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tv   NBC Bay Area News  NBC  September 29, 2020 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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ber interruptions and insults, what went wrong? >> new evacuation orders and a new look of the destruction. we are live. good evening, everyone, thank you for joining us for this special 9:00 p.m. newscast, i am janelle wang. >> i am raj mathai.
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we want to start with what we saw tonight on stage. chaotic and contentious. the first presidentabial debate 90 minutes of president trump and joe biden face-to-face in cleveland. no traditional handshake you can see. from the start, both campaigns taking turn answer questions, that's out the window. >> can i be honest? >> try to be honest. >> sir, -- >> that's absolutely not true. >> sir, gentlemen, i hate to raise my voice and back and forth, it was exhausting at times to watch. chris wallace from fox news showing his frustration primarily with the president throughout the debate. there were few uninterrupted
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answers by either candidate. >> the top ten cities and the top 40 cities are run by democrats and many cases radical left and they got you wrapped around their finger to a point where you don't want to say anything about law and order. i will tell you what, the people of this country want and demand law and order and you are afraid to say it. >> you can be the first president of the united states to leave office and having fewer jobs. >> i am not sure the american people benefited from tonight. both sides trying to claim victory at this late hour. >> let's bring in our analyst larry gerston, what happened tonight? we have never seen a debate like this one and sometimes seemed like a matchiboxing match. >> i have been watching debates
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for 50 years and nothing like this one. at one point he called the president the clown and other point he calls him to shut up. it was the president who again and again really just dismembered his office in the way he behaves and interrupting where chris wallace, the moderator, constantly telling the president please stop, please stop. it was an embarrassment because it was hard to get anything out. when we see something out, some were quite differeicult to take. >> at one point the moderator asked the president if he'll condemn white supremacy, this was his response. >> i want to see peace. >> do it, say it. >> what do you want to call them. >> white supremacy. >> stand back and standby, i will tell you what, somebody got
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to do something about antifa and the left. >> stand back and standby. what do you make of that? >> stand back and standby. get ready to rumble. and he went ahead and said they got to get in there and protect people. he talked about the cities, stand back and standby is not exactly condemning white supremaci supremacis supremacists. tomorrow morning is going to be that phrase. >> president trump routinely interrupted joe biden leading to this exchange. >> i am not going to answer the question. >> radical left -- >> will you shut up, man. >> who was on your list, joe? >> this is so unprecedented. >> larry, could anybody get their point across tonight?
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>> one thing i found interesting. remember how many times joe biden was looking right into the camera as he's looking at you in the living room, he was talking to me tonight. that was a brilliant move. he did it over and over again which sort of like cast the president's side. don't listen to him, i am looking and talking to you because i care. that's the kind of thing people are going to remember more than anything else. >> larry, last question here, did the president succeed tonight? if you watch his puns tonight, he came across fierce and came across his game plan. >> he came across incredibly rude. he ended up the pluses that may have been working together. this may have been something where the president failed. as a person who is above it all
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and all the good things he's done. he fell apart. biden crumbling, it was the president. it was the president absolutely saw how frustrated he was as the night went on. i don't think it went well for the president tonight. >> the voters will decide. larry, thank you for your insight. >> next debate is scheduled for october 15th in miami. based on what happened tonight, there will be a lot of focus on the moderator, steve skully from c-span and the final debate october 22nd, moderated by kristen welker. things are changing at wine country. >> there are new evacuation orders in western napa county. people living their c los angelange calistoga
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are being told to leave immediately. >> here is a look at where the fire is burning right now in napa and sonoma county. this map shows the fires permitted today. flames burned more than 46,000 acres. containment up to 2%. so far this fire destroyed 113 structures that includes 28 homes in sonoma county and 52 homes in napa county. several wineries damaged by these flames. 14,000 people remained under evacuation order as another 19,000 are on standby prepared to leave at a moment's notice. >> we continue to follow these fires from multiple angles. melissa colorado who's on the ground for us the past 48 hours. what are you seeing right now, melissa? >> reporter: raj, driving up and
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down at silverado used to be this picture-esque experience but now we are passed by so many fires. this place had it all, a wine cellar and vineyards. this is what it looks like. you can see the tasting room is reduced to a mountain of rubble. >> it is just hard to comprehend. >> reporter: red wine sweat and tears along the silverado trail in calistoga. on sunday night, the glass fire destroyed 17 years worth of work. >> i looked at the winery and everything was engulfed in flames. >> reporter: right in the thick of the guilty or not guilty glow, glimmers of hopes. they were the firefighters crew
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and first responders. >> reporter: the family's house is still standing but there is a gaping hole in the roof. >> we'll need to find a home. >> reporter: the fire transformed their once healthy vineyards into rows and rows of dried up fruits. >> this is the life blood of making wine. it is still standing and here. everything is right outside. we are incredibly fortunate. >> reporter: up and down the silverado trail, we found other wineries that were less fortunate. boutique hotel were burned as well. at the glass mountain inn were left standing with no tourists and all residents under an evacuation order, downtown calistoga never looked this empty. >> my fiance wants to move and everyone is sick of it. this is my home.
