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tv   ABC7 News 600AM  ABC  October 26, 2021 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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called me, screaming, come outside. you will not believe what's going on julian:. the bay area drying off from a mega storm but some areas still feeling the effects. one area is outraged. kumasi: are you waking up without power? you are not alone. thousands caught stuck in the dark. the reason and the timeline for when people may get the power back. julian: feel for those people. it is tuesday, october 26. you are watching abc seven mornings live on hulu live and wherever you stream. kumasi: let's check the forecast with mike. mike: good morning. we have some left over side effects if you are around green valley creek or mark west creek, we still have flooding happening that could continue through at least 11:00 this morning. that is something we will keep an eye on.
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a flood warning has been extended for several hours and almost about 12 to 24 because it takes forever for all that water to get through our tributaries. scattered, light showers. radar around richmond, oakland, and ukiah, the best chances across the north bay and the chances are minimal. cooler than average in the 60's. kumasi: an fda advisory panel is meeting to decide whether to recommend the pfizer vaccine for children ages five to 11. the meeting started about 30 minutes ago and if the fda gives emergency use authorization, 28 million children could get doses by november 4. that means some of the first kids to get it would be fully protected by christmas. we are hearing from one doctor who enrolled all four of her children and the pfizer trial. >> if it is something i can prevent with a vaccine that is safe and effective, that's my
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job, to protect my kids and other people's kids, to the best of my ability. kumasi: the biden administration has already purchased the vaccine and is prepared to ship it. moderna announced its low-dose vaccine for children ages six to 11 reduces a strong immune response that they are several weeks away from authorization. julian: $20 billion is how much the state gave away to -- in unemployment to those who should not have qualified and the department lames at all on congresses' -- blames it all on congress'-- inmates including convicted killers on death row. kumasi: thousands of people in the bay area are still in the dark. look at this current pg&e outage map.
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many people still waiting for power and it has been down since 5:30. sunday's storm hit the bay area the hardest, leaving 68,000 customers without one power from one point -- at one point. amy hollyfield is joining us live. amy: we do still season areas il moraga in the dark. they've been told their power will be back on by 6:00 tonight, so another day of waiting. we are hearing about powder -- power outages from the wine country to the santa cruz mountains. pg&e says that outages are related because trees came crashing down in the storms, taking power lines down. getting to the power poles and getting them fixed is taking a while because there are so many and because the fix can be complicated. >> yeah, there's just multiple damage locations on one line,
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for example, so if they fix one location, they still have a couple other locations where they need to fix equipment before they can re-energize that line and restore power to everyone served. amy: pg&e did bring in worke i from other parts of the state that weren't hit as hard like san diego gas and electric, to help with repairs. have almost 13,000 customers in the bay area still waiting for their lights to come back on. live in moraga, amy hollyfield, abc 7 news. julian: in the east bay, bay pointe was flooded from the storm and the community says it was avoidable. water from a can now flooded the street and at least three homes. neighbors are outraged, saying it was debris mixed with garbage that clogged up the drain, but county officials tell us they cleared it last tuesday, saying it was overwhelmed by the historic storm. the area upstream from here is
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on private property. the county says it will talk with those property owners to make sure they are doing their part. kumasi: we aren't the only ones seeing extreme weather. a major nor'easter is slamming the east coast this morning. mona gosar abdi has that and more. mona: with eight inches inches and wind of 60 miles an hour, new york and new jersey declaring states of emergency, flood warnings in effect from the jersey shore to boston. officials urging those living in basements to plan ahead. the storm system already wreaking havoc in the heartland. >> look at this strong tornado. mona: more than a dozen tornadoes reported in missouri and illinois, and in the west, the strongest storm ever in the pacific northwest, turning deadly, whipping wind and downing trees, killing two people in washington.
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this man is grateful his son is alive after a tree came crashing down oo his car minutes before he was set to leave for work. >> i can't think what would have happened if he was walking that pathway. mona: this man rescuing a kitten from drowning. mona gosar abdi, abc 7 -- abc news new york. julian: powerful waves are battering our coastline. the national weather service is calling it a sweltering with hazards like brick and waves of 20 to 30 feet. it is also closed because of sewage overflow in the water. the city says sunday's storm overwhelmed the sewer system and it will remain closed until testing shows the water is safe. you can track the weather where you live any time with the abc 7 bay area news app available to download on your phone or wherever you stream. all you have to do is search
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"abc 7 bay area." kumasi: reservoir relief, with all this heavy rain we are tracking an amounts and local reservoirs picked up. julian: the boise mall shooting rampage, gripping video from the floor -- the second floor the moment the gunman started firing. kumasi: the show set to debut next week that's made national headlines. mike: here's a look at some of the record rainfall totals. santa rosa, kentfield, napa, san francisco,
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kumasi: despite the atmospheric river that we all just made it through, bay area water managers say we have a long way to go to improving our reservoirs.
