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tv   ABC7 News 600PM  ABC  March 29, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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still cautious. our reporter explains, the superintendent of schools believes there is work to be done. she is in the newsroom to explain what that means. >> why are the numbers looking good? let's take san francisco. those kids 12 and -- most kids 12 and up were vaccinated and many older ones got a booster shot. there is still a mask mandate for elementary school kids. they were vaccinated a later. then you have the five and younger who were not vaccinated. when you look at all those groups put together, the vaccine or the masks are helping drive those numbers down. last week san francisco public schools had six cases of covid. even after the mask mandate was lifted for middle and high school kids, the number of cases has gone down. it is a good sign, says the superintendent of public
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schools, but there is work to be done in some communities. >> whether it be more vaccine outreach, creating opportunities to keep us safe because we don't want anything to be a threat to keeping schools open. >> more than 78% of students 12 and older are fully or partly vaccinated. the indoor mask mandate has not been lifted, although cases have gone down. the latest numbers for the week of march 20 first show there were 20 oakland students who tested positive for covid while only 11 staff cases. now in a survey, parents and oakland are being asked if and when the district changes the indoor mask mandate, would their children continue to wear a mask or not? >> we mask when we go into a place. my son chooses not to and i am ok with him doing that. i think it is the teachers that are probably not comfortable and respecting that is important. >> that is who we asked.
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this teacher is an academic mentor. >> i don't think we feel safe anymore. because covid goes down and then a new one comes up, then another one. so it is stressful. >> with the possibility of a spike after spring break, districts are sending students home with a covid test to be taken the weekend before the return. the superintendent of schools told us the tests will be instrumental in helping avoid any kind of spike or surge that could potentially force the closure of a classroom. who knew spring break would be so stressful? dan: one more stressor on top of everything. the state has lifted the mask mandate for schools. aren't districts supposed to follow? >> they can, but the superintendent of schools for all of california said it should
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be up to the district to decide. the locals know best what is going on with their communities and what they really want, so oakland for example still has a mandate, and they are working with labor partners to decide if the indoor masking requirement should be lifted after april 15. dan: thank you. leanne has been reporting on school issues for decades. that is why she is our senior education reporter. you can get in touch with her on twitter, you can find her on facebook and on instagram. ama: the big headline in the pandemic today, the fda authorized a second booster for people 50 and older. and those age 12 and older who are immunocompromised. contra costa county public health announced they will provide second booster shots for people in those categories. california's website has to be updated for the 15 and up category but it might much --
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not be long before second boosters are available to all. >> moderna asked it be approved for everyone. pfizer asked for people 65 and older and with medical conditions. i suspect everyone will be advised to get a fourth booster in the fall. ama: that dr. with the gladstone institute doesn't necessarily recommend a second booster if you are young and have had three shots. a bill that would require all california businesses to make their employees and independent contractors receive a covid vaccine is on hold. and oakland assembly number pause to the bill because we are in a new unwelcome tractor in the pandemic the virus receding for the moment. our vaccine team is here to answer your questions. head to our website. dan: san mateo police are investigating the death after a body was found near an on ramp to highway 101. several officers were on the scene near 4th avenue.
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police have not released details. they are still working to determine the cause of death. new details from oakland. police are on the scene of this crash at 18th and market street. it happened about 1:00 this afternoon. they say it is related to a shotspotter activation that was detected nearby. one minute earlier, in fact. nobody with a gunshot wound was located but two people were hurt in the crush and taken to the hospital. new video of the events leading up to a san jose officer shooting a man who had disarmed the gunmen. that man has non-life-threatening injuries. our reporter has more on what happened. >> this is the video police released at the press conference today. it shows a fight that broke out on east san carlos near san jose state around 3:00 sunday morning. two groups of people started fighting with each other. >> one individual produced a handgun and brandished it at another male. seeing the gun, the occupants
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and the employees began running out of the restaurant and yelling. the struggle for the gun ensues and the handgun changes possession more than once. >> the fight happened while a few hundred feet away, police were investigating a homicide. one person was shot and killed and a suspect was and still is on the loose. >> officers believe the incident at the restaurant could involve this suspect. they approached the office -- the restaurant as the fight was continuing. >> the fight moved outside. the officer told the man holding the gun to drop it several times. >> the individual didn't rock the gun. one officer shot more than once, striking the individual. >> police say the man they shot was not the one who brought the gun. he was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. he faces no charges. the person who brought the gun was arrested that night. >> whether the shooting was lawful and justified, that will come from the district attorney.