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>> reporter: the wineries say they hope to get creative and find a different way to sell their wine. this will changes but will not reduce. that's a sentiment we are hearing from a lot of people here in calistoga. they'll rebuild and need a lot of help in the community especially those in the bay area. melissa colorado, nbc bay area news. difficult months and years ahead. evacuation orders changing tonight. let's start at napa county where melissa is. the red dots are where the fires are burning right now. areas in blue are mandatory evacuation orders. both sides of highway 28 and majority of calistoga and west of calistoga are now told to leave. flames have reached this town of about 4,000 people. all the way to polk valley,
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those are mandatory evacuation orders, get out right now. that includes the neighborhoods of santa rosa, the east side. sky hawk oak mont and includes the town of ken wood. some evacuations were downgraded or lifted this afternoon and that includes this area in yellow. this is the santa rosa neighborhood, spring lake and summer field area. for a detailed look for the evacuation orders and warnings, you can go to our website right you nbcbayarea.com. we are seeing so much of this janelle, flames destroying one home but leaving the one next door untouched. evacuation orders are unlifted in some santa rosa neighborhoods. some people are finding out they have nothing to return home to. terry mcsweeney is joining us. we both grew up from the bay
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area, it is hard to go through this every year. what are people telling you? >> reporter: well, evacuations and destructions are becoming a little too common here. the santa rosa area and the north bay in general you see some destruction behind me. the fire tearing through here and the glass fire sunday night and yet next door maybe 20 or 30 feet away, you got a home virtually untouched by flames. it leaves people uncertain. we met several people who lived through both scenarios here in sonoma county in the past few years. >> reporter: the flames tore through parts of santa rosa on sunday night reduced dozens of homes to ashes. the evacuation orders were lifted this afternoon. some residents made the gut wrenching drive to see if their homes were still standing. >> there were fiver or six hom burned from the corner. i was 300 feet from where my house was burning.
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>> the fire destroyed his home in the fountain grove area. >> a neighbor of us in cotton grove and they lost their house here for the second time. >> reporter: there are a lot of people in santa rosa who are fire-evacuation veterans including megan in the summer field neighborhood. >> reporter: a few years ago families had minutes to clear the fire. this high school senior, she sounds wise beyond her years. >> it was better and we were prepared and we knew where we were going and we knew our commit plan. really families have like oh, we are going to go across the street if our house burns down. that's out of the picture. >> reporter: i don't have a scientific survey to give you tonight. the people who i spoke with up
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here say despite what they have been through and they know it is going to be happening again. they're staying here in sonoma county. terry mcsweeney, nbc bay area news. i am chief meteorologist jeff ranieri, tracking the train, i will tell you when it could pick up again with a brand new fire weather watch and a look right along the fire line in just a few minutes. >> and san francisco finally allowing dining in-doors. that's not the only covid safety rules being relaxed in bay area today.
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new details tonight of an investigation, an officer was charged with unlawful assault and battery. this is after a video surfaced showing a woman kicked and dragged during a traffic stop. >> this video was posted on social media platform and it went viral.
