tv ABC7 News 600PM ABC September 29, 2021 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
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reinstated at parking facilities following an investigation. we ask tough questions but a majority of the city's parking garages still do not have security officers on site and the limited staff tells the team and reporter stephanie sierra they are overwhelmed as the city faces a sharp spike in car burglaries. she is live in the newsroom with the story you stephanie: will only see on stephanie: seven. nearly 50% of car burglaries reported across the city so far this year happened within the past three months and parking garages as we know are always a big target. we followed the security cuts for months and asked if mta has made changes but staff working the grounds tell us they need more help. it happens quick. >> 30 seconds is in and out. stephanie: if you're in the wrong place at the wrong time, you can even feel dangerous. >> this guy got needles they use as a weapon. stephanie: this is jorge, a
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security officer describing stories of people trying to part inside san francisco's sutter stump and street project. jorge: i called the buggy house. stephanie: the facility earned that name after cutting service security contracts at half of high-volume parking garages during the pandemic. jorge: it can be 10 to 14 homeless people in different floors. stephanie: in his eight years working in this role, he says he has never seen as many homeless roaming the floors in breaking into cars or threatening people as they returned. >> we see a lot more people coming in from the city. stephanie: the director of compliance for marina security services, a company that previously provided security at half of cities high-volume parking garages, cutting most of their contracts and the company only staffs three garages. starter stockton, union square, fit in mission. >> we are getting trespassed and seeing people are more aggressive than before. stephanie: compared to the
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summer, is it worse? >> yes. it is getting up. stephanie: there have been 12,000 record -- burglaries recorded across san francisco this year. nearly half of those occurred since june. >> i would like to see the gorgeous --grudges- getting ready for the holidays. stephanie: before the pandemic, at any point, a security officer or to work inside 11 parking facilities working 168 hours per week. since june, the company is onlyy contracted to have one officer inside three facilities 40 hours a week. the abc 7 team reached out to us at mta for further, are there plans to reinstate security officers at the eight remaining facilities? the agency wrote the following statement. vehicle break-ins and crime has been down. off-duty police have been retained and deployed using the data we collected.
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these officers are in addition to the customer service representatives and security which we have recently increased. they agency reports there has been 251 vehicle break-ins at city red parking garage so far this year. does that sound right to you? >> that sounds low. i don't see how that would be possible especially with the garages being busy. stephanie: what do you think the number really is? >> i would at least say it has to be four or 500. i don't know with us not being here if some is not being reported. stephanie: as if mta added they replaced aging parking equipment with modern technology like cameras and signage and audible alarms. he says i camera cannot do what he can. jorge: we are here every day, every hour and it is different. kristen: security officers at several garages say some of these groups are using rental cars driving into the gag appe if th a instead circle theo
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target cards with belongings left inside. yet another reason, danna, we cannot say it enough. lock up and leave the seats empty and as you pointed out, not even leave a tictac inside. dan: it is a shame we have to be that vigilant but we do. there is no choice at this point. the agency told you in may the contracts were not terminated but on hold, citing the cuts, helping reduce cost during a time of customers using garages during covid. is this new strategy actually saving money? kristen: it is interesting. stephanie: what's ago, it was made clear the move was to cut costs but security services tell us they only contracted to pay their employees around $20 an hour but when off-duty police officers with us -- sfpd tells us they normally get paid $100 per hour. as you pointed out, it is a
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valid question. is the saving money? more importantly, are these garages going to be fully staffed as we head into the holiday season? we did as the agency if there are going to be customer service reps walking through all 22 of the city's parking facilities, especially in the garages we know do not have security officers good we are still waiting to hear back on that. dan: let us know and it will be a challenging holiday season if the cars are not protected. thank you very much. kristen: a bullet burst through the windshield of an oakland city sewer truck this afternoon. the driver told abc 7 he believes he was caught in the middle of car to car gunfire. shell casings that are 17's and broad street. 40 on the ground. the driver stopped a few blocks away and police responded. he was not hurt. a wildcard chase happened in the east bay this afternoon, starting with an armed robbery at the starbucks on willow avenue in hercules. police say a man wearing a mask
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came at the starbucks with a gun and filled a bag with money from the register. he got into a black bmw and got onto i-80 and that started a chase with the driver eventualle there were two passengers. guy seven shows the car driving in circles, hitting two other cars. the driver eventually got off in oakland and drove into emeryville on city street. he and the passengers got out and started running. police caught one woman near the abandoned vehicle. a man believed to be the driver surrendered as he was standing on a porch. police also arrested another woman. abc 7 was there when police searched the abandoned cart and recovered bags of cash. another east bay chase started as that one was ending just before 2:00. police started chasing a car on highway 24 in oakland. police say the car was used in three laptop and cell phone robberies last night. the driver stopped on the free weight just has the tunnel and