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>> in a tweet, the mayor asked people to refrain from jumping to conclusions until the investigation is complete. body cam video showing the officer asking the man to drop the gun before he shot has to be released per state law. police say it should be released within 45 days. zach fuentes, abc 7 news. ama: they reason to celebrate at the closing bell. it is the fourth straight positive trading day for the dow. it added over 300 points, closing at 35,294. the nasdaq gained 264 and the s&p on a winning streak went up by 56. california's reparations task force has been discussing the eligibility requirements in a marathon session today. our race and social justice reporter has been following the story. there was about about 45 minutes ago. where do things stand? >> good evening. we are still listening into the
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california reparations task force as we speak. the meeting was posta conclude until 6:00 p.m. but they are still into the discussion. a vote happened but it wasn't on the question at hand of who should be eligible for reparations. instead, a vote failed that would have forced a vote on that matter. that is where we are right now. all of this, concerning the question up for debate, should reparations be for those who contract -- who can track lineage to someone's is -- someone enslaved in america or black americans in general? there was heated discussion as the vote came later in the day than expected. most of the expert witnesses who testified today were in favor of lineage based reparations. the task force seemed divided. i want you to hear the language the task force is debating right now. >> i move that we define the community of eligibility based
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on lineage determined by an individual being an african-american descendant of a chattel enslaved person or a fleet -- free black person living in the united states prior to the end of the 19th century. >> you may recall the task force was set to vote back in february, but a motion to further discuss the issue pushed the vote to today. the committee is not a year into the two year process and there is no compensation plan on the table. the task force was created with the mission of documenting historical harms and determining what reparations for black americans should look like. looks like the vote on who should be eligible for reparations in the state will be delayed for a second time. discussion is going on right now, but we expect a vote at this point perhaps to happen tomorrow morning. we will follow it and keep you posted. julian glover, abc 7 news.
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dan: 7 on your side's michael finney is live with the story of things going from bad to worse. it starts with a scam. he will show you how it ends. >> do you anticipate there will be a full return? >> probably not. ama: companies are bringing workers back to the office. it is called the great return. what's different from when they left two years ago? >> clouds linger today but sunny and warm weather coming our way. i will have the forecast
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what are you recommending for muscle pain? based on clinical data, i recommend salonpas. agreed... my patients like these patches because they work for up to 12 hours, even on moderate pain. salonpas. it's good medicine dan: crane may have played a
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role in a home collapsing overnight. it had been undergoing repairs so no one was inside. our reporter explains, neighbors are concerned. >> a hillside in fairfax, covered in debris. >> this is that a visible lien. >> neighbors walk us through the damage. the normally quiet street, full of commotion. now, the whole neighborhood, on alert. >> i think i heard a beeping truck go by, which is interesting. >> cameron and bridget lived down the street. they are brave it -- breathing a sigh of relief because they considered buying the home. >> these folks were considering selling and my realtor walked me through, it wasn't the house for me and i'm really glad i didn't buy it. >> officials say the foundation was under repairs when retaining walls near the road failed and caused the home to collapse. officials think the rain may
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have played a part in the collapse. >> there was excavation taking place underneath the house and several retaining walls were undermined and collapsed, and the house fell over. >> officials estimate the home is a complete loss following the damage. the main concern is stabilizing the roadway because they say it is too narrow, they can't clean up the damage until they do that. >> the road is undermined and at this point we are trying to determine other we can have traffic going through. >> neighbors are watching the situation closely, hoping something like this doesn't happen to their home. >> i hope something was especially wrong with this one that wouldn't happen to mine. ama: some progress today in the first face-to-face peace talks between russia and ukraine in two weeks. russia's military says it will fundamentally cutback operations in kyiv to increase trust after