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it shows the woman laying handcuffed outside a silver car at a mcdonald's parking lot in downtown san jose back in july. at one point the officer appeared to kick her on the side and handcuffed her and dragged her several feet across the ground. that officer matthew rodriguez faces one year in jail if convicted. orange means green, a green light to move forward in san francisco and contra costa county. the first bay area moving from the red tier to the orange tier. contra costa county moving to red. restaurants can serve people in-doors. here is nbc's jackie ward. >> reporter: he's been able to weather the pandemic despite being less than two years old,
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maruricio franco. >> it is for the community. a lot of people don't know about me yet. >> thank you. >> reporter: while outside is spacious and breezy, inside is small with a precovid maximum capacity of 44 people. under the new health guideline, that number is slashed to 11. that does not include staff. in-door dining is a step in the right direction especially if it gets colder. >> getting everything ready and sanitizing and preparing everything so we can welcome all customers back into the door. >> reporter: after a business proposal via is gram, franco offers to serve food to the pub which means the barkann reopen, too. >> that essentially help me stay open. >> reporter: as a bar owner, ilene having her own challenges including bizarre directives that are coming from the city.
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>> we are not allowed to leave tv on. i think anyone is going to catch covid from watching a football game. >> reporter: for the first time in the pub's history, it will have to take reservations. each table will have a two-hour limit. jackie ward, nbc bay area news. we mentioned in the red tier in contra costa county. superintendent of schools say this is a positive development. she also says it is up to each school to decide if they want to return. the county says it is distributed ppe to schools to prepare a possible return to campus. they are providing special training for teachers regarding safety measures. let's check in with chief meteorologist jeff ranieri, talk about the wildfires and conditions. seems like the winds have calmed down. a bit of a cool down, things are turning around and heating up
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again, jeff? >> more heat on the way as we move for tomorrow and we also may see the winds ramp up based on a brand new forecast change. let's get a look at some of the goods today that allows firefighters to attack the fire in a different way and that's less wind. a decrease from the 50 miles per hour winds we had on monday and sunday mornday. a big drop in that wind which has been good. a close look along the fire lines on my map here. you can see on the top down view i have created on the fire perimeter as that populates on. most of the hot spots here have been on the north and also on the south side of the fire. so real close to calistoga as we have been reporting. that's why those evacuations are in place due to the hot spots on the north side. hot spots right here on both sides of 128. current temperatures dropping to
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68, wind only at the south at 4. tomorrow at an average of 87. wind gusts up to about 20 miles per hour. so not that gusty through most of tomorrow. we have some new information which could bring us some gusts in the higher elevations and i want to get this out here. as we head through wednesday night and into friday evening. we may actually see these winds kind of creep backup again, 15 to 30 miles per hour in the mountains. this fire warning in the hills of 1,000 feet from above from marin, napa, sonoma counties. 15 to 20 miles per hour gusts. i will be tracking that wind closer here as we come up to further updates a this hour. i want to get a broader look at the bay area's forecast. 99 in antioch and 97, morgan hill. 82 in san jose. san francisco at 78 and santa
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rosa at 89 degrees. half-moon bay dropping down to 69. here is the deal, we have a mix of stuff happening. we have fog off the coast, we have the smoke. look at all these fires burning across california. we'll take a look at the air quality and again a closer look at the wind tomorrow. i have got my next update in about 20 minutes. i will have it for you and i will see you next. >> thank you, jeff. we'll see you shortly. >> up next with the school districts and parents and teachers are grappling with. when should kids return to campus. the heat of the debate that's happening tonight. we'll take you there. our home was burned to the ground
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in the tubbs fire. the flames, the ash, it was terrifying. thousands of family homes are destroyed in wildfires. families are forced to move and higher property taxes are a huge problem. prop 19 limits taxes on wildfire victims so families can move without a tax penalty. nineteen will help rebuild lives.
