tv ABC7 News 400PM ABC October 10, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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go needed to bring more awareness to the major news outlets, local news. i thought this was a good way to get people to see it. kristen: sending a message with pain. a san francisco home now supports the colors of the iranian flag and a rallying cry for the country's people. >> thank you for joining us. this comes weeks after a 22-year-old iranian died in the custody of the countries so-called morality. these. -- morality police. a san francisco man came up with an idea to paint his home. his story is spreading. >> this marina district home is sending a powerful message to the world. the words women, life and freedom prominently painted on its facade.
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those words, the rallying cry for the people of iran and around the world. drawing attention to the country's fight for rights. protests ignited over the death over 23-year-old who died in custody for allegedly -- allegedly violating job rules. this is a first-generation persian american. he came up with the idea to paint his home just a week ago. >> it happened quickly. with fleet week coming up, it was important to get it done. i thought this would be a good way to get people to notice it. >> he insists this is not a story about him. it is about raising awareness, which seems to be working. >> all of friends in irvine reposting about this. all my friends around the u.s. >> sarah is persian american and walked two miles to see it it >> people who don't know what's going on will walk by this and questioned it and want to know more.
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>> -- of the group -- believes this home is stressed one example of how this evans ration may actually create change. >> not the same they were before. the young generation is organized. they are working in teams on the street and on social media. everybody knows that this time around, it is different. people from all walks of life are helping. >> solomon is not sure how long the paint job will stick around. >> today's problems don't worry me. >> he is just grateful to be persian american and living in this country. and being able to paint his home and seeing the response from his community. >> joy, smiles at i love it. people. it makes them smile. which makes me smile.
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kristen: attorney at -- the california attorney general -- california built responsibly. kristen: among the suggested new guidelines, local governments should consider wind patterns relative to fire history. he also says they should limit development along steep substance increase assess ability for fire eating. >> the document we are presenting is a proactive tool for local governments, providing them with clear and consistent guidance to address wildfire ignition risks, evacuation and emergency access at proposed fellow. kristen: that was rob bonta addressing what to do and how to build responsibly in the age of wildfires. dan: charges filed against the primary suspect in the kidnapping and murder of a family in merced.
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jesus salgado is to be arraigned on four counts of murder. he did not enter a plea, saying he -- he wants time to find an attorney. an eight-month-old baby and their uncle was found in the families orchard. salgado says he used to work for the victims until they parted ways after an argument. his brother is also facing charges in connection with the case. jury selection began today in the sexual assault trial of disgraced film mobile harvey weinstein. one of the witnesses set to testify is the first partner of california. jennifer newsome is among the five women who have accused weinstein of sexual assault between 2004 and 2013. he has pleaded not guilty and says all of the encounters were consensual. weinstein is currently serving a 23 year sentence in new york. kristen: residence of a flooded out high-rise are suing the building's owner the suit filed
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on behalf of 56 tenants accuses hines, the real estate company, of mishandling two massive water leaks. the first happened in june when a rooftop pipe burst, forcing 600 people from their units. the building flooded again in august. some tenants addressed the media today, saying they have been treated with a lack of respect by the company. >> we were shuttled between various hotels, not knowing where we were going to stay. we would find out through notes slipped under our door in the middle of the night. kristen: the building will be uninhabitable until next year. heintz issued a statement denying the allegations, adding, "our staff has worked round-the-clock." san francisco marked indigenous peoples' day with a number of celebrations. city leaders voted to redesignate columbus day in 2019. this year, morning changes to reflect awareness of native american history.
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>> ♪ >> dancing to remember. dancing to heal. many native americans today taking indigenous peoples' day to hard. >> today is a day for us to reclaim our stories, reclaim hourly, share in prayers. >> in california come a bit push to help the native american community heal. governor newsom declared september 23 native american day & three bills related to civil rights of the indigenous people. one bill removed the word squaw from places. for many native americans, that word is derogatory and painful. >> we know our women were enslaved it reminds us of the genocide. these are harmful. this is trauma. >> another bill renames hastings college of law.
