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tv   ABC7 News 500AM  ABC  June 10, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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>> live breaking news. >> we cannot confirm there are nine victims that were struck by gunfire. they are all expected to survive. liz: breaking news this morning. nine people recovering after
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struck by gunfire and a shooting overnight in san francisco's mission district. all are expected to survive. police tell us the suspect or suspects opened fire just after 9:00 last night during a block party happening at 24th street and treat avenue. when officers arrived they found multiple victims with gunshot wounds. as of now there is no suspect information available. police say the incident appears to be targeted. there is no threat to the public at this time. abc 7 news spoke to santiago lirma. he lives close by and heard those gunshots. >> i live in the neighborhood. i live a block away and heard the sirens myself. this is quite an outlier. this is generally a safe neighborhood. i was here with my three month old son an hour ago. i'm very shook up and concern
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for the victims. this is in a stream case. we hope to not see this anymore. liz: one of the victims underwent surgery last night. another was treated for non-life-threatening injuries. abc 7 is following this breaking news story. abc 7 news if you wantabc 7 news to stay up-to-date on this story, download the app to get mobile alerts sent to your smart device. good morning and thank you for being with us on this saturday, june 10. i'm liz kreutz. we have a lot to get to. let's start with another -- a first check of the forecast with shayla girardi. good morning to you. shayla: hey cool start to the day. we have low clouds. sunlight drizzle but temperatures on the cooler side. a tad bit cooler than this time yesterday. we are in the 50's to start the morning. 55 at oakland.
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54 at san mateo. continuing to see the onshore flow that is keeping temperatures cooler. this afternoon will be a tad bit warmer. a slight cool dent in the next couple of days but a nice weekend ahead. we have the fog out there -- liz: thank you for being with us. now to the latest incident involving a driverless car suddenly coming to a stop in san francisco and then being stuck in the middle-of-the-road for hours. this comes amid a debate among government leaders over how to regulate the vehicles. abc 7 news tim johns spoke with someone who witnessed the incident. tim: dylan federman his husband to work when suddenly he noticed something bizarre stuck in the middle-of-the-road. >> this was kind of strange. i started videotaping. tim: it shows a driverless car stopped on ninth street.
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it was in the middle of the street for at least two hours and was worried about the safety risk imposed. >> there are a lot of emts that go through here, fire trucks go through here, police go through here. it is just not safe to have this area backed up. tim: he tried reaching -- reaching out multiple times and walked to other offices blocks away. he says after receiving little help he decided to contact sfnta . >> they came up before crews and cited the vehicle. tim: he says he's reaching up because of the safety risk he believed the vehicle post. he's not feeling one who has spoken out in recent times. several officials have raised questions about the need for further regulation on autonomous vehicles, with one supervisor tweeting about if they add value to the city. they sent abc 7 news a statement. "in cruising -- for everyone we share the road with.
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we are always improving our technology and apologize to anyone inconvenienced the incident." federman thinks more oversight is a way to go. >> i would like to see some kind of legislation that need for transparency from these technology companies, and forces them to have a way to contact them a case of emergency. tim: tim johns, abc 7 news. liz: they received authoriza last june to roll out 30 vehicles that can carry passengers and select parts of san francisco. five much later, waymo permission. both have applied to start charging fares and operator on the clock. the cpuc has a hearing set for june 29. there's a benefit to help the family of the mother and two children killed, police are calling a murder suicide. the family pardoned with el
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patio for a taco sale today. all money made will go to funeral costs per lily, stephanie and emiliano. the bodies were found in fremont on tuesday. police say the one-year-old boy in the four-year-old girl were killed. they believe the mother died by suicide. the family currently has a gofundme page up. in four days they have raised nearly $18,000 of their $50,000 goal. in the south bay we have learned a man died on his honeymoon in hawaii while snorkeling. to make matters worse, dozing to the couple say thieves stole every thing they had the tragic accident. lauren martinez has the story. laura: tragedy strikes twice while on their honeymoon. on june 1, the newlyweds were snorkeling off the shore of electric beach in hawaii who when the men disappeared under water and drowned. the honolulu emergency medical
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services said first responders transported the man to a hospital where he later died. >> it is tragic to see the circumstances. lauren: take gofundme page identify the man as stephen phan. "as if this cannot be worse, all of their belongings were stolen. the thieves took their cell phones, wallets, money, clothing. they even stole their car rental." >> it is unreal. you question that person as a human being. lauren: friends were not ready to comment but described phan as nothing short of an amazing person. abc 7 reached out the honolulu police for an update on the couple's personal belongings taken during such a devastating time. an employee from erin's dive shop released a statement describing the beach where this happened. "electric beach is extremely popular with locals and has become a popular spot for tourists. every thing depends on the conditions and the day.