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vote 'yes' on 19. your shoulder seems to be healing nicely. well, dr. farrell, it feels really good... that's good. and... i'm sorry. baby, don't touch that... i don't want you to play with that... (singing) twinkle, twinkle little star. how i wonder what you are... (still singing) up above the world so high... like a diamond in the sky. i'm so glad that your shoulder is feeling better. but, how are you doing? i'm hanging in there... schedule a video visit with your doctor. and get quality care with no copay. kaiser permanente. thrive. this is a big debate and it is unfolding realtime. parents a teachers and school districts are trying to determine when to open schools. marianne favro with the heated
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debate. >> reporter: the district wants to see students inside this classroom by mid october. many parents and teachers say it is too risky for students and staffs. >> reporter: the father of this elementary school says this letter signed by 400 other parents, it asked the district board of alpalo alto to reconsi reopening school on october 12th. parents are not alone. teachers are reluctant to return to class next month. according to the latest survey by the palo alto education association. >> close to 90% of our teachers will be going back starting in two weeks that are uncomfortable going back in person. >> reporter: many teachers are concerned of the health risk to students and staffs. >> and our members are about
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300% higher than when we closed in march. i don't see how it is safe to go back now when our case rates are much higher. >> reporter: some parents are given two choices, commit to all distance learning or in-class hybrid plan for the rest of the school year. many say they have to commit by tomorrow and they simply don't have enough information to decide. we reached toout to the districs superintendent who declined to comment on camera. in palo alto, marianne favro, nbc bay area news. >> coming up next, we return to our wildfire coverage. we talked to one man credited with saving his neighbor's home. putting voting by mail to the test. we have been testing the usps for more than two months.
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we'll tell you what we found, next. in business you have to be able to shift-pivot-adapt.
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then do it all over again. comcast business gives you fast, reliable internet on the nation's largest gig-speed network. and now for a limited time, you can also get fast shipping- with amazon business prime essentials. so no matter what comes next, you'll always be ready to bounce forward. get started with powerful internet and voice for $64.90 a month, and ask how you can get one free year of amazon busines prime essentials on us. call or go online today. comcast business. the unfair money bail system. he, accused of rape. while he, accused of stealing $5. the stanford rapist could afford bail; got out the same day. the senior citizen could not; forced to wait in jail nearly a year. voting yes on prop 25 ends this failed system, replacing it with one based on public safety. because the size of your wallet shouldn't determine whether or not you're in jail. vote yes on prop 25 to end money bail.
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right now our breaking news coverage of the glass fire continues. it is night three and wine country are on edge. good evening, if you are joining us, we are on during prime tonight for this special new cast following tonight our first presidential debate. >> more than 46,000 acres destroyed. it is now 2% contained which is a modest but encouraging step forward. nearly 15,000 people remained under evacuation orders and more than 75 homes have burned. you can see some of the houses nothing more than ash and mangled mmangl manglmangl mangled metal. there are no reports of missing people or deaths right now. >> 3,000 people who live in the
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small town, cheryl hurd is there for us in saint helena with the latest news. >> reporter: right next is the basketball court and you would not know this is a school. this pg&e p is barely hanging on. this small town of 3,000 is still standing. everyone there evacuated. you can barely see the fire coming over the ridge in polk valley. people know homes and schools and churches burned in saint helena. >> i love this. i am the seventh generation of
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my family living in pope valley. it is hard to see it this way. it is beautiful here. that being stripped one fire at a time. >> reporter: now he owes the autorepair and towing company. it is a historical building and it has been there since 1927. these are things people there are willing to risk their lives for. this is the second time the people in the area have had to evacuate in the past two months. we'll hear more from him and the people who live in calistoga coming up at 11:00. i am cheryl hurd. nbc bay area news. it is differeicult to see a the burning buildings in s. in santa rosa, one man risked
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his life. one man stayed behind protecting his neighborhood. he facetimed his wife as golf ball sized fire balls fell from above. he was able to save four homes including his own. neighbors are calling him a hero. >> i feel sorry for neighbors that lost their homes. i know them all. >> about a dozen homes the were destroyed. the entire city of calistoga is under a mandatory evacuation order. about 5,000 people have been forced to leave their home. the christopher family has no home in calistoga.