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hastings sponsored the massacre it's of thousands. >> i am a descendant of those people. my grandmother was one of the last speakers of our language. >> april mcgill is with the american indian culture. >> when we talk about what hastings did to our people, our language keepers. >> the new names plus indigenous peoples' day bring a chance to reteach and relearn history. >> it is a beautiful thing to give homage and teach it right. >> on this day, many are honoring the legacy and celebrating the cultures, contributions and resilience of native evils. >> we are celebrating our resiliency but also remembering those that have sacrificed their lives for us to be here. dan: oh my gord. that is the reaction to this year's winner of the pumpkin off.
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[cheers] dan: the massive pumpkin grown by travis finger of minnesota waiting at 2560 pounds. that is a north american record. lena howland has more on the events leading up to the waving in including what travis did to grow such a humongous pumpkin. >> pumpkin by pumpkin, lifted by a forklift. each one bigger than the last. >> it's great. you never see anything like this, except in half moon bay. >> i always tell people back home it's the super bowl of pumpkin spirit >> -- pumpkins. >> travis drove his pumpkin from minnesota. >> this size, i have been hitting it with fertilizer 14 times a day. >> the -- hoping lightning will
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strike twice. >> they all said it was a once-in-a-lifetime type thing. gosh, hopefully we can do it two times. >> he is up against heavy competitors. >> it is estimating to be around 1500 pounds. >> cindy toback from washington is back for more. >> these take so much care. they also take a lot of water, which is a challenge in california. i've got my own well at home. unlimited free water is to my advantage. >> this third-grade teacher says in her time away from the classroom commit she is watering 150 gallons per plant per day. it is the people of half moon bay that keep coming back. >> the community of half moon bay, their roots are in out for culture and come in farming specifically. they honor and love pumpkin farmers. i feel that love.
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>> the winner gets nine dollars per pound. anyone who can break a world record of more than 2700 pounds gets to brat -- grand prize of $30,000. dan: travis fell short of the world record, but we'll head home back to minnesota with $23,000 in his pocket. kristen: coming up, police spending amid calls to defund apartments. a study with confusing results. experts discuss new data on colonoscopies. robot pets are providing a sense of calm. >> it was definitely a gorgeous day outside. there is no doubt we have so many outdoor plans i will
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community, the colon cancer screening trial was supposed to be the gold standard, following 80,000 people over 10 years, some who got a colonoscopy and some who did not. the results came out sunday. >> they found colonoscopies did not drastically reduce the odds of finding colon cancer as much as we thought. >> other studies have shown getting a colonoscopy could reduce your risk of dying of colon cancer by as much as 70%. this new study showed it was only 20%. >> we are not ready to say no, we are not going to do colonoscopies. there's just too much data out there to support the real benefit in colon cancer prevention. we want to understand where this study fits in among the other studies. >> the latest trial only studied people in norway, sweden and poland. diet hand lifestyles are different in the u.s. and could bring different results.
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>> we know that some in the united states hive a higher incidence such as black americans. there's also a lot of people who have a family history or may be higher risk. this study, by no means, disregards colonoscopies. >> colonoscopy started being recommended for people over 50 in the mid-1990's. katie couric famously televised hers after her husband died. >> the rate of colon cancer and a younger population, people 40 and up, has been going up over the past 20 years. which is why the recommendation was changed recently for people to start getting colonoscopies at 845. it is important for anyone out there who has questions to talk with a professional and not just listen to headlines. tristen stinko animal-rights groups are plotting a utah jury's verdict in a burglary case. saturday, the panel found paul
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pickles heimer not guilty on charges relating to a 2017 incident where two piglets were taken from a farm. this is video taken from inside the facility in utah. it is important to note, this case was about burglary, not animal-rights. even so, pickles heimer shows the case -- hopes the case can change behavior. >> i would just challenge consumers, citizens of the united states, to look for yourself. ask yourself, are these conditions consistent with your values? overwhelmingly when people see these things, they say i am not. >> the piglets they took our healthy and living at a sanctuary. a smithfield foods official told the salt lake city tribune they are disappointed in the verdict, saying it may encourage more