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it tends to be a great spot for beginners." lauren martinez, abc 7 news. liz: university campus has a new owner. the chronicle reports real estate firm bought it and plans on finding new tenants to use it for academic purposes. holy names was founded in 1868 but closed last month citing declining enrollment and financial problems brought on by the pandemic. it is called the oakland hills location home since 1957. the site where 36 people lost their lives in the tragic go ship fire be replaced by housing. the property was bought by oakland nonprofit unity council for $2 million last month. that's according to the chronicle. the nonprofit plans to build housing and a memorial for the victims of the fire. in december of 2016, more than 100 people were attending a music event when a fire erupted inside the warehouse. the building could begin as early as 22 any five.
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bart -- 2025. the transit agency says part of the deficit is due to a decline in ridership brought on by the pandemic. california public transit agencies are asking governor newsom a $5 billion bailout. officials expect the increase in fares to bring in about $26 million through july 2024. the money is desperately needed. >> we are paying more for energy, the electricity to run the trains. that is one of the big costs drivers we have. we need to pay our workers a living wage. also just a fixed cost we have of train systems with 50 stations. liz: the average share of $4.20 will be going up by $.23 in january. the southbound lanes of 680 are close for roadwork. crews are replacing pavement.
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the shutdown started last night and the lanes are scheduled to reopen monday at 4:00 a.m. detours will be in place. the closure only impacts southbound lanes. in california, multiple wildfires have been blamed on pg&e and its equipment. the utilities taking actn to prevent future fires by burying power lines. work is underway in sonoma county. on thursday night during a town hall, pg&e revealed more lines ll be put underground. the press democrat reports work will start on a six-mile stretch along highway 12 from santa rosa the kenwood and should be completed next year. peas coffee is closing its location at a warehouse in oakland that was damaged in march when the roof collapsed during the storm. the company says layoffs will begin july 19 for employees who don't elect to work at the company's new location in tracy. employees were relocated to different sites and i will lease 110 could face layoffs -- but
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now at least 110 could face layoffs. now though whether with shayla jordan. --girardin. shayla: we have a nice weekend coming away. i will have a full look at the we can forecast, plus the seven-day later in the show. liz: also ahead, federal indictment unsealed. what prosecutors say former president trump was involved with as he defends his innocence. first, bracing in one country. how a track in sonoma county differs from others as nascar drivers and fans get ready for the big race this weekend.
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liz: a live look the golden gate bridge camera. thank you for joining us on this early saturday morning. president biden will deliver remarks and celebration of pride month. the white house party was supposed to happen on thursday but was delayed due to smoke from the canadian wildfires.