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>> you don't believe it until you see it. we were just here last week for the harvest. >> reporter: fire crews letting hillside burn, hoping creating the barrier around the calistoga area. >> our website is a great resource at this time. we have updated information that you need and a checklist if you are forced to evacuate your home. you can find it all on nbcbayarea.com. if you saw the debate of the war of the words of mail-in ballots. both candidates are addressing it tonight. we have been testing this unit for two months now of a record number of people voting by mail because of the pandemic. here is our stephen stock. >> reporter: we upped our game sending out more letters than we did in august to get a better
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sample. >> we rely on our mail for important bills. >> reporter: joy harris like many we heard from noticed more delays. >> we get our medicines through the mail. >> reporter: for harris any delay can be a health emergency. >> i have ran out of medication and i have had to call express, wait a minute, what's going on with my meds? >> reporter: for the second month in a row, we teamed with nbxlx and nationwide to mail out our letters to test the postal services or usps meets its own performance standards. this time to get a bigger sample size, we mailed out 426 letters and 123 of them are in the bay area alone. sent all over the bay area as well as two areas around l.a.
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and san diego and ten different cities around the country. most of the local letters arrived within three business days. seven of them did not. one took eight days and another nine days to arrive. one letter sent from san jose to orange county still has not been delivered. >> the nationwide delivery rate from august to september were delivered. the failures are not likely to impact mail-in ballots because within one week, 98.1% of our letters reached our destination. the 2% we found isolated break down in multiple locations. >> my biggest concern is these changes from the postal service really undermine the core aspects of local government. >> filed in three courts
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attempting to stop policy changes at the postal service resulted in these delays. >> that includes election administration this fall but including seniors getting their prescription drugs and pension checks going out on town. >> there is always the anomaly that gets stuck in the trace some where. >> dan lewis, president of snail works, the company that tracks tens of millions of mail per day. he's seen a slow down with serious localized backlog with some cities like new york. he's not concerned of the mail-in ballots. >> i think a percentage of the ballots are mailed within a reasonable time and some that are mailed outside of the reasonable time will be delivered. >> reporter: while a failure rate of 1% or 2% does not seem
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that serious. if 1% of the mail-in ballots don't make it, that could mean half a million votes don't get counted nationwide. >> the public needs to know that we have prepared to deliver election mail. >> reporter: dejoy implemented changes resulted in these delays. >> we'll mention the process that we have in the past which we see a ballot and we'll get it through the system and deliver it fix. >> reporter: in an interview of the economic club in d.c., dejoy defended the changes saying they were meant to save taxpayers' money. >> they were good plans and rerecovered that. >> reporter: the senate minority court released this month. significant delays following dejoy's changes. this time for prescription drugs. the increase time is 32% in some
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locations. >> i never seen where we had an issue with mail like this. >> definitely i am going to vote in person. >> reporter: here in california, registered voters will be sent a mail-in ballot by october 5th. you can fill it out or drop it to the election drop box or hand deliver it. experts warned because there are so many mail-in ballots expected this year, it could take weeks or months before a winner is declared. stephen stock. nbc bay area news. . >> they did talk about that during the debate toinight. give us a call on our inve investigative unit. another bay area airport offering covid tests to passengers. this one is for free. we'll tell you about it next.
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since it started early sunday morning, we have been showing you the damage across wine country. more than 100 structures now burned. we'll show you this video, thanks to a quick action of a lieutenant named patrick mcmann. you can see the shed there on fire. the lieutenant grabbed the garden hose to defend the home. the shed destroyed but the home intact. he was successful. the race way opening up its gates for evacuees. about a dozen people spent the night and more arrived today. they provide snacks and water to anyone who needs it. >> in 2017, it was over to the right. we can see the wind but did not
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see the flames. this time you can see it all coming down the hillside. >> reporter: so many people went through this and lived through this in 2017 and now they're doing it again in 2020. it is expected of a number of vevacuees there and as hotel rooms fill up. campus leader sent out an e-mail letting them know that the spring semester will be similar to the fall semester. the semester will start with all classes online for two weeks. students will be able to quarantine after the holidays. some classes of 25 people will be allowed the meet in person but some classes will be offered online. we know the condition of the forecast is changing. je let's bring in jeff ranieri of what's happening in the bay area and wine country. >> so much stuff is happening
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right now. so many different layers. we are tracking a fire weather watch. i will have details on the fire lines and the air quality and the cool down. i will see you back here in a couple of minutes.