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vandals. >> fleet week wrapped up and it was a disappointing end for those who hoped to see the blue angels. the angels did fly friday and saturday during partly cloudy but fog and clouds force them to cancel yesterday. their next scheduled performance in the bay area will be next october. that's fleet week once again. at least they got two days in. a bit of a bummer they couldn't fly yesterday. kristen: i know. we have changes coming our way. let's talk to mike. mike: hi everybody. happy monday. you can see the fog starting to push through the gap and make its way towards sfo. that is going to be the case just about everywhere. mostly cloudy with patchy fog and drizzle tomorrow. mostly sunny, breezy and mild. most of the seven-day forecast and still no signs of storms. last year we had record-setting rain in october. a lot of people were talking about that, wishing we could
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replicate it. but it is not looking possible. we do have warmer weather outside if you want to go for a walk. you will find warm conditions inland east bay. mid-80's to upper 80's there. mid to upper 70's and the north bay. 92 in ukiah. list around oakland and san mateo. san francisco is only 60 degrees. you got this area of high pressure anchored, parked right here in the pacific northwest. that is going to push storms to the north. every once and a while it will bring us a breeze. sunday, we will warm up a couple of degrees. a couple of days we may see a little more sunshine at the coast but that is going to be the mainstay. wind manageable. let stand 15 miles per ever -- per hour. through the delta, may be a tick faster. at 6:00, watch the cloud cover role in. by 7:00, temperatures drop every
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hour as clouds spread throughout the bay. some of our coastal valleys in the north bay. by the time we get to 10:00, most of us in the 50's and 60's. tonight, 40's around santa rosa. low to mid 50's elsewhere and the moon does rise at 7:19. it is almost full. it might be nice to see, the harvest moon. you can see tomorrow morning, mainly cloudy along the coast. and then we may see a little more sunshine in the afternoon along the coast and we did today. 77 in milpitas. mid 80's for the rest of the south bay. 72 to 77 for the peninsula or low to make 60's -- low to mid 60's along the coast. low to mid 80's to the north bay valleys. along the east bayshore, richmond is 69. everybody else 71 to 78. inland east bay neighborhoods, mid to upper 80's. here is my accuweather 7 day
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forecast and you can see low to mid 80's pretty much the trend through saturday. low to mid 70's around the bay at low to mid 60's at the coast. possibly sunday and monday, little bit cooler weather. we only get 11 hours and nine minutes of sunshine sunday. it will start feeling more like fall. kristen: we will want to sleep in more. dan: service and speed. kristen: a new study on the quickness and accuracy of fast food. mike: fired for not turning on his webcam. an employee sues his company. you might take something for your heart...
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go employee in the netherland was told to turn on his webcam during work at -- he refused and was fired. techcrunch reporting the court back to the worker and the company has been ordered to pay the employees court costs, back wages and $50,000. keep this in mind if you are a remote worker. you could have more rights where you live they have those duet company had orders. the weather is getting cooler and the bad guys are tearing up to rip you off. the federal trade commission's warning that if someone calls claiming to be from pg&e or any other utility and says your services will be cut off if you do not pay, it is a scam. real utility companies don't do it that way. if you don't pay your bill, you will have plenty of warning before electricity is cut. including getting the opportunity to see if you qualify for a low income or emergency payment program. with electric bills expected to
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be higher this winter, the bad guys will be working the phones. the consumer group flyers rights may be getting close to a win on requiring minimum seed size on commercial jets. the group has been after this for years. it recently was back in court advocating that seats be large enough to take 90% of the population, not 50% which is in effect. flyers rights was founded when a napa real estate agent was stranded on a texas tarmac for nine hours. this thing is a major deal. there is a real concerned you could actually get people off a plane. kristen: quickly enough. thanks. dan: it is hard to get on. still to come, we dig into police spending amid calls to defund departments. kristen: missile strikes hit civilians in ukraine.