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gary kleiman says the storms resulted in an improvement of about one half of 1% in their system, which includes lexington reservoir near los gatos. he says we need a series of atmospheric river events to make more of a dent in the drought situation. gary: we went from 88% empty 287.5% empty so it hasn't moved the needle appreciatively. kumasi: aww. he's also hoping the storm system delivers a major impact on the sierra and wants to see the storms grow considerably. mike: that would definitely be nice. here are the newest numbers i saw this morning. compared to the average capacity for today's date, orville jumped 7% and everybody else about 1% to 2% but everyone went up. as far as total capacity, not
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everyone went up and if we did it was like 1%. we get three to five atmospheric rivers during a typical winter and that brings about 50% to 75% of our yearly rain and that was one. we are in the 40's in redwood city and menlo park, 48 and 47. 49 in palo alto. los gatos at 46. everybody else at 50 to 52 degrees. watch as the cloud cover increases this morning. the best chance of showers on the coast and the northbay. a few try to slip south for the afternoon. overall coverage decreases, and tonight we have a little bit of a burst that will last a couple of hours, but in the morning we are looking at cloud cover with increasing sunshine and a warming trend beginning tomorrow. i will let you know how long that will last. sue: yesterday at this time, we
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had 92 incidences on the chp traffic log. this morning, six. that's the difference between yesterday and today. roads are dry and still as we've been mentioning, some clogged drains but mostly you are getting by without delay. golden gate bridge, nice ride, no fog. the bay bridge, bit of a backup. the metering lights were on at 5:32, but minor delays. the san mateo bridge still under 15 minutes. the san rafael bridge, under the tolls for about eight and its to marin county. -- minutes to marin county. julian: the six flags savings plan, one man saving thousands of dollars. what he did with his life hack at magic mountain. kumasi: bay area high school students scrambling to rebuild a house -- haunted house. julian: we have some new information about the crewmember who handed the gun to alec baldwin. kumasi: as we had to break,
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let's take a live look -- head to break, let's take a live look outside, so much drier than yesterday. nice to see people making their
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julian: welcome back, 6:15. we are learning the community of boise, idaho is coming together to mourn victims of a deadly mall shooting. two were killed and four were injured. there was a shootout between police and the suspect, who was wounded. the motive is unclear. >> never should one have to, or does one expect when they are saying goodbye to a loved one headed to work, headed out to shop, and that they will get a call like they did today. julian: the suspect is in
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critical condition. the injured officer was released last night from the hospital. kumasi: new information emerging about the deadly shooting on the set of alec baldwin's new movie. the man who handed the gun to alec baldwin was fired from a previous movie because of a mishap with a prop gun. david hall's was fired from the production team in 2019 after a crewmember was hurt when a gun unexpectedly discharged. that same year, hall's was accused of neglecting safety protocols by a prop maker. and news conferences expected tomorrow where we are expected to hear an update. no charges have been filed. new developments regarding the scandal of richmond's police chief after a family filed for a restraining order. in court, visa french and her husband, lee french, agreed to stay away from a relative for two years.
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both are accused of possibly breaking the law while trying to rescue an 18-year-old relative from an older man, who has since been charged with human trafficking. visa and her husband claim he manipulated the relative into becoming a prostitute. the relative claims she was threatened and fears for her life. julian: dave chapelle is taking his controversial show on the road. a newly announced tour will screen his new untitled documentary, the first stop in san francisco at the chase center. the documentary is under fire for trans phobic and homophobic remarks. many film studios and festivals have canceled showings. last week, the film triggered an employee walkout at the streaming services office. the j center is set for november 4 and chapelle says he is open to meeting those. kumasi: a south bay high school
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is scrambling to real build its haunted -- rebuild its haunted house damage this weekend. lee high school creates one every october as a fundraiser. >> coming in this morning and just seeing the level of devastation and whatnot, it was a little disheartening. but then just seeing my students rally behind me and getting them to help me clear out the debris safely, because i didn't want them near any walls that were still partially leaning or anything like that. kumasi: students and parents come as you can see, pitched in, and thanks to their help, they will reopen thursday night. julian: who doesn't like some themepark food, especially when you are not paying full price? one man ate all his meals at six flags magic mountain for $150 a year. dylan shared his experience during an interview with the magazine so how did he do it?