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biden will adjust what he calls ugly and hysterical acts against lgbtq+ citizens. he will call at various republican bills that target transgender youth. he's announcing a plan to protect pride related events. the oakland mayor teamed up with the lgbtq center for queer youth trivia night at oakland city hall. first transgender jeopardy champion and oaken resident amy schneider hosted the event. >> it is hard to be a youth of any kind, let alone a queer youth right now when there is so many negative headlines out there. we wanted and i that is nothing about that, no politics, no headlines, and just like trivia and prizes and goodie bags and fun. liz: it included food, prizes, ofhe lgbtq+ community to beers san fra's pride parade is sunday, june 25. abc 7 is a proud spon. our morning anchors will host
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the event. you can watch the parade live right here on channel 7 and our streaming tv app. nascar racing is returning to wine country this weekend. thousands of fans will take over on sonoma raceway for the toyota 350. cornell barnard takes us there. cornell: speed have come to the right place. the nascar cup series is bringing the raor back this weekend -- roar this weekend. >> i'm a diehard fan and i've been coming here since 1998. >> we have attentive nascar fans in northern california. this is the one time of the year with visit the area. cornell: where else can you get this close to the cars, pit crews, drivers? he's here for the two-mile track packed with twists and turns. >> most racetracks don't have the elevation changes we haven't sonoma. a lot of blind, rolling corners.
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you drive of the hill and turn -- in turn one and two. down the hill for 7, 8, 9, 10. cornell: traffic was tough getting here on friday afternoon. fans knows there are a couple of must haves. number one, sunglasses. number two, your protection. yeah, you will need it. >> obviously, we purchased some of these because it was a little out. i did not realize how loud it would be. >> is allowed? >> yeah. cornell: we found cameron. this 12-year-old is already a rising star on the stock-car racing circuit. >> i'm working on it. i know i can make it and be on this racetrack sooner or later. >> we were never really racing fans coming up. cameron, people of color in general and diversity in the sport, he helps us with fans with the sport.
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nascar, we are fans of it. we love it. cornell: the race is on sunday the checkered flag drops. start your engines. cornell bernard, abc 7 news. liz: let's get a check of the forecast. should be a nice weekend. shayla: nice conditions coming away this afternoon. we got a cool, cloudy start to start today. a little cooler than this time yesterday. cloudy skies. a little morning fog. by this afternoon some sunshine will work its way into the mix. temperatures staying below average. we will not see more of a warm up until the end of this week. isolated showers are also going to be a chance this afternoon but we are talking about minor chances. could see some thunderstorms with a higher elevations. not going to see much moisture from this system. we start the day with the onshore flow sticking around. we have the marine layer to start the day as well. temperatures in the 50's. 55 at hayward and oakland.
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a tad cooler in san mateo at 54 degrees. we do have a little bit of wind out there. not too bad. most of us seeing winds and the single digit but this will pick up and in the afternoon. you will see the gusts in the teens. be prepared for a breezy day. we have that marine layer to start the day, cloudy skies. we see this taper off into the afternoon hours. also talking about the slight chance for thunderstorms. not very much. you can see bear valley some of the higher elevations. that moves out as we get into the later afternoon hours. a little more sunshine for us as well. a lot of areas still pocketed with the marine layer. seeing cloudy conditions into the afternoon. all these cloudy skies and cooler temperatures is thanks to a low-pressure system off the coast. that will stick around until tomorrow. we see the marine layer move back in. really slight chance for the afternoon storms.
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even less than what we see today. highs today. it will be a nice one. we are talking about below average temperatures. most of you in the 70's. santa cruz coming in a tad cooler. upper 60's for you. menlo park coming in at 68 degrees. air quality looking nice today. south in the mid 60's. going to see some breezes this afternoon. san rafael in the 70's today. a mix of sun and clouds are most of you guys. temps staying on the cooler side thanks to that low-pressure system. as this system moves out, temperatures are going to bump up a bit. nice for us today. we start to gradually cool into your work week. one the low-pressure system moves out temperature start to rise again. we will see temps closer to average for this time of year. we have the cooler conditions to start the day. a little sunshine into the mix by the afternoon hours. nice temperatures this weekend. we have a cool start to these days, liz. liz: thank you.
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after the break, to pay or not to pay? that is the question we dive into when it comes to riders paying when taking uni. how is impacting agency dollars. like going hiking, just to hike to the bathroom. reaching for the bar, just to reach for pads. waiting for the sunset, just to wait for the stall. discover gemtesa. a once-a-day pill proven to reduce all 3 key symptoms of oab: leakage episodes, urgency and frequency in adults. do not take if you have a known allergic reaction to gemtesa or its ingredients. tell your doctor right away if you are unable to empty your bladder or if you have a weak urine stream. tell your doctor if you're taking medicines that contain digoxin or if you have liver or kidney problems.