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your heart is the beat of life. if you have heart failure, entrust your heart to entresto. entresto helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or i thn oranma, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto. dan: abc 7 is fact checking
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claims that rising crime in oakland is a result of defunding police. in reality, local police spending has gone up across the country. stephanie sierra is digging through the data and joins us live with her investigation, one you will only see on seven. >> our analysis has found local spending on police has spiked in 90% of the cities and counties across the country since before the pandemic. of all the police departments here in the area, opd saw the largest increase in funding. questions are being raised as to how the money is being spent. in the wake of george floyd's murder, widespread protests calling to defund the police swept the nation. for years, city leaders made bold promises of big budget cuts. in june of 2020, mayor libby schaaf to set the oakland police department could see the largest
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funding cut in the budget. the reality, that's never happened. data analyzed from the i team found the budget actually increased by more than $11.4 million that year. >> the whole problem is the focus on defunding. >> fast forward a year later. >> yesterday was historic. >> in june of 2021, oakland city council voted to cut $20 million from its police force to go towards program aimed to help address mental illness. but the headline at the time didn't reveal the full story. while those cuts did happen, the i team found opd's ajit still increased $5.7 million. >> they are reflective of being tone deaf. we have had the longest defund campaign here in oakland in the country. we have been saying for years, take money out. >> despite years of widespread calls to defund the police, abc7
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data analysis found opd's fiscal year budgets increased by nearly 18% from pre-paem police chief armstrong says that apartment has 680 officers, but is budgeted to have 726. >> the money is in the budget. >> gaia says that apartment grossly overspent on overtime. he says $5 million to $10 million was allotted for overtime pay in the last budget. yet $30 million was spent. >> some officers were making $400,000 a year. go overtime is critically important when you are shortstaffed. >> don't you think that money could have been better spent in terms of reallocating the funds to hire more officers? >> the reality is this, let's quit playing. >> we didn't get a straight answer.
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>> it is the police chief's responsibility to assign the officers to whatever service needs to be addressed. >> yet records reviewed show several key positions in the department were cut due to budget constraints. 40 eight officer positions that were assigned to the surge 911 response units to help reduce wait times and lower overtime usage. another four positions with human resources would have helped to process things like hiring requests, also frozen. both resources that would've helped the department. we asked why those units were cut. >> the chief does not have the authority to cut positions. >> but the city council says that's not true. >> the council does not cut positions. we only deal with the budget. on a regular basis, that is up to the chief and the administrator. >> after trying to clarify, the chief admitted some units had to be reduced. >> we had to redo several units. and someone -- in some of those
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units had to be cut. >> is that true? >> that's not true. 911 has always been a priority. and the council, this council made efforts to make sure they were fully staffed. the police has to provide a monthly report to us on staffing. >> where's the disconnect? the chief is saying he has been forced to cut these positions and you are saying no, we fully staffed these units. what happened? >> the money is there. i do not supervise the police. >> politicians are good with words. the numbers speak for themselves. >> for me, it shows the quality of leadership within the police department. >> we are being asked to do a lot, an a lot of it on overtime. >> while their budget size sizable increase, reform advocates tell us the city's community response programs
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created to help respond to mental health calls are still struggling to get funds to operate. dan: how does opd's budget increase compared to other cities like san francisco? >> opd saw the largest increase come in nearly 18%. san jose was close behind with 17.6. san francisco was not and we will explain why there was such a big gap tomorrow night. kristen: president biden and other world leaders are condemning rush apostle latest shelling of ukraine. missile attacks struck city centers across the country, killing civilians. >> in ukraine, russian forces firing off several missile strikes. president zelenskyy saying russia deliberately targeted civilian areas in the early
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hours to inflict as much harm as possible. from the southeast to this playground in ukraine's capital. >> this is the biggest attack on the capital since the beginning of the war and the first attack on the city center, making this a clear escalation. >> vladimir putin calling his escalation a response to the explosion saturday on the strategic bridge, the longest in europe linking mainland russia to crimea area, which the kremlin illegally annexed in 2014. >> that seems a clear indication that he not only supported but essentially ordered these attacks on civilian infrastructure. >> ukraine not taking responsibility for the blast, which would significantly harm russia's war effort. >> this was the only way to get supplies into their. >> the u.s. joining global condemnation. hundreds of ukrainians seeking shelter in subway stations,
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singing as missiles fell. ukraine denouncing we have had also strikes at the power plants and our emergency services in our government is doing everything to recover quickly. >> an emergency meeting of the g7 group is set for tomorrow. ukraine's president zelenskyy is expected to speak and request more military support and urge members to increase pressure on russia. dan: did his election season nine dozens of ballot drop boxes are open across san francisco. the boxes will be open 20 47 :00 on election day. you can find locations for these online. you can also return your vote by mail ballots to the post office
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at the city hall voting center that opens tomorrow, or any of the 501 polling places on election day. kristen: researchers have figured out the magic number. how many steps you should be taking each day. (vo) a medicare advantage plan should come with all the benefits you want and zero compromises. with anthem blue cross, it can. just go to anthem.com/answers or call 833-797-4179 for a free one-on-one medicare plan review.