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he and his two passengers came out with their hands up. they shut down the freeway for a little while and made traffic a mess. dan: a red flag warning takes effect just hours from now for parts of the north bay. firefighters are on alert and preparing with extra staffing to deal with this good abc 7 reporter is live with the story. burnout. burnell: if you like that like t weather is moving in. winds are picking up and firefighters are getting ready in the east bay. some neighbors are stepping up to the lookout for fire. this grass fire breaking out wednesday afternoon on gird road road in sonoma county carried by strong winds. firefighters stopped it before it reached a barn. the santa rosa fire department says it is up staffing fire crews for red flag conditions. >> we will have upwards of 10 plus engines staffed around the
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county on top of normal routine staffing. that allows us to respond quickly to a developing incident. >> the main concern is fire. burnell: in the east bay hills, more than a dozen neighbors in kensington are standing by to be waters. >> we each take an hour or two for 24 hour watch. burnell: john mcabee is part of wildcat watch where neighbors take turns monitoring live wildfire camera feeds in the canyons near their homes. the fire dispatch number handy if they spot anything. >> what would you look for? >> smoke. you do everything you can to save yourself and not your things. we have a lot of older folks up here and it is estimated if a fire starts in the canyon, we have seven to 15 minutes to evacuate. we are looking out for each other. burnell: september and october historically, a critical time in
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fire season. fire crews know because they lived it. >> the time of year is only when we see a lot of large-scale wildfires again. fortunately we have had rains that have helped us in our lower elevations but the concern is really are heavier fields, especially in the upper elevations. burnell: firefighters urge homeowners to crew -- clear dry brush around homes and they say have a planet, know what to do and where to go when the amount of fire prompts and evacuation where you live. live in san rafael. dan: let's bring in abc 7 news spencer christian for details on the higher fire risk. spencer: here's a look at the details of the red flag warning. the focus is mainly on the north bay and you can see this is in effect from 11:00 tonight to 11:00 tomorrow morning so that window of time is the. -- the period.
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of highest risk. the focus is mainly on the napa county mountains and the interior sections of sonoma county. during this time, winds on the north northeast with gusts up to or above 35 miles an hour. committee will be dangerously low, 1815%. surface winds increasing becoming gust you're in stronger . as we look at argument any forecast, you can see going into tomorrow, many locations not just in the heart elevations -- higher elevations will drop to the lower teens. it will be dry. kristen: thank you. in the north bay, marin county today opened its very first booster vaccination site at the northgate mall in san rafael. the site is at the former victoria's secret. urban county residents 75 and older are eligible for their first covid-19 booster shot. you will need proof of your first round of the pfizer vaccine from at least six months ago. santa cruz county lifted its
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indoor mass mandate today because current cdc data shows the county has a moderate rate of covid-19 spread. the cdc color codes, moderate in yellow, and you can see five other counties are in the same category in the bay area. they are orange, the higher category of substantial spread, read his words, high transmission, changes in santa cruz watch closely by doctors in the bay area. >> it is always nice to, before you make a move that would feel significant to a lot of people, you can base it on data. kristen: the last time mandates were dropped, cases increased but that was with the rise of the highly contagious delta variant. since then, vaccination rates have increased and current case rates are on the decline. dan: are you planning to travel over the holidays? if you are, you could face new covid restrictions. hours ago, california senator dianne feinstein faced -- tweeted we cannot allow holiday
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air travel to contribute to another surge in kobe cases i introduced legislation requiring passengers on domestic flights to be vaccinated, test negative, or be fully recovered from previous covid illness good travel experts we spoke with our endorsing the idea. >> if it became law, it would add restrictions in the u.s. that already exist elsewhere in the world and -- >> anything to encourage travel and the most comfortable and safe way is important for everybody. dan: the tsa requires as you know passengers to wear masks in airports at all times except when eating and on airplanes. meteorologist: air quality affects all of us but it does not affect us all equally. >> you tell me your zip code. i will tell you how healthy you are you can have zip codes adjacent to each other and find life expectancy of the 10 to 15 years difference. kristen: a sneak peek on the equity report where the data
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a couple came up and handed me a brochure on prevagen. i've been taking prevagen for about four years. i feel a little bit brighter and my mind just feels sharper. i would recommend it to anyone. it absolutely works. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. dan: abc 7 is committed to building a better bay area and our newest tool is called the equity report. it measures equity in five categories, housing, health, education, policing, and the environment. that's talk about air quality, an issue when we have wildfires but also year-round for many communities. the equity report uncovered disturbing troops when it comes to -- troops when it comes to how air quality varies locked by block and who is reading the worst of it. race and culture reporter julie glover found people in west
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oakland had it worse than most and he joins us live with the story. the difference is very a block by block. we know people of color create less air pollution but are exposed to more of it and the consequences are being felt directly by our children. ♪ >> the pollution level in west oakland for over 50 years has really devastated this community. julia: at 75, a longtime west oakland resident would know. she has led the fight to clean the air in her neighborhood near the port of oakland with the west oakland and marne -- environmental indicators project for decades, starting with questions. >> why are we breathing us? julia: and concerns. >> i have two grandchildren who are asthmatic and right now, it's under control.
