tv Today in the Bay NBC March 12, 2023 7:00am-8:01am PDT
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good morning. it is sunday, march 12, 7:00 as we take this live look outside at san francisco. it's dark. normally it would be 6:00. but good morning, as we spring forward to 7:00. thank you for being awake with us. i'm kira klapper. cinthia pimentel joins us this morning with a look at your microclimate forecast. not only is it dark, but some parts are rainy. >> it's been rough on all fronts, hearing the rain once again, losing an hour of sleep, and we have a slick commute over the golden gate bridge right
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now, and some scary clouds up there over the bridge. i did want to take you to storm ranger and show you where the rain is. widespread south of the golden gate bridge and east. so let's go to the east bay. parts of hayward, union city, extending into pleasanton and your tri valley. heavy downpours over the coastline and stretching inward closer to redwood city and san mateo. a few sprinkles in the south bay. berkeley and richmond, any plans to drive over the bridge, do be careful with that. right here we are awaiting the rain in our studios. lots to talk about through my full forecast. i'll walk you through the showers today. a lot of activity going on monday night as we await the next atmospheric river. we begin with a follow up to a story we brought you yesterday morning. in just 24 hours, we have seen catastrophic flooding to our south, leading to evacuation
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orders in monterey county. with more rising water throughout the day yesterday, people were forced from their homes 25 miles south of this in parts of selinas, all because of this, the levy broke friday night, sending water rushing through the town. fire crews worked tirelessly throughout the day to make dozens of water rescues. the town sits 0 miles south of san francisco and is made up of mostly farm workers. >> reporter: rescue video shows first responders helping more than 50 people evacuate on saturday morning. >> worst case scenario has come to fruition here. >> reporter: the rural farming community was submerged after the river levy broke on friday night.
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[ speaking non-english ] he says deputies went door to door, urging residents to leave friday afternoon. he says this is deja vu. back in 1995, the last time the levy broke, he says he came to this evacuation center at the santa cruz fair grounds in watsonville after his home flooded. some 1700 people are now displaced. farm workers say they have also lost their live hihood now, as fields will have to go fallow for a while. you can see the road behind me just disappearing. officials say they're working on trying to repair a portion of the levy, but that may be hard to do because we still have more rain coming up. the chair of the board of supervisors says with the storm coming in on tuesday, they expect more flooding and more people rushing to evacuation centers.
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right now, there are two centers. the supervisor says there will be more shelter at the veteran wall in watsonville and in casterville starting sunday. food and clothing donations are accepted. s we have new video of oakland rescue task force helping out. firefighters arrived friday night and have been staging dozens of water rescues just like this one to get people out of that fast-moving water that is burying cars and is chest deep in some places. we're also learning about an air rescue to the south near king city. this as chopper video from a chp helicopter, the moment they spotted a man stranded on a small island in the river. the chp says the man was driving in his car when it got swept away by the rising water. he managed to get out and make
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it to the land and stay there until he was rescued. back here in the bay area, a big stretch of highway 84 in san mateo county is still shut down because of the storm. the sheriff's office says a landslide caused a road to buckle and crack. 84 is closed in both directions. we caught up with two cyclists who had to change their route. >> we're just going to bike off and check it out, but this is common for 84. and i feel bad for the folks that have to try and get down and have to dry down 92. >> no word yet on when that road will reopen. keep up with the very latest on our nbc bay area app. you'll get access to our doppler radar and you'll get alerts when the rain is headed your way. it's a great resource to have with all this rain coming our way. it was a frustrating night
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for b.a.r.t. passengers in the east bay who had to be rescued from a train after an equipment problem. it got stuck around 8:00 last night. this is video posted on snap chat of that b.a.r.t. train stuck on the platform. b.a.r.t. had to use another train to get passengers off the disabled train and then take them to the coliseum station. one passenger told us they were stuck on board for nearly two hours. these photoed were shared with us. there is robert, stuck in the dark. there is his face in the forefront there. he was headed to the oakland arena to a concert. he said the operators kept powering the train off, then on, trying to solve the power issue. we spoke with him last night as he was walking home. he said he was frustrated by the lack of communication from b.a.r.t. >> in total, we were stuck on
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that train for two hours before we finally got what they call a rescue train to take us to the station. there are 200 people on the train, the train is completely powered down. obviously, there's no -- you can't open the windows or anything, we're on an elevated platform, so the doors weren't opening. it was stuffy, people were smoking cigarettes, smoking crack, doing drugs. just ugly and, you know, swelters, and it was just the worst experience. >> robert tells us he's taken b.a.r.t. his entire life and wants to continue to take b.a.r.t. but he says this may be the final straw. we reached out to b.a.r.t. for comment. but we have not yet heard back. if you haven't watched our series "derailed," check it out. seasons one and two are streaming right now.