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side effects may include headache, common cold symptoms, diarrhea, nausea, urinary tract and upper respiratory tract infection. ask your doctor about gemtesa. and see how urovant could help you save.
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at kaiser permanente, ask your doctor about gemtesa. we care for all those who make your family, well, your family. that's why all of us work together to give them the care, and caring, that any family would. kaiser permanente. for all that is you. liz: funding for local transportation is an issue we have been following. the states wants to see muni on the path to being financially healthy. leah melendez spent a morning riding on mun to get ai look at the problem. leah: we decided to ride on oldest publicly operated transit system in america. paying using my clipper card. it is reassuring to see that most lines are back in your pre-pandemic levels. also encouraging is this recent statement by the executive
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director of the san francisco municipal transportation agency who oversees muni. >> most people are paying as they did pre-covid. leah: paying, did he say? we decided to record who paid into did not. -- and who did not. these two women did not pay. neither did he. no, this couple walked right on without paying. this man for same reason his clipper card never worked. nope. too busy talking on the phone. no. no. this passenger paid with clipper card but the person behind her did not. no. no. no. and no. and one more no. that is $12.50
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collect. three quarters of the people in the bus never paid. a driver told us a good day for her is when 40% of passengers pay. >> i'm honest but if i were really pressed and did not have anything to pay with, i would do the same thing. leah: some are candid about the reason for not paying. >> i think post-pandemic it is kind of like the norm as far as i have seen. especially when he goes up and down market. i don't know. people don't pay. i don't know. leah: there are other ways to pay that perhaps we did not catch on camera. >> we have invented new fair instruments -- fare instruments. you can pay with your phone rather than with her clipper card. leah: have you heard of the muni mobile app? >>do you use it?
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>> no. leah: we found that honest tours to had a one-day pass on his phone. so you paid using the app? >> yes. leah: there are people who feel because others in a paying, why should i? >> absolutely. that's the reason. leah: that attitude shiftin psyo his crowd behavior -- referred to as crowd behavior. >> it just gets to a point where it is like what is the point. leah: because bus drivers have been assaulted in the past for trying to collect a fare, it's understandable they don't engage with anyone who refuses to pay. that is the responsibility of the fare inspectors who are supposed to ask passengers to show proof of payment. >> we have transit inspectors out there collecting good data about who is paying and who is not paying. leah: one was the last time you
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saw an enforcement officer? >> i would say probably a year ago. on a train, not on a bus. leah: here's the problem with not paying. transit fares represent 18% of the revenue or about $219 million. that is part of the reason why muni had a $134 million deficit in 2022. too many numbers for you? perhaps you're interested in knowing how muni is seriously thinking about addressing the shortfall. listen up. this will likely affect you. extend the hours of parking meters on weekdays to include nights, and on sundays. that is 28,000 parking meters that could potentially be active on sundays. >> that brings it an extra $18 million a year. it's enough to save three lines. leah: other proposals include
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expanding neighborhood parking permits, increasing taxes on offstreet parking in downtown garages. another idea that is circulating in the past is downtown congestion pricing. after the pandemic, downtown has been slow to recover. so many proposals out there. why not do something simple like in force fares? >> we should enforce fares but it's a small piece of the problem. even if we had 100% compliance, that would not solve the problem. we need the state to help out. leah: the federal stimulus money's are respected to run out. sfmta hopes the state will provide short-term relief funds. if not, the transit agency may have to scale back muni to pandemic levels of service when only 40% of routes were up and running. >> so many people are riding on
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muni and bart. we cannot have them fall apart. leah: plan melendez, abc 7 news. liz: still to come, expected to be ok after a shooting overnight in the mission district. but we know this morning as he wait to hear more information from authorities. air quality alerts. which states are still dealing with toxic air as fires continue to burn in canada.