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i don't want to go back to that. julia: nearby mlk elementary, neighbors are also concerned about their kids health. >> a little bit of asthma and coughing. julia: west oakland are 1.5 more times more likely to be sent to the er with severe asthma than other parts of alameda county according to public health data why? >> america is so does segregated and so is pollution. -- america is segregated and so is pollution. julian: it is an issue of environmental and structural racism. >> i can tell how healthy you are based on your zip code in they can be adjacent to each other and find a life expectancy of differential of 10 to 15 years. julian: in west oakland, life expectancy is 7.5 years lower than the alameda county average. all you have to do is take a trip on to east bay freeways to
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see why. let's start with 880, they grad trucks carrying goods. the route takes the trucks through the flatlands where the exit near 7th street in west oakland. a neighborhood that is home to more black and latino residents with lower household incomes according to census numbers. thousands of trucks each day stacked up in stall as they make their way to and from the port of oakland. one of 10 business container ports in the country. diesel particulate matter or dpm for the truck traffic is associated with almost half of west oakland cancer risk according to a 2019 air district report. on 580, the opposite. opposite.. only commuter traffic allowed. trucks have been back to 1951, before 580 was even an interstate. trucks heavier than 4.5 tons are prohibited around 580 by state law for nearly nine miles to foothill boulevard in this --
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the highway sneaks through the east bay hills, home to wealthier residents. >> the neighborhoods experienced substantially less pollution around 588 so the truck dam has led to a displacement of pollution into communities of color. julian: according to an analysis from our data team, 2014 epa numbers, residents living within 10 miles of interstate 880 have on average twice the cancer risk and are almost twice as likely to develop respiratory illnesses than those living the same distance from 580 where trucks are banned. the health council has been serving the community for more than 50 years. after a.j. and james has care for patients there for the last 26, he had seen the impact firsthand. dr. james: that is hard to bear because there is so much we can do. the number of children going to the er and being newly diagnosed with asthma has grown up -- gone
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up in the question becomes, why? julian: the alarming number of children in west oakland going to the er with asthma. the families affected. it is difficult to imagine and so many people might be asking, what is being done about it? in our full report, you will hear from the port of oakland about what they are doing to cut down on omissions and from the san francisco-based company that is mapping out the differences in air-quality block by block to hopefully find solutions. all of that in our full 10 minute report on abc 7 bay area app for connected tv's, fire, roku, and watch it there. reporting live, julian glover, abc 7 news good -- news. dan: the air we breathe not all equal. grab your phone right now. we will be tracking this with the equity report. you can see more on our america abc.com site for use your phone just grand that equity report you are code on your screen.