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he got an unlimited year-round access to six flags costing $150, which included parking and two meals a day. dylan says he paid down his student loans, got married, bought a house. before you get any ideas, the deal is no longer available. six flags offers special year-round passes but they don't come with free meals and i bet they are not $150. kumasi: my goodness, the hack of all hacks. mike: i wish dylan put us on before they changed up the pricing plan. keeping that close. his not sharing. -- he is not sharing. kumasi: did they go out on dates? mike: if we bought a house -- if you saved up the money to buy a house, i can't for him. priorities, kumasi. [laughter] you know how expensive the real
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estate is in the bay area. mike: i'm completely with you. i would think his wife would say, if he is that smart, i need to hold onto him. julian: a keeper. mike: kumasi is doing this. now she's laughing, so i'm glad. the golden gate bridge, 50 six degrees, south wind at 10. some of the w w the golden gate can meet -- commute. sunnier and milder tomorrow through friday and friday night into monday, a couple of chances of wet weather. temperatures today, 59 in napa, 56 in lakeport and ukiah. everybody else around 60 to 66, more sunshine to the south. clouds will open up in the southern half of our neighborhood. up north, a lot of cloud cover, but rain is mainly around lake
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mendocino and sonoma counties and potentially napa county. here is a look at future radar. friday morning at 7:00, increasing clouds. friday evening, a shield of light rain heading into the northbay. it may bring light rain saturday morning and then increasing clouds saturday afternoon. sunday, increasing clouds. six, halloween, fine. hyundai morning, mainly not so much,'s -- monday morning, mainly not so much. that's just one model. that's why there's not a storm impacts gail on monday. -- impact scale on monday. 70's on the coast and brighter conditions. kumasi: checking in with rob with what is live coming up on gma. rob: hello. good to be with you. you guys had it yesterday. we've got it today.
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thank, a big mess in the northeast. it is a double threat, this other pulse coming to the west. we will show what you guys have been dealing with as far as the atmospheric river, flooding, wind, and snow in the mountains. of course, the countdown to the covid vaccine for kids. an fda panel meeting this morning to vote on authorization of the pfizer vaccine for five to 11-year-olds. nih director dr. collins will be live only on gma. dr. jennifer ashton will be answering your questions about getting your kids vaccinated. plus, a gma consumer alert. a lot of us holding onto our cars for longer. i constantly get calls from spammers wanting to sell me an extended warranty. is it worth it? "dancing with the stars" star bencic derek huff -- star derek
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huff, the horror night in the ballroom. i don't like horror movies so i didn't watch that. i like halloween but i don't know about you, julian, i am a scaredy-cat in the theater. that, plus some spiriteddddd a scaredy-cat. don't know what to tell you. i don't like it. another disney movie. [laughter] we've got it all coming up, soon, guys.
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julian: welcome back. check out the video, at least 13 people arrested for a climate change protest in new york city. there are reads -- "our house is on fire." this brought fdr drive to a halt during the morning rush-hour. a similar protest walked traffic
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on the west side highway around the same time. earlier this morning in london, we saw this. animal-rights protesters scaling the environmental protection environment ahead of a major global climate change summit in scotland on sunday. two people in attendance, president biden and governor newsom. governor newsom is headed to scotland next week. in glasgow, scotland, newsom is expected to talk about what his administration has done to fight climate change in california, including working to phase out gas powered vehicles, band fracking and oil extraction by 2025. senator bob wieckowski of fremont is also part of the delegation. kumasi: the company owned and founded by jeff bezos, blue origin, is announcing x next venture into space -- it's next venture into space.
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orbital reef would be almost same size as the international space station. it could perform research and host getaways and in space manufacturing. goal is to get it up and running in the late 20 20's. nasa is expected to sign on as an anchor tenant since the international space station is reaching the end of its life span. all right. julian: i know, they're going to do what they're going to do. kumasi: on the interstate, something that fell off a truck. the video that's going viral. julian: the pay proposal giving one type of worker a well-deserved benefit. kumasi: the great pop tart debate with a lawsuit over the fruit filling. julian: 6:27, t a live look outside at the golden gate bridge. traffic is moving nicely for now.