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you can watch online at nbcbayarea.com/derailed. happening today, a community is grieving in pittsburgh after a teenager was hit and killed by a car this week. friends and family are calling for change so this doesn't happen to anyone else. loved ones think this could have been prevented. >> the ripple impact from her death is impacting so many people. >> reporter: family, friends and teachers crowded the entrance here in pittsburgh. >> make your voices heard. >> reporter: they're lighting candles, shedding tears and remembering 17-year-old brook jeffrey, who was a junior there. >> she was the most beautiful person, the most creative person
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i knew. >> reporter: brook was hit and killed by a car today just after school. police are investigating. >> it's really sad just to know that she was my best friend and i won't be able to see her anymore. >> reporter: at the dance studio she attended for 12 years, her friends are having to rechoreograph their dances. >> we will not stop fighting for her until we find out who did it. >> reporter: they say on the night she was killed, she had just returned from dance practice, then was walking to school to get some forms signed nor a trip to d.c., then she was hit. >> i don't want anybody else to become a victim for something else that could have been avoided. >> reporter: loved ones plan to let city leaders know their concerns, and her friends want everyone to remember brook for
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welcome back. please join me in welcoming moderator of "meet the press"chuck todd who joins us with a preview of today's show. thanks for joining us this morning. i have to ask you about the failure of silicone valley bank, and of course the consequential news here in the bay area. one of your guests this morning, senator kevin cramer, sits on the senate banking committee. if you would allow me, i want to set this up. cramer was not a senator nor on the committee during the great recession in 2008. but what viewers might not know, new regulations were passed in the wake of that financial
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crisis. in 2015, the president and ceo of silicone valley bank, greg becker, pushed congress to reduce scrutiny of financial exemptions, exempting more banks, resulting in a bill that was signed by then president donald trump. so my question is, by weakening those risk checks, did congress essentially pave the way for this bank collapse and if that's a fair assessment, what are lawmakers like cramer saying now? >> well, in fairness, we don't know yet if that's why this happened. i asked senator cramer, because he was the co-sponsor of the bill that weakened this bill, and he wasn't ready to say that that was the case. but he wasn't ready to say he was fully right either on that. i think everybody is trying to figure out what went wrong here. were these bad decisions by the
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bank? was this bad acting by venture capitalist firms led by people like peter teal? is this the first bank run caused by a tweet? and in many cases it might have been. so i think that trying to unpack and figure out what happened here, but the fallout, i think you may have a federal reserve that may slow down interest rate increases, because there are other mid-size banks that may have made the same mistakes that silicone valley bank made in trying to manage its assets in a rising interest rate climate. so i think we have to figure that out. but we shouldn't ignore the role that people like peter teal and others who are super online people and maybe overreact to the moment. and their overreaction just destroyed a bank that they may regret they destroyed. >> indeed. what a fascinating confidence. you have the former chair of the fdic, who was the chair during
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the last great recession. so we look forward to that conversation today. chuck, thanks for joining us with that preview this morning. we hope you do join chuck for "meet the press." we'll have a full lineup of interviews, including senator bob menendez, as well as sheila bair, who was the chair in 2008. we hope you sun in to "meet the press"at 8:00 a.m. governor newsom is coordinating with the fdic which ensures money in banks. he said in a statement -- coming up in about 30
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minutes from now, we'll talk to larry gurston for our weekly segment to look at california's push to make more affordable housing, and why some cities are opposing those new plans. happening today, the funeral service will be held for the 16-year-old who was stabbed and killed at a high school in santa rosa. jaden pienta died march 1st during an altercation that escalated. the service will be at 11:00 this morning and a secondary service will be held at new vintage church in santa rosa from 2:00 until 4:00. coming closer and closer. >> this is the spacex dragon endurance capsule after it splashed down just off the coast of florida. this is video from the recovery