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you can find specific data for the 100 largest cities in america. kristen: to neighboring schools will close for two days due to a flea infestation. esperanza elementary and korematsu discovery economy will be closed tomorrow and friday for deep cleaning. the district noticed a problem in mid-september and believes the infestation was caused by a nearby park and what it reappeared at the foot -- school reopens monday. meteorologist: dan: dan: warmer weather and the next few days as we had october. check out the seven-day forecast. look at that
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kristen: forget fetching and sitting. a dog is learning to repel from a helicopter. members of alameda county sheriff's office took a k-9 on a helicopter drop in oakland as part of the rescue training. you can see the dog in the man's arms as they repelled down from the copter. the exercise helps the canines get used to being on a helicopter and propelling down. dan: that is fascinating that they do that as part of training. the man was the dog's best friend in that case. [laughter] dan: so was the helicopter. spencer: for anyone who may have missed it, i want to give another look at the red flock warning. important details of this. in effect from 11 p.m. today to 11:00 a.m. tomorrow and mainly
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for the higher elevations of the north bay particularly, i napa pouty -- county mounting, wind gusts are up to 35 miles an hour or higher or dangerously low humidity. alive you looking out at ocean beach. the absence of low clouds and fog. the c4 in san francisco. 71 mounted you've speared 70 38 san jose. 61 containing me - you may see high clouds but no low clouds at the golden gate. mid 70's in napa. 84 in fairfield. livermore 76 and here is a view of blue sky over the golden gate from the golden gate. these are forecast features. gusting hills for tomorrow. everyone should be cautious. warmer days lie ahead near the bay and inland through the weekend and into monday of next week. overnight, clear skies and windy conditions in the north. we will see low temperatures and upper 40's to know 50's -- low
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50's in the north bank. 50's everywhere else and sunny skies and breezy at the coast with highs ranging from 69 to 74. 79 in oakland. inland east bay will heat to upper 80's to around 99 degrees. let's take a look at the rainfall forecast. starting tuesday, october 5 at 5am, notice in the latter part of the week, the frontal system will sweep into the bay area. per se, friday, and saturday, there is a chance like rainfall. emphasis on light. here's a accuweather 7 day forecast and are warming trend will be quite impressive through the weekend with mid 90's inland saturday. 80 degrees our height near the shoreline and cooling down sharply next tuesday and wednesday. dan: salmon in school. not in schools but school. a lesson about saving lives. >> don't touch my stuff, broke. >> i moving it out.
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>> don't touch my stuff, bro. kristen: see w working at recology is more than a job for jesus. it's a family tradition. jesus took over his dad's roue when he retired after 47 year. now he's showing a new generation what recology is all about. as an employee-owned company, recology provides good-paying local jobs for san franciscans. we're proud to have built the city's recycling system from the ground up, helping to make san francisco the greenest big city in america.
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moving forward, finding solutions. this is abc seven news. >> getting the homeless off the streets did not go as planned in berkeley today. the city is moving to a parking lot to provide a safer alternative. >> is at grayson street. laura anthony shows you why some rv dwellers pushed back. >> still was not supposed to go this way. >> don't touch my stuff. >> he thought he had until tonight to move his dutch belongings away from an rv sureos with a friend. click don't understand how you can prevent this gentleman from being able to move his vehicle. >> a city worker started to move him this afternoon. >> i said what you doing?
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is that i moving your stuff. i said no, this is my stuff. you are a city official. >> berkeley is offering these residents what city officials is -- so is a safer, cleaning dust cleaner and turn it. -- alternative. parks this was five days of though. we are here >> even with the fencing, some security and some fences, the residents -- >> families who entered the parking lot are doing so. all of the amenities we need to power our home will be given to us. >> i will agree to everything
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provided, everybody is on the same date, time frame, deadlines and what can and cannot be done. >> those who don't move out by the end of the day will be cited and potentially towed. >> if you are able to move in your stuff collapses, >> abc 7 news. >> the city of oakland is said to expand a program that will recruit and retain teachers of color. it is held by an organization called teachers rooted in oakland. trio is providing s s housing or housing stipends to 18 teachers allowing them to live in oakland. >> i would not be here without the support from trio. i received financial support through subsidized housing. without it, i would not be able to afford living in the area. >> the program will be offering a new location to house educators.
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the received the first corporate donation with them give america committing $1 million and a multiyear grant to help double the number of teachers in the program and teacher residents for oakland schools. california's pandemic infection moratorium begins tomorrow, which means landlords can infect tenants. if you need help, contact michael finney and his team by going to our website. >> the city of san jose apologized for its role in acts of determination against chinese immigrants. >> past is not dead. it is not even past. and yes, there have been public pronouncements and it is for every generation to reckon with the darkest corners of our collective history. larry: back to the 1800s, a number of policies were in place
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that discriminated against chinese immigrants. san jose chinatown was destroyed in eight arson attack in 1887. this is the largest city in the country to pass a resolution apologizing to chinese immigrants and descendants. kristen: reducing the risk of wildfires with something that would go to waste. here about a product. larry: a turning point for people with kidney disease. if they could get them off dialysis and
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kristen: abc seven news is committed to building a better bay area by tracking stories that impact your health. a bay area research team has been awarded a prize for a device they hope will free kidney patients from dialysis. luz pena has details. luz: for thousands of kidne k patients in the u.s., the only hope of getting off dialysis has been a transplant a new engineering breakthrough is reigniting hopes for a second option. an implantable, artificial kidney. >> we are able to create a functional prototype that was
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able to produce urine. >> 10 years ago we unveiled the prototype. luz: we first met him at at at t -- each chamber is the side of a deck of cards and on one side there are membrane filters for cleaning the blood similar to dialysis, the other side a bioreactor filled with living cells which perform other functions the kidney would can dust control in the body. >> it would allow dialysis patients to eat and drink freely, travel without being tethered to a scene and have better physiological outcomes because they are getting continuous treatment unlike dialysis that happens every other day. luz: the prototype was tested successfully in live animal models. it will need to be improved to make human trials possible.
