tv KPIX 5 News CBS September 20, 2015 11:00pm-11:31pm PDT
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victims. where do they go from here? good evening, i'm brian hac. i'm juliette goodrich. a new problem for valley fire victims. good evening. >> this has many returning here today. charred rebel where their homes one stood. tonight, they are facing a new challenge. >> the unique question for fire victims when they find they have no home to go to is where do they stay? the video and hotel just became a long-term option. they opened their doors on saturday. one couple we spoke to said
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they simply live day-by-day. [crying] >> reporter: anything that survived the valley fire say rare find. >> the only thing that i have left. >> reporter: for this couple the only belonging standing in their home say miracle. >> it is there. we have it. >> reporter: her husband owns a yard service business but he has not worked since the fire destroyed their home and all of his tools. >> it is killing me on the inside. everything is gone. everything we built is gone. >> reporter: they have a family to stay with for now. for many, they don't have anywhere to go to. as of sunday night 41 evacuees are staying at the twin pine casino and hotel. they opened up a room they typically use for events for evacuees and 59 rooms are booked to travel members and the employees who lost their homes. >> the good thing is we live in an awesome community. >> reporter: they say they relied on donations but when they will be able to call a
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place home again they are not sure. >> now we are trying to live day boy day. no ponent to plan so far ahead when we have to -- no point to plan so far ahead when we have to enjoy what we have. >> reporter: they expect to see more evacuees as more orders are lifted. one more is expected to be lifted on monday night. he says the evacuees can stay here as long as they need, free of charge. in lake county, kpix5. tonight, the total number of homes destroyed topped 1,000. and that tally could still rise. the clean up crews get deeper in the burn area there is good news, firefighters continue to gain ground. it is now 69% contained and evacuation orders will be lifted tomorrow for the communities in the north. many people in hidden valley lake saw the damage firsthand today. the e srag waeugz order was lifted at noon and many
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evacuees did not have much to turn home to -- the evacuation order was lifted at noon and many evacuees did not have much to return home to. >> the toughest part is the loss of his two dogs that were killed in the fire. a reporter shows us similar stories are playing out across the sierra foothills tonight where all evacuation orders have been lifted for the butte fire. >> i lived up there for 28 years. that little green peg that is all i got. >> reporter: joe thomas just returned to this evacuation center only to realize he does not have the basic service we take for granted. a place to wash their cloths. >> there is no laundry mats up here. >> just one neighbor out of hundreds. >> here is another one. you need, you know, they need laundry. >> reporter: one of many
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volunteers here got his brother to donate his washing machines. they started a campaign asking a laundry deter gent company to send a mobile camp. >> reporter: they are expecting to see more come back to the the e -- evacuation camps. >> phase one is coming to an end. phase two will start or has started already once people find out what they have and what they have lost. >> until they rebuild this lot near the fairgrounds with trailers, tents, countless porta potties is their home. >> the great thing is that we will find our way out of the ashes, rise again. >> firefighters are making progress tonight on two wildfires burning in monterey county. the fire and the laurel fire are burning 30 miles southeast of carmel. 1,000 acres is the largey --
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larger of the two. 10 homes have been destroyed. a body was found near a car among the ashes. the authorities are treating that death as suspicious. meanwhile, the fire burning near highway 68 is almost completely under control tonight. that one is 95% contained. brings us to the subject of heat. >> now, it will be almost as warm with readings near 100 degrees in the east bay. and the valley fire zone. the complete forecast just ahead. >>
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. [indiscernible] cbs reporter is live tonight, chris? >> reporter: at this hour, the pope is sleeping ahead of another full day of cubans today. they are inspired by the visit here. >> pope francis greeted thousands of young people in cuba sunday evening. they urged them not to give up hope for a better future. >> it caps off a busy day for the world's first latin- american pope. little girls gave him flowers while crowds chanted his names. earlier the holy father held a meeting with fidel castro at the person's home. they exchanged books and
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discussed environmental issues. . [dropped audio ] -- a message for u.s. and cuban officials. we are live in cuba tonight, back to you. >> chris, thank you. the pope will bring his message to the u.s. on tuesday. he will spend two days in washington before heading to new york city on thursday. and then it is on to
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philadelphia where he will spend the weekend before departing back to rome next sunday. now, the archbishop, now, blessed 150 catholics making the pilgrimage. they will leave tomorrow. then he told us he admires the pope for his down-to-earth approach. >> he represents the community but he represents most of the people in the world. >> for a person of faith you can say, well, if he is doing it. he is so normal then i can do it, too. >> the group will not meet with the pope directly, though. >> the group will attend a mas where the pope will proclaim sainthood for the founding father of california's missions. many oppose it. saying that the father was more sinner than seupbt with the message he used to convert people to christianity.