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i drop off and pick up my kids from school so, i can't work early. or late. and i need to make enough to make it worthwhile. i can only work two days a week. and it can't interfere with my other job. i can do full-time. just not daytime. and i need benefits. good ones. and you know, it would be nice if you paid for my tuition. like all of it. ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions, this is abc 7 news. julian: here's here's here's h making news right now. scattered showers kicking off your tuesday morning. mike is tracking the neighborhoods being hit in the next chance of rain. >> these kids are not getting infected. we should drive the pandemic down. kumasi: that sign of hope happening now, the fda panel underway to open the gates for vaccination for children. julian: the future for the a's in oakland, the all-important vote for alameda county today. kumasi: it is tuesday, october
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26. you are watching abc 7 mornings live on abc seven, hulu live, and everywhere you stream. mike: good morning. much quieter this morning. let's take a look at what's going to happen as we had throughout the day. -- head throughout the day. mainly scattered light showers near the coast and the northbay. last line, minimal to no impact, that's what we like to see. live doppler 7 picking up a few sprinkles especially in the east bay hills so 580, maybe 13 could be affected and possibly highway four. so if you need to use the windshield wipers once or twice, that's probably why. elsewhere, it is pretty quiet. we have the wind and the clouds. temperatures mainly in the upper 40's to mid-50's. we are nearing 60 at noon.
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a few green splotches try to slip south but around 3:00 or 4:00 they taper, remaining in the low to mid 60's this afternoon. the best chances will be in lake and mendocino counties. more chances coming up in the forecast. julian: thousands of people in the bay area are without power following sunday's storm. we are giving you a look at pg&e's outage map. at one point, 68,000 customers were in the dark. amy hollyfield is live in moraga for the latest timeline for when people may get their lights back on. amy: we still see some dark spots in moraga. some people here without power and were told they will have to wait until about 6:00 tonight, so another day in the dark for patches of the bay area. about 13,000 customers still without power.
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pg&e says that outages are from down trees that took power lines down with them during the storm. they brought in workers from utilities around the state to help with repairs. pg&e has 3000 workers on the case that have been busy. >> crews have been out at all of these locations where we found damage across the bay area, restoring power, making repairs and replacing conductors and damage from the wind and the rain. amy: officials with pg&e say workers in many cases are dealing with access issues. have to get around flooding and downed trees blocking the pols they are trying to get to. -- poles they are trying to get to. some of the repairs are complicated, but they are working around-the-clock and chipping away at the issue. now it is down to almost 13,000
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customers without power. live in moraga, amy hollyfield, abc 7 news. kumasi: close call doesn't even begin to describe this narrow escape for a family in marin county. three redwood trees fell onto their rv during the storm and crushed a bed where a husband and father was sleeping. >> the glass went flying. the whole rv was shaking back and forth and i looked over and i was panicked. >> i heard danielle screaming for the dogs and i noticed this tree was right up against my shoulder. i saw a little bit of an opening so i reached out and said, i'm ok. if i was over another six inches, the whole tree would have crunched me. kumasi: this all happened in kentfield just before 6:00 sunday night. this family has been living in the rv for the past year while they are working on building a house. when the trees fell, one daughter was in the construction
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tent and the other was in the rv next to mom and two of their dogs. there thought dog -- third dog had just died. >> our dog had just passed the night before and i feel like he was our guardian angel. kumasi: dad remarkably, had a blackeye and a concussion. everybody else is ok. family says an inspected the trees and said there safe. you can track live doppler anywhere, on the bay area streaming app, available on roco tp and apple tv. julian: the meeting of pfizer -- of an fda panel is getting underway to authorize the pfizer vaccination for kids five to 11 years old. this will be a big step in the process. the expectation is that the fda
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and cdc will greenlight the doses by next week. pfizer says trial data shows just one third of its adult doses is nearly 91% effective against symptomatic illnesses in children. the director of the national institute of health is on gma this morning. dr. francis collins says authorization should be a huge relief for all of us. >> we can create a situation where more of these kids are not getting infected. we should be able to drive this pandemic down, which is what we really hope to do, even as we face cold weather and concerns about another surge. we don't want that. julian: moderna says it's pediatric shot is highly effective in children with only mild symptoms, but they are still several weeks away from authorization. kumasi: it is a crucial day for the future of the a's and oakland. alameda county are expected to vote. supervisors will decide on a