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vessel. dragon endurance touched down around 6:00. inside were four astronauts, including bay area native nicole mann, back on earth after five months in space. he's considered a judo legend. he coached the first u.s. olympic judo team, putting san jose on the map as a power house in the sport. and there was a special celebration for the coach ahead of his 103rd birthday. marianne favro was there. >> reporter: this celebration was planned for his 100th birthday. and then covid came along and they had to cancel it. so now as he nears the age of 103, people can come together once again to celebrate him. as he prepares to blow out 103 candles, he has worn a lot of hats, from judo legend to
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entrepreneur. the one he's most proud of? >> coaching the team. >> reporter: not just any coach, he's the founder of san jose state judo. he coached the first u.s. olympic judo team in 1964, and has turned out 20 olympians, who have brought home four medals. even as he's about to turn 103, he's still giving back to the judo program. this is him showing a move on the mat. >> he comes to practice fairly often. until this semester, he's there at least three times a week. >> reporter: he's credited with establishing a weight class system in judo. >> he had judo included in the olympics and it became more popular. >> reporter: outside of judo, he served in the u.s. army during world war ii while his parents were sent to live in an internment camp. he started a successful medical
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lab business, and was instrumental in investing in japan town. people came together to honer him, including his family. >> his legacy is for the judo, but to us, it's how he brought people together. >> reporter: and tonight, once again, he's bringing people together. in san jose, marianne favro, nbc bay area news. there was an early celebration of st. patrick's day. the city of san jose hosted the shamrock 5-k run yesterday. runners took off from san pedro square. money raised does to the public sister cities program, which hosts students exchange scholarships. san jose students are sent to dublin, and students from there are sent here. 1500 people turned out for the
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run. no pot of gold, but there was a free pint of giness waiting on runners. and the united irish society posted their st. patrick's day parade yesterday. this has been happening for 172 years. now to cinthia pimentel for a look at your forecast. thank goodness those events happened yesterday. >> that's what i was thinking. i was like oh, it's bad out there right now in those cities. san jose still staying clear of that rain, so if you are stepping out, bring your umbrella with you. we're adjusting to the time change right now, so look at the activity overnight, focusing south and east of the golden gate bridge. remember, you can see storm ranger on your phone and track the rain and incoming
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atmospheric river on your phone, even down into palo alto and off to the coastline. that's the yellow you see on your screen. taking it over to the east bay. even down into san ramone and into marsh creek springs and over on into the pass, a lot of activity there, which will continue through the next hour, about an hour and a half or so. look at the scattered activity, north bay, oakland, even out at the coastline. it will be a chance of isolated thunderstorms today. but really pockets of it. i'm not going to take out oakland, seeing heavier activity. we could see some hail develop. i'm going to walk you through the forecast and get through today's highs. upper 50s and 60s. 64 for fremont. here is the meat of this report, what i want you to take home
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today. we have this flood watch that remains in effect monday through wednesday. we'll see the higher rain rates with the incoming atmospheric river. creeks and streams running high, leading to more issues. high wind watch with all of this, going to be gustier than what we saw with the last storm, from 50 to 70 miles per hour plus out at the coastline and east bay hills, south bay. we're seeing the valleys from 30 to 40 miles per hour, which could lead again to that free damage, already saturated ground and power outages. monday evening, look at the rain starting light in the north bay. but wow, 3:30 rolls around and your morning commute. you might want to stay home for this one. gusty winds and heavy rain continue through the day, into the evening hours. another round for the evening commute. so a difficult day to say the least. rain estimates are going to pile
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up on top of what we have seen. we're not getting a break to recover from the last atmospheric river. from two to three inches plus in the north bay and santa cruz mountains and we'll remain under the microclimate weather alert through your 7:00 forecast. but count on us to guide you through the storm and then bring you that big yellow thing in the sky wednesday, thursday. a little bit of a break to clear out, but we see some light rain for next weekend. so the month of march definitely active. i see this continuing into april, which is good and bad. >> the end of the month? it's the 12th. oh, my gosh. >> a lot to get through. >> oh, my goodness. pray for us all. all right, cinthia, thanks so much. there is much more ahead on "today in the bay." coming up, a thrilling night, did you see it? what steph curry did to help get the win. sports is next.