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don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. healing from within is a powerful thing. ask your eczema specialist how dupixent can help heal your skin from within. announcer: building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. >> the laws that protect national defense information are critical to the safety and security of the united states and they must be enforced. liz: indicted on 37 federal counts. the allegations against former president donald trump as he makes his first public appearance today since the
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indictment. good morning. we will start this half-hour with a check of the forecast with meteorologist shayla girardin. shayla: we have a cool and foggy start but a little sunshine coming our way by this afternoon. taking a look out there now. definitely on the cooler side. temperatures of about five degrees cooler than this time yesterday. all of us in the 50's out the door. 53 at san francisco. we have the fog to start the morning. this afternoon we will see some of that burn off. some sunshine in the mix. temperatures today will be warmer than they were for us yesterday. nice weekend ahead. we stay below average. the marine layer moving in overnight. we will look at what things will look like tomorrow, plus this week. all of that is in the seven-day forecast. i will toss it back to you. liz: we continue to follow the overnight shooting in the mission district were nine people were shot. all the victims are expected to
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be ok. here is what we know this morning. according to police, the shooting happened just after 9:00 last night at treat avenue and 24th street. police believe it was a targeted incident and say there is no threat to the public. there is no suspect information as of now. all the victims were taken to san francisco general hospital. abc 7 spoke to a native san francisco supervisor hillary ronen who lives blocks away from where the shooting happened. one of the victims had undergo surgery last night. the other victims were treated for nonlife threatening injuries. we will stay on top of this breaking news story on the abc 7 news app. if you update push alerts, you will get updates on you t device. donald trump is expected be back on the campaign trail, one day after the unsealing of a 37-count indictment into his alleged mishandling of classified documents. for the first time a former use time is facing federal criminal
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charges, including willful retention of government documents, conspiracy, and obstruction. an aide to the former president has been charged in the case. here's allison cossack with the latest. allison: donald trump facing 37 count indictment unsealed by the special counsel following an investigation into the former president's alleged mishandling of ossified records. prosecutors say in the indictment trump was personally involved in the willful retention of government records after leaving office, and then obstructed authorities' efforts to retrieve them. the indictment alleges well president trump gathered classified documents and other materials in boxes, including information regarding defense and weapons capabilities of both united states and foreign countries, united states nuclear programs, potential vulnerabilities of the united states and its allies to military attack, and plans for possible retaliation in response
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to a foreign attack. the classified documents allegedly packed into boxes and stored at his private club at mar-a-lago in florida, which hosted events for thousands of guests. the indictment included images of documents allegedly unsecured in a bathroom, a ballroom, and a shower. special counsel jack smith saying trump is innocent until proven guilty, but also saying the laws apply to everyone. >> our laws that protect national defense information are critical to the safety and security of the united states and they must be enforced. allison: the indictment alleges on two separate occasions trump showed military documents to people who did not have security clearances to see those documents. just hours before the charges were revealed, trump was on the golf course at his club in bedminster, new jersey. he insensate -- he has
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he has done nothing wrong. trump is scheduled for arraignment in miami federal court on tuesday. allison cossack, abc news, new york. liz: we will keep you posted on that. the four indigenous children who went missing after their plane crashed in the colombian jungle last month have been found. a miraculous story. the siblings were after missing for 40 days. colombian president gustavo petro announced the news on friday. the small plane crashed into the colombian amazon on may 1. all three adults, including the childrens' mother and pilate did not survive. -- pilate did not serve -- ot did not survive. smoke is still drifting south from canadian wildfires. the nation's capital region code purple on thursday.