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now more than ever, it's important californians have health coverage. if you've lost health insurance, covered california can help. you may even get financial help to pay for your health insurance. just visit coveredca.com today.
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returning to our coverage of the fire in wine country. the glass fire so far has scorched more than 46,000 acres. slightly up in containment at 2%. we want to show you another point from sky ranger today. you can see how thick the smoke is. those plumes made it very tough for cal fire today and the national guard in terms of visibility when it came to fighting the fire in the air. >> so far 113 structures have been lost to the flames. that number expected the rise. another 10,000 homes are threatened. because there are so many other fires across the state, fire crews are stretched thin.
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this is something we have been dealing with for the past six weeks. 1900 firefighters are on the frontlines. back to our big story of the first presidential debate. because of covid, the candidates could not shake hands. our scott budman has more of the technology that gave young voters to listen and talk and argue about tonight's presidential faceoff. >> reporter: as you saw a debate during the pandemic is much different for one thing. the candidates began by not shaking hands and the manners went downhill from there. as for the watch party, it was driven by polititics but also technology as well. >> will you shut up, man? >> who was on your list, joe? >> the first debate between president trump and joe biden went off the rail quickly, watched by a virtual audience. >> you are going lose all your
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radical supporters. >> reporter: including this san jose state university party happens entirely over zoom. >> leit lets us listen on the se page and zoom is putting us in that room. >> reporter: everyon though the candidates barely completes a sentence -- >> if someone who watched 9/11 unfold, that's about the level of anxiety that i am experiencing right now personally. >> felt like a world war i where no one is happy or having fun. everyone is taking serious casualties. >> reporter: a digital experiment bringing people together on one screen to discuss what they saw on another
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screen. scott budman, nbc bay area news. a bay area woman was in the audience of tonight's debate in cleveland. she was a special guest of joe biden, she gained attention after an obituary she wrote from her father died one month after being diagnosed with covid. in it was a result of the carelessness of the politician. she spoke at the dnc and blamed president trump. she says tonight she is honoring her father and the other 200 people who died from the virus. >> i had some pictures of my dad that i kept looking down at to remind myself why i was there and what brought me here. >> reporter: she now dedicates her time helping others who have been affected by covid-19. the election is november 3rd, so many of us will be voting early. ballots will be mailed out
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beginning next week. there are plenty of safe places you can drop off your ballots or vote in person. the 49ers announcing they are turning levi's stadium into a voting center beginning halloween. they're posting voting messages from players like jimmy gee there and advising fans to text 49ers. we have been under surge for smarter and safer and larger locations. >> reporter: that's the secretary of state. he expects a record turn out. we are seeing a lot of rapid tests available. oakland airport will offer free rapid result covid tests beginning next tuesday. the report will work with urgent care to test all employees. the general public may get free
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tests as well. the program will soon expand to include travelers heading to hawaii. we'll have to produce a proof of negative covid-19 test when they arrived there. let's get a check of our forecast and check in jeff ranieri. the air quality seems a little better today. the winds changing and temperatures heating up again. what is it looking like? >> we do think some unhealthy air is going to return tomorrow. as this forecast continues, we may have more wind gupss in the mountains. this will not be as gusty as we had on sunday night and early sunday morning. a chance for some gusts to return. i did want to start off with the new information with the fire weather watch wednesday, 8:00 p.m. until 6:00 p.m. on friday. we are looking at on and off mountain gusts, a thousand feet
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above. this is for the north bay, 15 to 30 miles per hour and sustained winds of 10 to 20. this could bring down the humidity to 10 % to 25%. we have seen winds really calmed down today. it just were so hot in the fire lines. they're only able to make minimal progress right now. a lot of them are doing double shifts as well. the exhaustion is setting in. you can see in my fire perimeter map here. we got it zoned out. i put these fire icons here to show you where the hot spots have been located due to satellite fire detection. it has been on the north side and also on the southern side of these fire lines and of course now getting all too close to saint helena and calistoga. saint helena will be the target for maybe the fire to blow back in the other direction. tomorrow, 87 degrees.