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welcome back. it was an exciting night at chase center. the warriors led through the third quarter, but it looked like they were going to squander that lead in the fourth. they didn't, though, thanks to steph curry. of his 36 points last night, 29 came between the second half and o.t. they win in overtime 125-116, the seventh straight win at home. what does coach have to say about steph curry? >> he's fearless. it doesn't matter if there's a slow start, he can ignite at any time. i thought that comeback down the stretch, we were down eight with 2:00 left, championship stuff. at the shark tank, san jose hosted the minnesota wild. check out this scuffle at the
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goal. hertl gets in there. the wild try to challenge, but officials uphold it after review. not enough to overcome the wild. sharks still lose 5-2. we have much more ahead on "today in the bay." coming up, more evacuation orders as rivers flood communities. the latest orders, and the rescue efforts underway. and a historic clubhouse in san francisco in shambles after this latest storm, leaving a hole in the
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this morning. hopefully you're safe and warm at home. thank you for starting your sunday with us. i'm kira klapper. cinthia pimentel joins us with a look at the forecast. you know what? it is so cold in the studio right now, i feel like i'm outside. >> i think it might be a little warmer outside actually. it's always cold in here. you just take a look at storm ranger, one of my very trusted friends as we guide you through the rain. in the north bay, bring your umbrella, because there are light showers moving over the area. i'm going to take it out into the coastline. heavier downpours continue, stretching into parts of redwood city and woodside. embedded thunderstorms could be happening with hail activity developing. and san ramone, seeing heavy downpours, as well. what we want to focus on is the atmospheric river.
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things pick up tomorrow night into tuesday's commute. so a lot to get through. i'll be back in a little bit. we'll stick with the weather, and in just 24 hours, this catastrophic flooding happened to our south. we told you about this yesterday morning about evacuation orders in monterey county, with more rising water yesterday, the flooding started forcing people from their homes 25 miles south of this, in parts of selinas. as we told you yesterday morning, that levy right there broke friday night, sending water rushing through the small town. fire crews worked throughout the day to make dozens of water rescues. the town sits 90 miles south of san francisco. it is made up of mostly farm workers. more than 8,000 people were ordered to evacuate. first responders helped more than 50 homes evacuate
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yesterday. the chair of the monterey county board of supervisors says they are expecting people to pour into evacuation centers. right now, there are only two centers in watsonville and selinas, but more will open today at the veterans hall in watsonville and the recreation center in castroville. we also learned about an air rescue along the selinas river near king city. this is video from a chp chopper. you can see they spot a map stranded on a small piece of land in the river. the chp says the man was driving his car when it was swept away by rising waters. he managed to get out of the car and make it to that land and stayed there until this. he was rescued. now back here locally to major damage in san francisco. an 85-foot eucalyptus tree fell
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on the clubhouse in stern grove. rangers arrived to find a roof totally crushed. and the inside of the building flooded from the sprinkler system. nobody was in the clubhouse when the tree fell. that building has been around since the 1800s. >> this building has been used for special events, weddings, graduations, and there's a lot of history in it. it's setting there just gorgeous. this is, to be honest, quite soul crushing. >> most of stern grove has been closed since last year because of unstable trees. part of the park has been under construction to repair flood damage from a broken pike. you can keep up with the very latest on this storm after storm after storm with our nbc bay area app. you will get access to our doppler radar and alerts when the rain is headed your way.
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it is free to download and a great resource to have with all this rain. a frustrating night for b.a.r.t. passengers. they had to be rescued from a train after an equipment problem around 8:00 last night that the train got stuck. this is video posted on snap chat of the train stuck on the platform. b.a.r.t. had to use another train to get passengers off and to the coliseum station. but passengers were stuck on board for nearly two hours. robert hammock shared these photos. he was headed from san francisco to the coliseum for a concert when the train got stuck. he said the operator kept powering off and on the train trying to solve the issue. we caught up with him last night as he was walking home. he said he was frustrated by the
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lack of communication in b.a.r.t. and called the situation a fiasco. >> so in total, we were stuck on that train for two hours before we finally got what we call a rescue train to take us to the station. there's 200 people on this train. there's no ventilation, because the train is powered down. obviously, there's no -- you can't open the windows or anything. we're on an elevated platform, so the doors weren't opening. so it was stuffy, people were smoking cigarettes, people were smoking crack, doing drugs. i mean, just ugly and sweltering and it was the worst experience. >> hammock tells us he's taken b.a.r.t. his entire life, but half what happened last night, he says this might be the final straw. we reached out to b.a.r.t. for comment and to find out more about what happened last night but have not heard back. if you haven't watched our