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failed negotiations. ukraine says the talks made enough progress for a possible meeting between president zelenskyy and putin. the recent russian troop movement away from kyiv is a repositioning. >> if it is what russia says -- there is what russia says and what russia does. we are focused on the latter. they continued brutalizing ukraine. ama: ukrainians want to involve other countries in peace talks to establish guarantees protecting ukraine from future attacks. war is keeping a family from adopting a ukrainian orphan. journey they have been on for years. our reporter met with the family to hear their story. >> ukrainian orphan, eight years old when she first spent the summer in 2019 the callahan family in california. >> she gave him a hug. chris turns to me and goes, what
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have you done? we loved her right away. she is just a spitfire. >> they started the adoption process. there was a pandemic, and then good news as 2022 dawned. >> on january 17, we were approved. we were excited for about an hour. then we got word russia had actually pulled all of their people out of the ukrainian embassy. we both thought, this is not good. what is happening? then it just went downhill from there. >> as the first shots were fired, the orphanage director loaded 130 children onto buses. in a dangerous convoy, got them out of ukraine in february. sveta among them. >> it was the worst couple weeks of my life. wondering where this girl was, where she was headed, are we
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going to lose track of her? >> she wound up at a hostel in germany. chris jumped up on a flight and managed to find the compound. she -- he showed his adoption paperwork and wiped away tears when he saw her. it was her 11th birthday. >> we had this child of ours that is fleeing a country at war. to physically see her, and see her safe was the most comfort. >> he stayed for three weeks but with the ukrainian government freezing adoptions, he came home to california without her. >> was it hard to say goodbye? >> it was terrible. it was really hard to leave. >> she has gone through a lot of trauma. and it is a helpless feeling. >> they are lobbying the state department and president biden, along with 200 other families,
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to get special u.s. visas for the children to come stay with their adoptive families temporarily, and then they must get ukrainian approval. they talk to sveta every day. >> she calls and asks, will you take me to my room? we go up to her room. everything is still there, her toys, her stuffed animals. everything. we will get her here. >> leslie brinkley, abc 7 news. ama: if you would like to help people in ukraine, we put together a list of verified groups and nonprofits sending donations and supplies to refugees on our website, abc7news.com take action. dan: let's turn our attention to the weather. ama: the wind kicked up. spencer: the rain has left us but the wind remains behind. a look at live doppler 7, we are rain free at the moment but let's focus on the wind. we have gusts up to 24, 25 miles
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per hour. 30 one mile-per-hour winds in san francisco. around the area we have breezy conditions. pleasant with fog building along the coast, beginning to overtake san francisco. current readings, 55 degrees in oakland and san francisco, 59 in san jose, santa clara 57. here is a view at the golden gate where we see blue in that direction. temperatures right now, 63 in petaluma, 64, 62 concord, and livermore 58. the view from the mountain, looking down to richardson bay. a look at the forecast for down fog continue to develop overnight. expect patchy drizzle near the coast and bay during the early morning. that probably means wet roadways in some locations for the morning commute. a mix of clouds and sun tomorrow and expect sunny and warm days, a string of them beginning
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thursday. the forecast for the overnight hours, notice the high clouds passing by. low clouds and fog developing along part of the coast and across the bay. be on the lookout for spotty drizzle in the morning, and wet slippery roadways. by the afternoon, things dry out even with passing clouds. skies will be bright. low temperatures overnight will be in the mid to upper 40's, a little chilly in santa rosa, a low of 39 degrees. overall a seasonally cool overnight period. tomorrow's highs, 60, 64. 65 at morgan hill. on the peninsula low 60's up to about 63 redwood city. on the coast, 50 six. pacifica and half moon bay, 61. highs of 67, 69 at santa rosa, 67 in napa. east bay hi 63. the inland east bay tops out in the mid to upper 60's.