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ask about our zero dollar monthly premium plans that include dental, vision and hearing coverage along with transportation, a gym membership and zero dollar copay for prescriptions all for zero extra cost. plus, you could be eligible for extra benefits to help you save even more. we have plans with up to twenty-three hundred dollars a year to help you pay for over the counter health items, groceries, and living expenses like cell phone, electric or water bills. all on a single prepaid mastercard you can use at thousands of locations nationwide. call anthem blue cross at 833-797-4179 or visit anthem.com/answers and get a medicare plan with zero compromises for you and your wallet.
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kristen: no statement from jordan poole about his fight with draymond green. she was presented with a trophy for leading the league in free throw shooting. then scored 25's -- 25 points and 23 minutes, losing a close one to the lakers. the warriors play their first preseason game since the scuffle. raymonde has apologized for punting his teammate and is taking time away from the team. they didn't say how long. chris paul really let his plane do the talking there.
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>> you think about what jordan is dealing with and able to push everything aside and enjoy a good game. it is an awkward situation. dream on his away from the team and hasn't been seen outside the press conference he held for 40 minutes saturday. he was contrite, he apologized to jordan and his family. and he also mentioned that ultimately it will be on jordan to see whether the relationship can be repaired. it is an unfortunate situation for a championship team that one week from tomorrow has ring night and we saw that. the eyeballs will definitely be on chase center next week when they play the lakers. as far as the other stuff, we are waiting to find out anything. jordan at some point will speak publicly, just not ready yet. >> let's hope they can move on and get past that. we are weeks away from the start of a major holiday sales event
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from retailers like target, amazon, walmart. there is a huge slow down when it comes to how much americans plant to spend this shopping season but experts say that could mean more discounts. experts believe amazon's crime day event will set the holiday sales pace in terms of consumer spending as well as the timing of the discounts. here we go. the holiday shopping season. i suspect a lot of people are anxious. inflation is outcome a gas cost a fortune. the economy is dicey. >> you look at those variables and it is like, wow. it always catches up with us because it is so beautiful outside. it's already the middle of october, we forget christmas is a couple of months away. like most of those come i will be tightening my belt a little this year just because of the unknown. >> just get three things.
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chris, you too. do you plan to spend more or less money on christmas this year? >> i haven't thought about it. isn't that what santa is for? right? kristen: why do we have to think about it? >> good point. >> i am a tough one to influence peer i think advertisers hate me. i think people will be waiting a little longer. >> to see what kind of sales are out there and procrastinate a little bit. kristen: if you like to track your steps, research has found your magic number. 8600 steps a day will prevent weight gain in adults. 11,000 for adults who are already overweight. researchers followed more than 6000 people for four years. the cdc says moving just 20 minutes a day is highly beneficial to your health. 8600 steps, could you break that down? how many miles is that if i am walking typical steps?
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>> three to four miles. >> somewhere in that range. go i used to be in the 10,000 staff club during the pandemic, still haven't gone back to the gym. it didn't work for me. that is why i started swimming. i really need more work. >> 18,000 steps i did once. it still defense on what you eat too. you can do 10,000 steps but if you eat 4000 calories, that's not going to help. >> go to disney. you can get 25,000 to 30,000. kristen: never thought about that. disney, that should figure into their marketing campaign. >> need the food, walk it off. >> we should all move as much as possible. on the other hand, here is something to chew on before deciding on fast food. a study says wendy's ranked last in drive-thru satisfaction due in large part to having the worst accuracy rating.