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series "derailed," check it out. seasons one and two are streaming right now. watch it online at nbcbayarea.com/derailed. a community is grieving after a teenager was hit and killed by a car this week. dozens of people gathered in pittsburgh to mourn and call for change. they are remembering 17-year-old brook jeffrey, who was a junior at the school. she was hit and killed by a car tuesday night at the intersection just outside of the school. police are investigating, but they have not said anything about the driver nor the vehicle involved. >> she has a lot of people that care for her and family that will be there for her. we won't stop fighting for her until we find out who did it. >> the intersection was just outside of the school. it does have lights installed
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overhead, but neighbors say they have never worked. after brook's death, they are calling for changes. new this morning, firefighters are on the scene of a two alarm structure fire at history park in san jose. the fire broke out just after 3:30 this morning. firefighters say right now the intersection at center is closed to drivers. no word if anyone was hurt or when the roads will be back open. developing news now, two men and one 13-year-old have been arrested in connection with dozens of car break-ins on the peninsula. deputies say yesterday morning they received an alert of a stolen hyundai. while searching for a car, deputies say they got about 50 reports of cars being burglarized. and then a witness says they saw
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that red hyundai crash. three people were seen running from that car, jumping fences and entering the green hills country club. deputies sounded the area and the three taken into custody. happening today, a public funeral service will be held for the 16-year-old who was stabbed to death at a high school in san jose. jaden pienta died march 1st during an altercation at montgomery high. the service will take place in santa rosa at 11:00 this morning, and a second service will be held at new vintage church in santa rosa from 2:00 until 4:00. state and federal regulators will reopen silicone valley bank tomorrow. officials took control friday morning after a run on the bank. our scott mcgrew says the big question is, will everyone get
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their money back? scott? >> yes, good morning. the financial forms that the bank public show it has more assets than deposits, so at least logically, everybody should be made whole and should be able to cover its depositors. if for system reason they can't, fdic only insures up to $250,000 for an account. silicone valley banks are venture capitalist firms, dealing with numbers that are not in the hundreds of thousands but the millions. and the other big question for most people whose accounts have maybe thousands or hundreds of dollars in them, they don't generally use silicone valley bank, and if they are using any other bank, we can state here that those banks are safe. this is not a contagion. it's a very strange one-off that
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affects silicone bally bank and no other. we will have reporting for you on monday morning on "today in the bay" and then midday after the bank reopens on monday. >> everyone is waiting with bated breath. still to come, breaking records during women's history month. a new achievement unlocked by americans here. mikaa shiffrinel d
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and a money back guarantee. all on the largest, fastest, reliable network. from the company that powers more businesses than anyone else. call and start saving today. comcast business. powering possibilities. welcome back. maybe you're just waking up, getting adjusted to the time change. well, it's been a very active couple of hours here in the bay area. you might have been awoken by the rain, as well. we see that low pressure system develop bringing in rain and some lightning strikes out on the coastline earlier this morning. let's take you to storm ranger. we do have heavy pockets of rain right now, particularly over the
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east bay. hayward into fremont, you're seeing some of that rain, especially going over the san mateo bridge. seeing high rain rates out there. a little bit lighter activity in the santa cruz mountains. bolder creek, ben lowman and santa cruz. in the north bay, currently 52 degrees. we'll see those mild temperatures and the rain last through maybe 10:00, 11:00. notice over here, 1:00, k, a potential of thunderstorm activity in the north bay. that could bring the possibility of hail over there. let's take it into monday. we're gearing up to prepare ourselves for the week. the time is right now. power up those generators, make sure they're working outside of your home. make sure your pets are ready to go and you have all your important documents. we'll start the rain monday evening. gusty winds, powerful down force
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around 3:30 tuesday morning down into the south bay. this will continue, maybe a good day to stay home and charge the electronics right now in case the power goes out and you need those. continuing on into the evening commute, and then really out of here by maybe 10:00, 11:00. very gusty winds. look at your screen. over 30 miles per hour in the east bay. around 40-mile-an-hour winds in livermore. and really felt around the bay area with wind gusts from about 50 to 70 miles an hour. tuesday, this storm extends into the central coast and will hit our friends down in los angeles. so we have a very stormy pattern to get through over the next couple of days into the second half of this month. we will be under the microclimate weather alert this week. count on us for sure any day to get you through the storm. and the sprinkles that return next weekend, kira.