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a little lower in san ramon, and further east we will see highs in the upper 60's. here is the accuweather 7 day forecast. warming trend begins on thursday, quite an impressive one. thursday, friday and saturday, inland highs in the mid to upper 70's. not much of a warm up on the coast, maybe up to about 60 saturday, then cooling breezes with a few high clouds on sunday. temperatures drop off a few degrees, but they will bounce back on monday and by tuesday, we will be looking at highs inland in the upper 70's to near 80. low to mid 70's of long -- along the coastline, 60 at the coast, spring weather. dan: thanks, spencer. will smith slaps chris rock at the oscars. tonight, a legal expert weighs tonight, a legal expert weighs in on what consequences the hi, i'm mike holmes. i'm here with ivan from agm renovations america's kitchen and bathroom renovators
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ama: the oscars moment will be etched into memories for years. >> while -- wow. ama: actor will smith took exception to a joke chris rock made about his wife and came on stage and slapped the comedian. there are questions as to whether smith could face legal action although rock has declined to press charges.
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>> when you thing about a criminal case, it is the people of the state of california versus the defendant. it is not chris rock versus the defendant. they could make a decision if they wanted to move forward. as a practical matter, it is not going to happen. when you talk about a misdemeanor assault and battery case, you do need the complaining witness to come forward. you need there to be a police report. it's possible in a domestic violence situation where the police could say, this is too important, we are concerned about the victim, we will step in. in this kind of case, it wouldn't happen without the complaining witness. ama: jada pinkett smith made statements today in a brief post on instagram, stating, this is the season for healing and i'm here for it. you can stream the oscars right now on hulu, disney is the parent company of hulu and abc 7. you will find oscars coverage on demand through the abc 7 bay area connected tv app available for apple tv, android tv, amazon fire tv and roku. dan: empty offices, empty roads.
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they were early symbols of the pandemic. a reminder of how quickly our lives changed. they are changing again. >> lots of employees don't want to come to the office unless there is a good reason. dan: the great return. what it means for the commute, communities and how much people
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>> building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. dan: the coronavirus could soon become endemic, health risk that we will live with. as we embrace that, companies are finally calling people back to the office. it is the great return. ama: as part of our commitment to build a better bay area, we partnered with the people investment consulting firm that surveyed hundreds of companies across the u.s. to see what changed and what returning workers faced. dan: stephanie is here with a closer look. >> it is getting busier in san francisco's financial district. certainly not five days back in the office, but companies are bouncing back.
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the question is, what will that look like in 2022? employers say flexibility is the future. getting back to the office comes with a renewed sense of excitement. team bonding with new faces, new expectations for many, a new experience. >> it was this relief of back to normal, but i could see someone and not see a piece of them. >> mary is the vice president of people operations at simpler, a software company that helps businesses streamline communications within the workforce. the company is planning a gradual return to the office this spring. her first day back was last week. greeted with a packed conference room. >> it was bubbling. people were so excited, like a party. i get to see you. >> she isn't alone. there is heightened the man pushing the great return. sequoia, a people investing
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platform, conducted a survey of 450 companies across the u.s., a majority of which are based in california. 24% of companies will require employees to return to the office in some form this spring. that is up from 6% reported since november. 21% are undetermined, citing uncertainty of covid variants. around 11% will require a return during the summer or fall and winter of 2022. roughly 6% already returned. the most, 37%, are still undecided. >> a lot of employees don't want to come to the office unless there is a good reason. the reasons are collaboration or working on projects together or culture or being able to interact with colleagues. >> landon's director of software solutions at sequoia. he says most companies are embracing a hybrid work life or employees are in the office two days a week, but the majority have the choice, come in or stay home.