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nonbinding resolution that could one day see the county contribute tax revenue to help the a's. the money would be used for parks, infrastructure, and affordable housing. leadership and the league say if howard terminal does not get built, the a's will explore moving and the county needs the city involved to make it financially possible. we will drip -- hear from them later. julian: the federal government says bart's billing theling thee cost a draw dropping $9 as the federal transit six mile extension would include four stations and would bring bart into downtown san jose by 2030. three years ago, vt estimated the project would only cost $4.7
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billion. in a statement, the transit authority says do not get ahead of ourselves with the new price tag and focus on the fact that the project is getting funding from the feds. kumasi: they are now becoming known as the facebook papers, internal documents spelling out its alleged profits over people, but the amount it is profiting during this tumultuous time might surprise you. julian: you are looking live at the big board at the new york stock exchange. another update, coming up. kumasi: plus, this is a can't miss survival story, a palo alto woman stranded in the frigid sierra for two days. what she did to survive. mike: how about a can't miss forecast? kumasi: i like that. mike: everybody, welcome to tuesday morning, mostly cloudy in the south bay with temperatures from 46 to about 50 degrees. elsewhere, temperatures in the
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low to mid 50's with increasing clouds in the north bay. have a chance of wet weather. watch the clouds increase, the gray from north to south through the morning into the afternoon. best chance of showers near the coast and the north bay. a few may try to step across the line and head southward but they will fall apart completely. the entire coverage tapers into the latter parts of the afternoon and early evening, but on the north bay, there is a chance of some showers. tomorrow morning, waking up with cloud cover but we transition to warmer weather. other than this one storm, the greatest amount of rain, 1/10 of an inch in cloverdale. it shouldn't prolong the green valley creek and the mark west creek flooding. through 11:00, they are close to that because of all of the
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residual runoff from sunday. other than spotty showers, it will be quiet, calm her out of the bay -- calmer out on the bay. good news with this nice, cool air mass and even when it warms up on wednesday and thursday, the air will be about as clean as it can be. into the weekend, a couple of chances of wet weather. the traffic, what is going on? sue: it is relatively light, and we say that in comparison to yesterday. here's a look at your drive times. highway four westbound starting to get sluggish antioch into hercules, 45 minutes. if you are just going into the concord area, about 15 minutes less than that. highway 80 from highway four to the maze, 23 minutes. the metering lights are on at the macarthur maze.
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highway 87 to the south bay, bad at all, about eight minutes. speaking of the south bay, highway 87 past the sap center and towards the airport, both directions are moving nicely. over towards 101, the over crossing, and traffics heading in the northbound direction of 101 looking good. no delays, just typical out of tracy. a 15 minute delay over the alta mom passed and a road closure in -- altamont pass and a road closure, highway 35, they have a tree in the road and power lines
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and liver problems. if you have a rash and other symptoms of an allergic reaction, stop dovato and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have kidney or liver problems, or if you are, may be, or plan to be pregnant. dovato may harm your unborn baby. use effective birth control while on dovato. do not breastfeed while taking dovato. most common side effects are headache, nausea, diarrhea, trouble sleeping, tiredness, and anxiety. so much goes into who i am. hiv medicine is one part of it. ask your doctor about dovato-i did. ♪
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julian: that will make you grip the steering wheel with both hands. the golden gate bridge back to singing. you can hear the eerie sound, and this was taken during sunday's storm. the bridge has been making noises like this following a retrofit project last year. kumasi: toilet paper caused a slowdown on 880 in san leandro. sky seven was over the north side of the freeway just after 5:00 yesterday. it got cleaned up in about an hour or so. chp officers think it fell off a truck. that's all the information we had about the tp. julian: happening today, nannies , housecleaners, and others are one step closer to being paid sick leave in san francisco. lawmakers are expected to propose a new ordinance. that proposal would allow people
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who work for multiple households to earn time for each employer and combine them to cover sick time. kumasi: governor newsom announced a $210 million investment in the medical school at uc merced, the first public medical school in california's central valley. officials have been trying to launch this program for years that haven't had the money until now. governor helps the medical school will increase the number of health care professionals in the central valley. this is an area that has lacked medical resources during the pandemic. >> they will come to the valley and stay in the valley and contribute and serve the residents and the people that made their education possible. kumasi: the program will be able to train 200 future doctors at a time and the first 50 are expected to enroll in 2023. julian: a palo alto woman is talking about how she survived in the frigid sierra with only a little water and a single tangerine.