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welcome back. american citier mikaela shiffrin now holds a world record. the two-time olympic gold medalist record broke the world cup record for career wins. shiffrin creted the alpine world cup and won. that means she has a record holding 87 world cup wins, beating the swedish skier, who broke the record with 86 cup wins 34 years ago. shiffrin is expected to complete in three more world cup races this season. congratulations. california and many of its cities are in conflict over
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affordable housing. according to state law, every eight years, each city must meet new housing goals assigned by regional government organizations. the deadline for cities to provide plans for the next cycle was january 31st, but many cities opposed their assigned allocation, which include housing for low income people. larry gurston is here. great to see you as always. help us understand this confrontation, if you can. >> this is about the regional housing needs allocation. the story is we need in california 2.5 million housing units by 2030. a whole lot of housing, especially since we've only been making about 125,000 annually. not nearly enough. we need 360,000 annually. people believe that californians
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are leaving because they can't afford housing. we need more housing and lots of it. that's why we talk about this allocation plan. >> so talking about people leaving california, that's especially big here in the bay area. how does this requirement impact us here? >> in the bay area alone, nine counties, we are required to come up with 441,000 units by 2030. some cities have come up with their plan to how they're going to build their share. others have balked. woodside decided it should be a wildlife refuge area for the mountain lions so they couldn't be assigned more housing. but they don't want to do it, they just don't want to. >> this is an overly simplified question, why? why is it so difficult? >> especially affluent cities don't want to have anything to do with this. we like what we have.
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some cities want to preserve their unique construction. we like what we have. they don't want to change anything. these are just a lot of people feel rejections, avoidances, related to this whole idea of them being right not in my backyard. so you have this odd romance developing between the real estate industry and the affordable housing folks, especially environmental groups who want to see housing go up rather than out. >> according to law, it has to happen, right? how is this log jam going to be broken? >> power, it's simple, power. the state has the right to require these things. local go. s may not like it, but there will be one lawsuit after another but the state will prevail. perhaps more interesting, what
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will local people do, do you elect somebody you don't like who participates in this or do you elect somebody else? >> interesting. as always, thanks for bringing to light these things many of us aren't aware of. it's 7:51. up next, a quick look am the stories we are following, including more evacuation orders in monterey county. the latest orders and
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welcome back. here's a quick look at the top stories we are following on this sunday morning, including a public funeral service for the 16-year-old who was stabbed and killed at a santa rosa high school. the service will take place in santa rosa at 11:00 this morning. a second service will be held at new vintage church from 2:00 to 4:00. in the south bay and new this morning, firefighters are still on the scene of a two alarm structure fire at history park in san jose. the fire broke out just after 3:30 this morning. firefighters tell us that right now, the intersection at center and phalen is closed to drivers. no word if anyone was hurt in
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this fire or when the road will be back open. in just the last 24 hours, catastrophic flooding to our south. we told you yesterday morning about evacuation orders, with more rising water the flooding is forces people from their homes 25 miles south of this. as we told you yesterday morning, this levy broke friday night sending water rushing through the town. crews worked throughout the day yesterday making dozens of water rescues. this small town sits 90 miles south of san francisco and 50 miles south of san jose, made up of mostly farm workers. more than 8,000 people were ordered to evacuate. first responders tell us they helped more than 50 homes evacuate yesterday morning. officials say they cannot work on repairing the levy yet because of the expected incoming
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storm monday into tuesday. the chair of the board of supervisors says they are expecting people to pour into evacuation senters. two are open right now and more will open today at the veterans hall in watsonville and the recreation center in castroville. back here in the bay area, major damage to a historic building in san francisco. an 85-foot eucalyptus free fell in stern grove. rangers arrived to find the roof totally crushed. the inside of the building flooded from the sprinkler system. nobody was in the clubhouse when the tree fell. the building has been around since the 1800s. part of the park has been under construction to repair flood damage from a broken pipe. cinthia has one last check
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of the weather before we go. i just hope that we survive this next round. >> another day to count our blessings. we're okay, but the families of the farm workers are definitely struggling. heavy rain moving in, look at parts of the south bay, east bay, parts of the peninsula as well, and the north bay. belmont down into over into newark, fremont, even as you make your way over the 580 interchange and into the central valley, we have seen a lot of damage there already. and we are gearing up for this atmospheric river. take the time to prepare now, because we will see heavy downpours tuesday night. it's the middle of the night. you might be told to evacuate. you have to have an evacuation plan and a backup plan. tuesday morning's commute looks rough, so a good day to stay home. you can count on us every single day to guide you through the
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♪♪ this sunday, a stunning collapse. the second largest bank failure in u.s. history rattles the tech world and raises fears the panic could spread. >> when banks experience financial losses it is and should be a matter of concern. >> why did the government have to take it over so quickly and are other banks at risk. >> i'll ask sheila baer, the former chair of the fdic about the last banking crisis. >> legal troubles. donald trump faces potential criminal charges in new york where he's been invited to testif
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