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>> that is where we see a shift, let's make this employee centric. >> employee centric even when it comes to salary. >> what stood out was seeing the companies that are not adjusting . that went up slightly. over half the companies are saying you can keep your compensation wherever you go. >> kyle is vice president of rewards at sequoia. he says this year companies are making a concerted effort not to lower compensation. for example, the survey found more than half or 53% of companies are allowing employees to keep their salary if they move, even if it is a location with a lower cost of living. only 22% of companies would adjust salaries if moving to a lower cost of living labor market. 21% are undecided. some employees will get to keep their salary regardless of where they live. for others, the influx of new hires may not be the best for their paycheck. according to home, veteran
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employees are getting shorthanded as companies try to compete for quality candidates being offered big bonuses. >> employees that remain may not be experienced -- ends. saying -- experiencing the benefits. turnover and increases to new employees is happening. >> most companies say the great return will be incremental and not immediately. some, keeping capacity restrictions in place although it likely won't be necessary. >> we aren't seeing an influx in people coming into the office where capacity is an issue. >> more than half of companies say at most, 20% of their employee base will be back in the office. san francisco-based people management software company lattice is one example. do you anticipate a full return at some point? >> probably not. i don't think we will ever see 80%, 90% capacity consistently because we are hybrid and people
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like the flexibility of being more intentional about the office. they want to come to the office for a reason. >> a reason that is worth making the commute. the commute being a big factor. coming up tomorrow night, the big investment some companies are making to make the commute worth it. how the hybrid work culture will look different. ama: our most companies planning on keeping the same space or are they downsizing? >> it is interesting, the survey found 60% of companies have not reduced their leases or indicated they don't plan on it. in the future. only 28% have actually downsized and cut their leases, leaving the rest undecided, weighing both options. for more details, we have survey results on our website, abc7news.com. ama: stephanie, thank you. >> will wells fargo -- more wells fargo customers fall prey to a s
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dan: 7 on your side has reported about a scam spreading across the country, imposters posing as bank employees tricking them to send the money through zelle. the scammers are laughing at victims. it happened to a woman from san jose. she turned to michael finney to get help. >> they steal their money and laugh. this woman knew seconds after that sending, after she hit send, she realized it was a scam. she yelled at the impostor who was still on the phone and he began taunting her. she called the real bank and said the bank gave her the brushoff. she's not sure which one has made her more furious. >> oh my. >> the moment is seared in lisa's head. she watched $3500 disappeared from her bank account. the scammer who took it was still on the phone. >> the guy knew i knew.
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he cloud me. he taunted me. i went, oh my god. you think this is funny? >> it happened when lisa was working here, at a winter festival. >> i was selling novelties, stuffed animals. >> she had no credit card terminal so she was using her personal zelle account to collect money. that is when it happened. >> i got a call that said wells fargo. >> the caller says he was from the bank and someone was taking money from the account. >> i thought, one of these customers must have accessed my account. >> lisa tried to figure out who to trust, the customers or the guy on the phone. the caller id matched wells fargo number. >> i continued to talk to the person. >> the man on the phone said she had better act fast or lose her money. >> we have to hurry. so i'm panicking. >> the man said she could reverse the transaction by sending the money back to herself through zelle. >> i'm frantically stopping my
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money from being suspiciously taken from my account. >> the man told her to delete her phone number from zelle and put her own name as the recipient. >> there are so many customers. i couldn't focus. >> she dumped -- ducked into a restroom and sent the money. she received text messages saying she had sent the money to lisa, that is her. when she's checked her account, the money was gone. >> i guess my name really isn't my name somehow. i'm authorizing the money to go into my zelle but it doesn't actually go to my name. >> unbeknownst to lisa, the imposters use tournament phone number to create their own zelle account to a receiver money. the caller id was fake. a spoof. >> that is when i ran out of the bathroom and said it out loud to people who were standing, i just got taken for $3500.