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humidity at 33%. wind gusts of 5 to 20 miles per hour. an average of temperatures i think we'll have some 90ss on the fire line. it is such a gray area. those temperatures are going to vary. i want to show you 10:30 tomorrow night, the surface winds is not that bad. look at these colors in the north bay. you will see higher elevations around 20 or 25 miles per hour . as we head into thursday ooer evening. we'll see some of these winds here across the north bay as we head into friday evening. we'll be here to cover it up for you. air quality could get worse tomorrow. i am not bringing a lot of good news for you. we are going to see likely some of that smoke move from the central valley closer to us so
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that red and that purple color seen right here, that's possibly higher concentrations of smoke headed our way tomorrow afternoon and evening. so we are going for unhealthy here from the north bay down to the south bay. my forecast temperatures tomorrow. 90s across the in land valleys. san jose 89 and 70s at half-moon bay. what about some relief? yes, we do need it. saturday and sunday going out at 60s here. in land valleys we'll see numbers dropped by this weekend into the 80s. on saturday and sunday, a cooler system approaches near the coastline. something we'll be watching out next week is some rainfall getting close to the california oregon border, by next thursday and saturday, it is way out there. that's something i am looking forward to, maybe developing into a wetter scenario. i will keep you posted on that
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as well. >> that'll be great for the fire fight. the baseball playoffs started today. the a's hoping for a better day tomorrow. we'll take you to the coliseum next. proposition 16 takes on discrimination. some women make as little as 42% of what a man makes. voting yes on prop 16 helps us fix that. it's supported by leaders like kamala harris and opposed by those who have always opposed equality. we either fall from grace or we rise.
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together. proposition 16 provides equal opportunities, levelling the playing field for all of us. vote yes on prop 16.
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the a's were one of the best teams in baseball. the playoffs have started rough. >> i noticed you are wearing the a's color. we need this. we are need losing faith. here is anthony flores from the coliseum. >> reporter: the a's still have not solved the mystery winning in the postseason. they tied a franchise record by dropping their sixth straight playoffs game. the good news, the previous fivfive losses were only one game series. this year, they're guaranteed to play two games. the a's taking on a best of two series, all games being played
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at the coliseum. oakland fallen behind early. 1-0 sox. chicago would add to the lead on the third. the white sox takes a 2-0 lead. lucas taking the a's quiet through 7th inning. chicago takes game one, 4-1, the final. >> we won the series and it is the best time for us to respond. we'll have to do more offensi offensively. we can't score one run and thinking we'll win. >> we have to take it backup. i feel confident that we'll bounce back tomorrow. >> the a's faced a must-win game two on wednesday where their season will come to an end. anthony flores. before we go, we want to give you one last update. thousands of people are out of their homes at this hour.
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new evacuation orders underway for parts of western napa kou county. 113 structures destroyed including homes and wineries. containment up slightly 2%. we'll be back with 11:00 with more updates. you can stay up to date on our website on nbcbayarea.com, and also through our free nbc bay area app. >> thanks for joining us at 9:00. w we'll see you in a couple of hours. voting 'yes' on prop 19 to help california's most vulnerable. over 24,000 homes were destroyed by wildfires in less than two years. too many of those victims are also hit with a sudden tax hike after their forced to move. it's wrong. prop 19 limits taxes on wildfire victims and limits taxes on seniors and severely disabled homeowners.
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join firefighters and emergency responders in voting 'yes' on 19.
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we heard all this talk around the town to know she was dead she was in so much fair. it's not fair. he is still out there could still be plotting, hunting >> jesse gave her all to everything she did. >> she was on a mission. >> her whole life. >> and then someone took it all away >> i was like jesse, nothing i jiggled her a little bit and knew this is

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