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reena roy has the latest. reena: from lingering haze in new york city and barely visible bridges in philadelphia, a massive plena smoke still shredding major cities in america. similar conditions in cleveland, baltimore, and washington, d.c. a so-called code purple issued in the nation's capital signaling hazardous air quality. >> pei told me it was code purple. i thought i was getting better. we are not used to this language to deal with this type of air quality. reena: air quality extending south as far as atlanta and memphis, and west as st. louis and indianapolis. in harrisburg, pennsylvania, the air quality index hitting 491 on the one to 500 scale, even worse than new york city's 484 on wednesday. schools in new york and philadelphia switching to remote learning. parents encouraged to watch for signs of shortness of breath, chest pain and wheezing. people urged to stay indoors or mask up. >> this is our old friend.
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one you never want to see again but it makes a difference. reena: conditions are slowly improving in some areas with winds shifting and smoke started to move out of the u.s. and eventually north back to canada. reena roy, abc news, new york. liz: in the south bay, work is set to work on a long-d pr to increase flood protecting coyote creek near san jose. the preparation cau controversy among the un-housed and theirates zach fuentes has more in why officials say it's a matter of public safety. zach 2017 highlighted the need to improve local waterways. valley water is starting a flood protection project. >> we need to make sure the areas in san jose are protected from potential floodwaters. zach: that is why they say the project is set to do. in just days the nine-most
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stressful be prepared and construction will start right after. >> the first phase out on the goal is to have the completed by the fall of 2024. . then would begin the second phase and start construction and 2025 -- in 2025. zach: up to 200 unhoused people live along coyote creek and had to clear the area. as we first reported in april, valley water voted to give san jose $4.8 million to do that work. some had tickets understand -- advocates say those living along the creek were not given proper alternatives. >> they just get swept from place to place, broken promises and broken people. zach: the city says it has successfully housed approximately 30 people at an interim housing site. additional housing and shelter opportunities will be based on availability. valley water since the coyote creek protection project has to start now because it's tied in with the anderson dam retrofit
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project underway. >> the timing of the projects have to meet so if there are any delays in the coyote creek flood protection project it does not delay the other project. zach: meetings for residents impacted started tuesday. another is june 14. zach fuentes, abc 7 news. liz: the open police department is holding their second annual gun buyback event. it will take surrendered firearms and repurpose them into gardening tools. anyone who turns in a firearm can receive up to $300 and gift card. it will be at -- from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. last year, opd collected 130 firearms and gave away more than $10 worth in gift cards. still ahead, could we soon see the warmest year on record? we speak to climate experts about how those winter storms earlier in the year player role. here is a live look outside right there at the san francisco
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skyline. we will check in with shayla in just a ♪ always in that state of mind ♪ ♪ living on a high vibration ♪ ♪ so hot gonna make it melt ♪ ♪ and i'm lovin' what i'm tastin' ♪ ♪ que bonito lugar lleno de tanto sabor ♪ ♪ so much flavor ♪ ♪ un future brillante se acerca ♪ ♪ ahhhhhhh ♪ ♪ nos gusta mezclar ♪ ♪ como malteada ♪ ♪ aqui hay lugar ♪ ♪ yeah we livin' in the golden state ♪ ♪ dame mas, fres-co y real ♪ ♪ (wooh) dale gas ♪ ♪ vive en el estado dorado ♪ ♪ ♪ thousands of women with metastatic breast cancer are living in the moment and taking ibrance. ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor is for adults with hr+/her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole significantly delayed disease progression versus letrozole.
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liz: here is a live look from our emeryville camera. an fda advisory panel voted to affirm the alzheimer's drug lekembi. this shows clinical benefits for treatment of the disease. it paves the way for full approval. the medication, a monoclonal antibody, is one of the first dementia drug set appears to slow the cognitive decline. a decision is expected by july 6. the world meteorologal organization projected we may see the warmest year in the next five years. what exactly is that mean for the bay area? especially when it comes to fire season? dustin dorsey spoke with experts to find out the answers.