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>> she called wells fargo to stop the transfer but the bank said, file a claim. weeks later, they denied it. they said she authorized the transaction and zelle had no fraud protection. >> although i know it is fraudulent, you have full knowledge the scam is existing, so you are going to give me my money back. >> it didn't. wells fargo says, we never want to see anyone become the victim of a scam and we are actively working to raise awareness to help prevent these heartbreaking incidents. >> afterwards, you are left looking at your account going, i worked for two months for nothing. >> wells fargo refunded some victims of the scam, but not others. they wouldn't tell us why, citing customer privacy rules, although we didn't ask for anyone's private information. we wanted to know the ground rules. i want to hear from you. send me your stories about buying a home, a car, paying off
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a loan, anything to do with money, we want to hear about your trials and frustrations. go to abc7news.com/7onyourside. we are hearing so many of these stories. dan: wells fargo has to do something about this. they do catch you at your weakest moment. >> and she was using zelle. you think -- they are sending out millions of them. dan: thanks, mike. ama: is the pandemic of her? a look at spring break travelers (music throughout)
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ama: a live look at san francisco international airport where travel is picking up. we are nearly at pre-pandemic levels. spring break is getting underway. by some estimates four out of 10 americans say they plan to travel. for a look at conditions at airports, our reporter shows us the scene. >> terminal three is coming back to life as passengers are starting to fly again. united and sfo handled 110,000 spring break flyers last weekend and is expected to carry 18
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million passengers systemwide from mid-march until the end of april. how was it going? >> busy. but it has been good. >> no reservations about being around people and flying? >> no. >> this family from san mateo hasn't flown anywhere for a year. where are you off to? >> spring training arizona. >> looking forward to this? >> yes. i've never been to spring training. >> a new app based check-in system is helping customers bypass kiosks. they can take the bags to the drop off point. >> this will be a great way to figure out what will happen in the summer, one of our busiest times for travel. we are happy to get customers on their way. >> the airline realizes some people haven't flown for a long time, so making the terminal check-in process faster and stress-free will help. as more people fly again, united has been doing hiring events, including one today, thaad customer service representatives
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and ramp staff. at sfo they have hired 300 people in three months on top of bringing in personnel from the airlines other hubs to fill in. for those who might be traveling this summer, there is good news. united will be adding about 30 more flights for the peak summer season compared to 200 flights per day no. -- per day now. ama: let's get a check on the weather. people are heading out to spring break. dan: spencer christian is tracking the forecast. spencer: this might not be a great place to be right now, a little breezy and cool but we have warm weather coming our way. overnight, clouds and fog expanding. patchy coastal drizzle near the bay. a little drizzle in the morning, mix of clouds and sun tomorrow, then a warming trend starts later in the week. overnight, this will be the pattern, high clouds, lots of high clouds passing over and a pretty good area of fog and low clouds near the coast and around
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the bay shoreline. that will burn away by midday tomorrow, giving way to sunnier conditions. overnight lows will range from mid to upper 40's and highs tomorrow, mid 50's at the coast, not very mild but around the bay shoreline, some low 60's and some mid to upper 60's in inland areas. here is the accuweather 7 day forecast. a string of sunny days coming our way and a warming trend starting thursday. inland highs in the mid to upper 70's writing on saturday, low to mid 70's around the bay shoreline and a brief cool down on sunday, then temperatures bounce back up monday and tuesday. tuesday, we will probably have highs near 80 degrees in some inland areas. dan: here we go. thanks, spencer. beware of coyotes. some hiking trails in presidio are closing starting next week because it is pupping season. spring starts in the early spring and runs into september. coyotes are protective of their pups and if somebody gets too
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close, especially if they have a dog with them, coyotes can become aggressive. >> during the pupping season, if you have a dog and you encounter an aggressive coyote, the coyote is trying to tell the dog you need to leave. the best course of action is to have your dog on a leash and leave. don't linger with the dog. dan: the closures are preemptive and have been successful over the years and avoiding confrontations between coyotes and dogs. ama: don't get close. that is how people feel about larry. dan: it is good advice, don't you think, larry? larry: i would be the equivalent of the abc 7 coyote, i think. just stay back. look how far you are. kyle shanahan talks about quarterbacks. plus, the woman who has unlimited work until jimmy g. gets traded. take a look at these pictures from portugal.