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the goal is to keep the unit at a size where it can be implanted in the body but still adding more filtering power along with a more powerful biological capability. this professor says the challenging -- challenges are funding and improved engineering. it is proven to be practical. >> is likely to treat patients in the coming decade. luz: luz pena, abc 7 news kristen: prize was awarded to the group at uc -- ucsf, and, an their partners, dedicated to treating kidney disease. larry: warm and
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this helps protect every connected device. yours, your employees' and even your customers'. so you can stay ahead. get started with a great offer and ask how you can add comcast business securityedge. plus for a limited time, ask how to get a $500 prepaid card when you upgrade. call today. larry: as california continues to battle the drought, high school students in petaluma are making a difference to offset impacts of the ecosystem. it is part of building a better bay area and our anchor was in petaluma with a look at how students are helping keep salmon
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alive. >> sixth than yours stood at this high school because the students are part of a one of a kind fish hatchery program learning about conservation. >> he is cleaning the water line to make sure garment does not build up. here they are doing weight counts. >> thank you from trout from the russian river but because of drought conditions they have been called upon to do some thing different. they have taken in thousands of coho salmon at risk of extinction. >> the summer after cover, our teacher said the drought is so bad that these other hatcheries need help. >> the science teacher explained the salmon are usually cared for at the hatchery at lake sonoma but temperatures got so hot they needed to find the fish a new home. >> making a long story short, we ended up with was from mendocino county, the russian river and
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santa cruz. >> the hatchery opened in 1983 and this is the first time in the program's history that the students have been approached and asked to care for coho salmon. >> though so endangered and i think being part of that is a once opportunity. >> they need our help. they are part of the ecosystem. >> the hope is for the salmon to return sometime this fall to the hatchery at lake sonoma. that time at the high school is a short-term solution but with a lot of impact. >> we are able to help with the flesh but it also allows long looking at these young adults being able to step in. they gives them hope for the future, too. >> saying that we can make a difference is amazing. it is going to stay with us for the rest of our lives. >> in petaluma, liz kreutz, abc 7 news. kristen: let's turn to the idea of fighting climate change. >> there is an interest in using
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a substance that normally goes to waste an expense is here. -- spencer is here. spencer: we can see the benefit and farming and fighting wildfires. you could say professor diaz is fighting fire with fire in a specially controlled unit known as a hydrolyze or he and his team -- pilo -- unit, they are turning this into bio-char. it helps to understand that the material is not burned to ashes but charred and heated into a porous material containing a high concentration of carbon. researchers believe it could be a powerful weapon against climate change, helping protect forest land from fire and sequestering harmful greenhouse gases underground. >> you can actually store this material and put it back in the
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soil. >> you can see huge difference in methane emissions. >> a fellow resw resw resw resw studying the effect of mixing this with the amounts of manure used as a fertilizer in the central valley, a major source of methane. >> method from manure is a big deal. in california it accounts for 25% of all of our methane emissions across the state. >> early results show major reductions in methane levels during the composting process. spencer: as promising asromisins be in california, a group in washington state is looking for another benefit, to help prevent devastating wildfires. >> we can walk out on our driveway and show you the burned trees for 3, 5 different fires.