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according to the study, wendy's got 21% of their orders wrong. chick-fil-a top the list in satisfaction, despite having the slowest service think oh average time of 8:30. it is a little slow, but they seem to get it right. it is a big deal, i suppose. there's nothing worse than driving off and realizing you are missing something. >> i was sad to see it because i love the frosty. it is so good. >> i go sometimes just for the frosty. kristen: my, you know about chick-fil-a. >> and wendy's. i could see wendy's hasn't gotten any better since i stopped manning the window at the drive through. not sure what that means. chick-fil-a, i asked a person of authority. their goal, once you order and to get you out, is actually about eight minutes. but if you look at their line, i
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drove by there today and i looked at the line and said nope. it was out in the street. >> around the block sometimes. >> that's why. kristen: in and out lines are like that too. >> i think you see every chick-fil-a built is spilt with two driving lanes. just for that. kristen: increasing customer satisfaction. >> your brain is an amazing thing. but as you get older, it naturally begins to change, causing a lack of sharpness, or even trouble with recall. thankfully, the breakthrough in prevagen helps your brain and actually improves memory. the secret is an ingredient originally discovered...
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dan: the drought revealed a world war ii boat at the bottom of lake shasta. the forest service shared pictures on facebook saying the higgins boat appeared when the water levels were very low. the boat was removed last fall. officials have no idea how it got hit -- how it got there. the forest service says the boat was assigned to the uss monrovia, an attack transport shipped that served at patton's headquarters during the invasion of sicily. that might be the one slight benefit to the drought. kristen: history revealed. but yes, the drought. i don't think we have any rain coming our way? mike:. no. i was looking at the long-range models and towards the end of them which is about 16 days out,
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there may be our first offshore wind event. that is completely opposite of what i wanted to see. but, it's two weeks away. ears what's going on outside. the sun sets at 6:39. hopefully you can see the nearly full moon. clouds will be on the increase. 50's and 60's by 10:00. if you are worried about the air quality, it is going to be cleaned today, tomorrow and wednesday. temperatures will jump around three to four degrees every day. kristen: thank you. dan: pets are helping to comfort elderly patients. kristen: but the animals are not real. robotic dogs and cats are providing a sense of calm.
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kristen: at 8:00 bachelor in paradise. the good doctor at 10:00. abc 7 news at 11:00. pets can provide comfort for people in hospitals. but they are not always practical for some. some hospitals are introducing robotic vets. leanne melendez explains how this new program is turning skeptics into believers.
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[pet sounds] >> before you make any judgments, we ask you come with an open mind. >> these cats don't need to be fed or go outside or anything. they just stay with you inside. >> zuckerberg san francisco general hospital now has 50 robotic cats and dogs for their patients on the acute care for elders unit. they cost between $120 and $150. the dogs are more expensive. nurse becky remembers giving one to an agitated patient part >> we gave her a cat it was like night and day. she loved it. she was petting it, talking to it. definitely helped reduced her agitation. this painting -- patient named her pet ruby.
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there is a sense of calmness because somehow the nonliving brought comfort to the living. >> whether a pet is living or is a stuffed animal or a doll, or this robotic patch, it really doesn't matter. it is that opportunity to connect and feel connected. >> that's what many elderly patients need. >> if they benefit the elderly, they are great for children. a columbia university study found these robot companions lowered pain and anxiety in children who were hospitalized. kim meredith is the ceo of the san francisco general hospital foundation. since 2004, that foundation has raised 34 million dollars thanks to the auction. that is how the robotic pet pilot program was started. they look and sound so real that
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at times, a few patients seem to not realize the difference. >> we have sometimes people think they are actually real cats that died and we stuff to them. one of our patients said, i hope that was a happy cat when it was alive. so that was funny. >> bringing laughter through technology is the best medicine. kristen: so lifelike. so cute. abc7news is streaming 24/7. you can get the bay area streaming tv app on roku, apple tv, fire tv and google tv. you can get the latest breaking news and weather. join us wherever you want. that is it for abc7news at 4:00. abc7news at 5:00 is coming your way next.
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building a better bay area moving forward finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. the instability that we've been provided and us kind of being uprooted from our life. it's just really tough. four months after being displaced because of flooding residents of a troubled luxury high-rise in san francisco are now suing the properties management company, but they say the suit is due to much more than just water damage. good evening. i'm amidates and i'm dan ashley. thanks for joining us. this comes after the residence of 33 tahama were uprooted back in june when burst pipes flooded the apartment building and then some tenants reported theft and unauthorized access inside their apartments stuff was stolen and now some of them are suing abc 7 news reporter. tim johns joins us live from the
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