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dustin: another day of june gloom. temperatures mostly in the 70's. not exact a commonplace for this time of year. >> across the valleys of san jose and livermore, concord, santa rosa, they can be pretty hot this time of year. i think for those places it is great. for those of us on the coast it would be nice to see more sunshine. dustin: the days of sunshine and warmer temperatures could be here before you know it. the world meter logical organization recently was eased global climate updates and say it's going to get hot. with nearly a 100% certainty experts predict in the next five years earth will see the warmest year on record due to global warming and the el niño conditions. >> some of the warm ocean temperatures closer to the atmosphere. we expect the atmosphere get warmer when we have these large el niños. dustin: professor eugene cordero
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says we have seen temperatures rising steadily over the last three years, but the report shows we can see even bigger changes for our bay area whether. >> i would not be surprised to see over the next few summers we will experience very hot temperature experiences and maybe breaking records like we have never seen before. dustin: that does not bode well for fire season. our wet winter has produced more fuel and hotter temperatures increase fire risk. sarah barth to mitigate the concern. >> that includes bringing in prescribed fire, low severity fire, thinning the forest to help make them healthier and it can do what they would have been over 100 years ago before they were logged. dustin: she is confident the work to prepare for the possible record future is the best chance our force have to survive as a -- forres
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dustin dority abc 7 news. shayla: taking a live out at the bay bridge. we have a cloudy start to the morning but it's shaping up to be a nice day. a little sunshine coming away this afternoon, plus a warming trend in store. all that coming up in your seven-day forecast. i will have that after this break. like going hiking, just to hike to the bathroom. reaching for the bar, just to reach for pads. waiting for the sunset, just to wait for the stall. discover gemtesa. a once-a-day pill proven to reduce all 3 key symptoms of oab: leakage episodes, urgency and frequency in adults. do not take if you have a known allergic reaction to gemtesa or its ingredients. tell your doctor right away if you're unable to empty your bladder
5:46 am
or if you have a weak urine stream. tell your doctor if you're taking medicines that contain digoxin or if you have liver or kidney problems. side effects may include headache, common cold symptoms, diarrhea, nausea, urinary tract and upper respiratory tract infection. ask your doctor about gemtesa. more time here, less time there.
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liz: here's a live look from the san mateo bridge camera. to sports now. denver takes game 4 against miami. larry beil talks about last night's highlights and more. larry: the denver nuggets need one more win, getting a huge game from aaron gordon. they are one game away from the first ever nba championship. low-scoring contest early.
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jimmy butler, buzzer beater. the heat up by 1. travel for denver in the second quarter as jokic rolled his ankle. he did return. did not miss a beat. 27 footer. knocks it down. four assist for the joker. monster second quarter. the nuggets by 4 at the half. this would be with authority. he had a couple of soul snatching dunks for 20 points and 11 boards. jokic to gordon. denver up by 11. we go to the end of the third. more from gordon. the archbishop with a 27 points and 11 of 15 from the field. miami gets within 7 but never made the nuggets a comfortable. butler turnover. bruce brown had 21 off the bench. denver had 14 three's.
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the nuggets victorious. 108-95. >> this will be great for my teammates. i know my teammates need me. doing it for my brothers. >> i'm ready to win the championship. we have the tools to do it. it's been on our minds for a while. we are locked in. i don't think you have to overthink it. we are ready to win. larry: cubs and giants. seems like he is at every game. giants, three hits after two out. rb i double down the line. lamonte wade jr. scores. to the seventh, bases-loaded and white house for the cubs. nico warner base hit off the first page. 2-1 cubs. brandon crawford strikes out and that ends it. the cubs win 3-2.
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a's visiting milwaukee. cheeseheads in the house. tripling to the right-field corner. look at the slide by brian noda. he is safe. notice sneaking his left hand under the tag. that is beautiful. 2-0, athletics. shea lingle ears froze up like perkins. a's win 5-2. that's a wrap on morning sports. have a great weekend. i'm larry beil. liz: the 11th annual pride celebration returns in person. free to be me is the theme. community members can head to downtown for a fun filled day. the free family from the event will include live entertainment, dj, food vendors, and resources. it starts at 11:00 a.m. until 5:00 tonight. let's get a check of the forecast now with meteorologist shayla girardin. shayla: good morning.