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we will meet the artist and her reason for painting dozens
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i'm greg, i'm 68 years old. i do motivational speaking in addition to the substitute teaching. i honestly feel that that's my calling-- to give back to younger people. i think most adults will start realizing
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that they don't recall things as quickly as they used to or they don't remember things as vividly as they once did. i've been taking prevagen for about three years now. people say to me periodically, "man, you've got a memory like an elephant." it's really, really helped me tremendously. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. >> now, abc 7 sports. larry: the warriors have six games left in the regular season to figure things out. starting with the best team in the nba, the phoenix suns who are coming to town tomorrow night. the level of frustration, evident after a rocky road trip and the return of a healthy steph curry would change everything. they hope you will be back the
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last game or two of the season. golden state needs to make a commitment to defense. effort, intensity. stop the ball. andre iguodala returned. he is not to see -- used to seeing teams score so easily. >> the game is more of a pickup. i score, you score. we don't get mad when someone scores on us. that is the aphis -- the essence of basketball, it's competing. this is a score's league. i will make you run as hard as possible. now i am out there, and it is hard to speak on things. larry: hopefully he can stay healthy. the season hasn't started yet, speaking of, but the giants are banged up. lamonte wade jr. will probably miss opening day because of a sore knee. he will be reevaluated in 10 days and joined evan longoria who needs finger surgery. spring training in scottsdale, giants and padres, carlos rodon
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throwing smoke. struck out four and allows one hit. the new giant looking good. joc pederson, nice lefty swing and this is deep and it is gone. six-zero giants and the third. with buster posey retired, joey is hitting over 300 this spring. the giants win, 11-6. onto one of our favorite subjects, 49ers coach kyle shanahan fielding questions about his quarterback since the moment the niners traded up to get trey lance. training camp might be a little awkward if this continues. lance will get first-team reps and spring workouts because jimmy can't throw. whatever happens with jimmy, this will be trey lance's job. >> that is why we looked into trading jimmy. we believe trey can be ready. if we can't upgrade in another
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way, we won't get rid of a good quarterback. quarterbacks are hard to come by. some teams don't have any at all. we have three that we are happy with. that's a good thing. we will probably not announce a starter. i don't think i ever have. larry: said felt be the third quarterback. an artist from portugal became a fan of jimmy gurule below watching the 49ers, and this is her work. she her fame began when she drew a photo of jimmy g. and it blew up. fans asked, why don't you draw a photo every day until he gets traded? she draws them on her ipad, wakes up in the morning in portugal and comes up with something. she never thought she would be up to 55 drawings and still going. >> i started doing this for fun. started when my boyfriend asked me to do a goodbye and thank you
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jimmy illustration. it got a lot of love and people liked it, so i started drying jimmy g. every day until he gets traded. that is how it started. just for a fun boost. it became 55 drawings so far. today's was a little late because i didn't know what to draw. that is the stressful part. drawing is fun. ideas are always welcome, so keep them coming. larry: this could go on a while. she says it takes about half an hour to draw each picture. it takes longer to come up with the idea for the next drawing. you can see on social media, you can reach out and if you have ideas, fire away because this could go into the summertime. chris alvarez is working on a big piece with her at we will have that coming up later. dan: she is quite prolific. larry: the art is fantastic. jimmy g. as you have never seen them before. ama: coming up starting at 8:00,
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it's judge steve harvey followed i avid elementary and blackish, then to tell the truth followed by abc7news at 11:00. that will do it for this edition of abc7news. thanks for joining us. dan: for spencer christian, larry and all of us here, we hope you have a nice evening and we will see you again for the news at 11:00.
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♪ t atrektage at sony pictures studios, this is "jeopardy!" please welcome today's contestants-- an editor from los angeles, california... a rabbinical student from galesburg, illinois... and our returning champion-- a pension calculation developer from cary, north carolina... ...whose 2-day cash winnings total... [ applause ] and now here is the host of "jeopardy!"-- mayim bialik. [ applause ] thank you, johnny. welcome, everyone. pulled away after an impressive true daily double moment
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in yesterday's show to take the lead and she never looked back. makes sense that the former state track champion was able to beat the competition to the finish line. let's see what happens in today's game as we welcome jennie and john. good luck, players. let's go to work in the jeopardy! round with these categories... notice the quotation marks. and... jackie, you will select first. around the world, $1,000. - jackie. - what is japan? - yes. - tv shows, $1,000. - jackie. - what is "stranger things"? - yes. - fan fiction?--$1,000.

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