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jolly bows was hiking up mount gibbons with friends on october 17 when they got separated and she got lost. she sheltered in a small bathroom to stay warm as the temperature dropped down to 14 degrees. she relied on meditation to survive, imagining herself eating more food than she had an drinking water even though she ran out. >> the moment i got lost, my goal was to stay alive because i know they will be calling 911. i didn't have any fear and i never lost any hope. >> i think she shows how powerful the mind is to keep that drive alive. julian: rescuers found her two days later. as you saw in the video, talking, she looks and sounds good. she says she is ready to hit the trail again. kumasi: your morning money report and the boom for tesla, becoming the first electric vehicle company to join the
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trillion dollar club on wall street on news that hertz is adding 100,000 tesla cars to its fleet that you can rent next year. this is the largest ever electric vehicle purchase, worth about $4 billion, and a pretty big change for hertz which is fresh out of bankruptcy. facebook it seeing its profits boom -- is seeing its profits boom despite harmful impact on teens. third-quarter profits were up 17% compared to the third quarter of last year at almost $9.2 billion. monthly users up 6% from last year. this comes after facebook ceo mark zuckerberg slammed documents claiming it favors profits over people. a shoe company is getting ready to go public with a valuation as high as $2.2 billion.
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they make eco-friendly sneakers and have not announced the initial date but a pre-ipo shows they will offer more than 19 million shares priced between $12 and $14. it is expected to list under nasdaq. let's look at the new york stock exchange. we are up by about 70 points. julian: now to social media burnout. of you experienced this? some of the biggest influencers revealed they are facing burnout. they are sharing tips on "good morning america" on how to put down the phone. >> definitely was an addicting feeling that i had to keep going and going because i didn't want to take a break. >> mental health definitely takes a backseat? >> i think i have at some points where i phase -- where i deleted the app. >> i was so sure people were
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going to be mad, seems like you are not into it anymore and i wish you the best. very supportive. i was crying reading the comments. julian: influencers say sitting time and app limits can help. "good morning america" will have more on facebook's emotional toll, coming up. kumasi: cyber criminals are targeting fans of "squid game," reportedly infecting devices with an app. this allows hackers to sign you up for premium services that they can profit from. thousands of people downloaded the app before it was removed. julian: if you weren't one of the many people who has seen the popular show, this might creep you out. what? no. this is a real live version of the "squid game" doll. apparently it is standing at
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olympic park in korea. dozens of excited adults and even a class field trip -- i don't know about that -- came out to the unveiling. kumasi: we are going to go back to that but let me tell you about this first because mike is having a whole reaction. if you have strawberry pop tarts in the pantry, listen to this. they might not have much strawberry in them, according to a $5 million lawsuit. it is claiming that advertising on the boxes is misleading because the filling uses fewer strawberries than expected. the person who made the complaint says the toaster pastry attains more pears and apples then pay -- then strawberries. lawsuit calls for a jury trial. julian: that means nothing. kumasi: are you watching the show? mike: it is so good, if you haven't watched it, and you will understand why the doll is so terrifying. mike: it makes chucky seem like
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something you want to cut a with. -- cuddle with. julian: love a "child's play" reference. kumasi: i'm not ready. mike: it's dystopian for sure. let's take a like that take a look at what's going on as far as our forecast. i wanted to show you some of the numbers in the neighborhoods everywhere except san jose had record rainfall. some of those records going back several decades. look what it did to our average capacity for today's date. this is data i pulled up this morning, lake orville went up 7% . everybody went up at least 1% to 2%, but you compare the percent of total capacity, only a couple went up and some stained the same -- stayed the same. we get three to five atmospheric winters during the winter and we
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need at least five to seven more to make up for where we are so behind. just spotty showers today, fewer clouds tonight. showers linger in the north bay and we will be in and out of showers as we head in and out of the weekend. 59 in napa. 56 in lakeport. the rest of us around 66, more sunshine along the south bay. more cloud cover to the north. let's jump ahead to friday. in the 10:00 hour, some light rain possible in the north bay. saturday afternoon and sunday looking dry. trick-or-treating, 6:00, no worries. today morning, 1/10 to 2/10 of an inch is possible for the commute. the only storm impact scale is today. 70's inland tomorrow, the bay thursday, back inland friday,
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and a little bit cooler this weekend. julian: the storm is giving ski resorts a big dose of winter weather. palisades tahoe sent us this video of the snow coming down. the resort received as much as 39 inches in upper elevations. they are opening on november 24. two bear cubs advantage of the fresh powder in south lake tahoe. they are wrestling around in the snow. throwing bows, having a good time. alex ferguson said this is a pretty common site s --ight for people in tahoe. kumasi: the alameda county fair is back in full swing. a storm caused damage but not enough to stop the fund for the rest of the week. you can see the rides and the games and the food. >> we are looking for food. >> we are hungry.