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we have cloudy skies to start but for heading out this afternoon some sunshine in the mix. we have that thick marine layer once again. it's heavy this morning. most of us seeing the cloudy, foggy skies. that is what we are talking about to start the morning. temperatures once again remain below average. that will be something we continue to see over the next few days. a slight chance for thunderstorms this afternoon. this will be minor, isolated storms and not much moisture from this system. those starting up the weekend with a cool start. we are all in the 50's so we have the onshore flow keeping temperatures cool. 50's out the door. 53 at san francisco. a tad warmer at half moon bay. here is the marine layer to start the morning. that persists into the early afternoon hours. we start to see a little bit of clearing into the afternoon. once again talking about the really slight chance for storms. not going to be very much but this is because we have this low pressure system setting up the
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coast -- sitting off the coast. that's giving us that really slight chance of drizzle some of us have been seeing the start the morning. the marine layer comes back in overnight. we have a cloudy start to our sunday. by sunday afternoon seeing a slight chance for clearing and a little bit of a chance for thunderstorms but not going to be quite as significant as what we see this afternoon. highs today. even though it is warmer than what we saw yesterday, still seeing temperatures below average. 68 percent of cruise. same for menlo park. 70 degrees at palo alto. going to see a mix of sun and clouds. somebody will hang onto the marine layer into the afternoon hours. that is because of that trough of low pressure continuing to keep temps pretty cool for us this afternoon. 70 for union city. a little warmer for fremont at exactly 71 degrees. not a bad day to get outside. a little warmer than what we saw yesterday.
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coming in at 82 for brentwood. jumping ahead to your seven-day forecast, we cool down over the next few days. we will see the mix of sun and clouds in the afternoon. gradually cooling thanks to that trough of low pressure keeping temps below average. by mid to end of the week when the system moves out, that is all he temperatures warm up once again. a little more sunshine coming into the mix. we will see more seasonal temps for this time of year. looking back you will start to reach the 80's again. very cool on the coast. 50's and 60's all week long. overall, cloudy start to the day. a little chance of sun this afternoon. not too bad for us this weekend. liz: thank you. you can watch all of our newscast live and on-demand at the abc 7 bay area connected tv app available for apple tv, google tv, amazon fire tv, and roku. download the app now and start streaming.
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juneteenth on the waterfront. what you can expect that the embarcadero today, including fun for likes or followers. their path isn't for the casually curious. and that's what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it's what they were born to do... it's what they live to do... trinet serves small and medium sized businesses... so they can do more of what matters.
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best-in-class specialists to care for all that is you. liz: the city of clara raised the pride flag over city hall to celebrate june's pride month. this was their seventh annual lgbtqia plus pride flag raising ceremony. juneteenth on the waterfront is being held on the embarcadero. it starts at 9:00 and last until 2:00 p.m. pick people -- people are -- admission is free. another event to keep in mind, the san francisco juneteenth parade. it starts at 11:00 a.m. at market and spear street a few block away from the ferry terminal plaza. ai foodservice could be the new wave for restaurants. they have work shifts at oakmont
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east senior living facility. what some thought would be a threat is decreasing the staff's workload. >> it definitely helps keep the attention of the servers on the floor so we can do this part back here. liz: instead of replacing human workers, they're responsible for bringing food out and bussing tables. this gives more time for the service to interact with the residents. some of the people living there say the robots event any interruptions from happening. kitchen staff members aai servers also take the pressure off staffing concerns when i worker calls out sick. there you go. coming up next on abc 7 mornings at 6:00 a.m., new developments in the shooting and the mission district. what we have any from san francisco police as the investigation continues. another driverless car stuck in the middle-of-the-road. what crews had to say about its vehicle causing frustration on the streets.
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announcer: from abc 7, lob, breaking news. >> at this time we can confirm there were nine victims struck by gunfire. and they are all expected to survive. >> breaking this morning, nine people are recovering after they were struck by gunfire in a shooting overnight in san francisco's mission district. as you heard, all are ete

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