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it is everywhere. spencer: they live in a mecca for skiers and there have been filers sweeping the pacific northwest. the couple are working on a way to thin the fuel from the forests with a project profiled by our partners at the jewel nonprofit newsroom investigate west. turning small or unhealthy trees into biochar. >> it is critical that we make our communities and our homes safer by reducing these fuel loads. spencer: began converting ponderosa pine and douglas foir. they are hoping to support the business and a processing plant. the effort is about more than money. >> i would like people to understand it is our ecosystems that keep this planet habitable and if we let our ecosystems collapse, which is what is going
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on with our forests, we stabilize the climate if we bring carbon emissions to nothing. spencer: researchers have been recruiting local growers to study the use of biochar. they are hoping to create a powerful limit friendly movement that will keep growing as well. exciting and encouraging. while uses for this are evolving, there is a lot of history. indigenous peoples of many use -- have used forms of many purposes for centuries. let's look at the weather, our red flag warning for high fire danger. this is for 11:00 p.m. feet napa county mountains in the interior sections of sonoma
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county, once at the five miles hours clear skies and looked temperatures in the low to mid 50's. highs will range from near 70 at the coast to low 80's at the bayshore line, upper 80's and 90 an our inland areas. it's going to be a warm span from saturday through monday with mid-90's inland, a sharp cooling trend to stay. dan: thank you. kristen: a bay area favorite is larry's topic. larry: when tom brady calls, people listen. the story of how he ended up assigning not with the 49ers but tampa bay in sports.
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>> sports are sponsored by river rock casino. >> blame jimmy gurule flow for not running down the clock in the heartbreaking loss to green bay, but his head coach could have been in his ear pace -- peace. he should have won the game for the 49ers. they are not stretching the field or pushing the ball deep. defense is played close to the line of scrimmage. still, jimmy gurule flow, one
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pick, the bizarre turnover in the fourth quarter that could have been fatal but he performed better than the defense and he is the clear starter into sunday's game with seattle. >> there's not a quarterback battle. we are going with our starting quarterback, i'm happy where it is so he is not thrown into any situations early. if he is thrown and i know he will deal with it and get better as it goes, but that -- we don't have to do that yet to him or our team. >> the turnover is going to eliminate those but the way we bailed in the second half, give ourselves a chance at the end but with offense you don't want tack to do that, drive down at the end and be -- to have to do that, drive down at the end. we would have liked to perform better in the first half but there was positive to take out of it. there is good and bad. larry: richard sherman signed with tampa bay, lore of a ring
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and playing with tom brady irresistible. he spent three seasons with the 49ers and expressed interest to bolster the pleated secondary. but the buccaneers sealed the deal. sherman explained his reasoning. >> halep, san francisco called emme how do you feel about that? you're not offering anything yet , seattle is stringing you along, tampa is the most aggressive. tom has called and once he calls, it's like, you would better come or you are going to regret not coming. larry: tom brady. i will be there. the nbo is tightening the screws on players who are not vaccinated. the league announced if players don't comply with local vaccine mandates in san francisco and new york they will forgo for games. in the case of andrew wiggins it could mean a loss of $50 million if he sit out all of the four
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games, a lot of money on the line. 90% of players are vaccinated, some are in the eye doing my own research category, prompting this from him. >> i'm not sure milwaukee won the check digit. i did not watch, i wasn't there. so i guess i will go off the basis of their's got to be some kind of proof. i will do my own research. larry: that the kansas city royals hosted bark at the park. one san took it literally, usually you bring -- one san took it literally. you ever seen a dog take us healthy? now you have. how accurate. that is perfect -- a selfie? that is perfect. it is a dog in a royals shirt.
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sports on abc 7 is sponsored by river rock casino. now i know what i will be for halloween. spencer: that is terrific. kristen: i'm going to have nightmares, thanks larry. larry: it's either i go as the dog or the dan ashley mask. spencer: some would say it is the same thing. larry: alex wood on the two up on the dodgers, every game critical for the giants. kristen: coming up at 8:00 is the goldbergs, the wonder years, the connors and then a million little things at 10:00 and abc 7 news at 11:00. that is it for abc 7 news. i'm kristen sze. dan: i'm dan ashley. enjoy your evening and make time
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♪ from the alex trebek stage at sony pictures studios, this is "jeopardy!" let's meet today's contestants-- a student adviser from fontana, california... a nonprofit manager and tour guide from brooklyn, new york... and our returning champion-- a phd student from new haven, connecticut... ...whose 30-day cash winnings total... [ applause ] and now here is the host of "jeopardy!"-- yi.plse thank you, johnny gilbert.
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welcome to "jeopardy!" thanks to a big wager in yesterday's final, matt amodio ended up with quite an impressive total at the end of the game. will it be another big payday for one of our contestants today? welcome, daniel and adriana. good luck. let's go to work in the jeopardy! round with these categories... ...as recited by our own johnny gilbert. and... matt, the board is yours as our returning champion. non-coastal, $1,000. - daniel. - what's lawrence? - correct. - non-coastal u.s., $800.
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