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>> ate a lot of food, got on a lot of rides. just been enjoying the experience. >> it is time for the fair. kumasi: i just think kayden is so cute. i have fun on these rides and i'm sleepy. the fair runs through sunday which is halloween. julian: speaking of halloween and spooky season, investigators are looking for two people connected to a spooky and suspicious fire at a haunted house in colorado. that's not part of the attraction. the fire consumed an entire section of the fright acres haunted house and spread to hay bales outside. walkabout fuel for the fire. two people were caught walking up to the haunted house minutes before the fire started. nobody was hurt. kumasi: americans are expected to spend $10 billion on halloween this year, more than last year by about $2 billion.
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according to the national retail federation, people are expended -- expected to spend about $3.3 billion on costumes, the highest since 2017. every american is expected to spend 102 dollars on halloween related items. julian: $102? kumasi: it can add up. julian: the costumes are so expensive here -- expensive. kumasi: some people cannot get a costume off the rack. julian: you can get the lifeline -- lifelike version of this custom. kumasi: you don't have a costume? julian: i was thinking of a " squid game" mask but you wouldn't get the reference. kumasi: i don't know if i want to. julian: do you have one picked out? kumasi: i'm behind and i gave up. julian: we are going to go as news anchors. seven things you need to know today. kumasi:
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ever wonder how san francisco became the greenest big city in america? just ask the employee owners of recology. we built the recycling system from the ground up, helping san francisco become the first city in the country to have a universal recycling and composting program for residents and businesses.
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but it all starts with you. let's keep making a differene together. ♪ i see trees of green ♪ ♪ red roses too ♪ ♪ i see them bloom for me and you ♪ (music) ♪ so i think to myself ♪ ♪ oh what a wonderful world ♪
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kumasi: it is 6:58. here are the seven things to know. the fda is meeting now to decide whether or not to authorize pfizer's covid-19 vaccine for kids ages five to 11. if it is authorized, kids could get the vaccine by november 4 and be fully vaccinated in time for christmas. julian: a critical day for the future of the a's in oakland. the alameda county board of supervisors is expected to vote on the howard terminal. they need to agree to make the plan work. kumasi: pg&e is still responding to power outages from the strong storms over the weekend. about 15,000 customers are still waiting for the lights to come on. julian: pacifica state beach is under a high surf warning but is also close because of sewage overflow.
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the city says sunday's storm overwhelmed the system. mike: the high surf warning goes through 11:00. we have a one on this storm scale and we have scattered light showers, lust of -- less than 1/10 of an inch. sue: metering lights are on at the bay bridge. you can see it is stacked up. you are getting busier but not as busy as yesterday. kumasi: number seven, you have to see these. a record-breaking pair of sneakers. this pair of nike chips worn by michael jordan during a chicago bulls game in 1984. they sold at auction over the weekend -- guess how much? $1.47 million. mike: like who bought them, jordan? that much money, who could afford that? julian: the money and memorabilia is skyrocketing. $600,000 for tom brady's 600 td
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pass. kumasi: i'm out -- julian: i'm out. kumasi: tes for our viewers in the west, as we take you through this tuesday morning, two big storms hitting now. state of emergency. new jersey and new york on high alert for flash flooding. with the nor'easter bearing down after tearing through the midwest, the severe weather whipping out at the heartland. now taking aim at the east coast. millions bracing for dangerous conditions at this hour. we're tracking it all. deadly mall shooting. a gunman opened fire killing two, wounding four. this morning the cell phone video from inside the mall as eyewitnesses speak out about the moment the chaos broke out. vaccine vote. the fda's high stakes meeting about the pfizer vaccine for children just hours away.

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