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they say he treated him like a servant. >> they could not speak their language. could not wear their clothes, could not sing their songs or say their prayers. >> now, lopez and his tribe now writing several laters to the pope about what they call the dark and violent reality. >> now, campaign 2016. a woman is surging in the presidential polls and brian webb reports it is hillary clinton. >> reporter: now, the second shot in the polls, boosted by her performance in last week's debate. >> they come to know me and understand what they have done and what i will do. they tend to support me. >> in the latest poll, front- runner, donald trump slid to 24% among registered republicans. followed by fioriona on 15% now, we know our current
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president is one. days after trump did not correct the town hall participant. he has his own comments about muslims and the precedency. he insists a muslim should not be president because islam is not consistent with the constitution. >> i would not advocate that we put a muslim in charge of this nation. >> hillary clinton made her first appearance on tv in almost four years on "face the nation" she calls donald trump irresponsible. >> fueling worry. >> reporter: she says she is not doing anything to prepare if joe biden joins the race. the commute to los angeles could be quicker than crossing the bay bridge. they are call it the hyperloop. it could be here sooner than
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and ann shows us the space aged transit system could be here a lot sooner than we think. >> it will be the smoothest ride that you can imagine. >> now,. >> reporter: faster than a commercial jet. >> we are investing transportation, no small test. >> now, a team of engines is working on a futuristic system that is moving them through tubes on a cushion of air on supersonic speeds in a vacuum. from los angeles to san francisco in 30 minutes. >> we literally build a full- scale, too. between the destinations. >> inside of that, we have a pod. people or cargo quickly. >> 2 years ago it seems like science fiction when a tesla and space-x unveils the design
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specks. now, they have seed money and expect to do another $80 million. >> 3 years from now, i believe it will be the first two or three production systems in the world. 5 years from now we will be moving goods from people. >> there are critics saying hyperloop is exciting though unrealistic. >> it does not solve the bigger problems. you know, how could you possibly imbed this kind of technology within the complicated transportation systems that we already have and we are developing in our cities. >> hyperloop technologies plans to have a text track up and running next year. >> it is going to change the world. hyperloop will change the way we live. it will change where we live. hyperloop will change economies, it will transform supply chain and manufacturing and that is an exciting thought.
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>> reporter: back to you. >> southern california community is under attack tonight from coyotes. officers are armed with paint ball guns and taking an extreme approach to scare them off. >> the moon rises and all bets are off. >> it concerns me that i have to walk around with a bat to walk my doing at -- my dog at night, i have 2 kids. >> when the sun goes down, more and more coyotes are coming out. last week a coyote followed a resident to these mailboxes and bit him on the leg. it is the 5th attack in 4 months. >> we have taken it to the next level. >> reporter: now, animal control officers are turning to paint ball guns. >> this is hazing them. >> even though someone may yell
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and scream they are becoming more comfortable. it raises the level of agitate them. >> officers shot water-based paint balls at two coyotes. they were not injured. the idea is to scare them enough they don't come back. residents hope it works. >> if they are not afraid of us how are we going to get rid of them? i mean and what stops them from going after pets? >> reporter: it is not just southern california. sanfrancisco ingleside neighborhood sees the spike in coyotes. since july, residents reported sightings. the neighborhood sorbiation posted warnings signs and hired an expert to hire a plan to deal with them. tonight, scientists are confirming what people in livermore knew. the summer of 2015 has been the
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hottest in history. a new report from the national ocean antic atmospheric shows global land and sea temperatures between june and august are the highest they have been since record keeping began in 1880. it was so hot at the wine festival, six people had to go to the hospital for heat exhaustion. today, they had cooing events to help people stay hydrated and healthy. that did the trick. no reports of heat-related illness today. well, another warm one tomorrow. there is good news, heading in the right direction, cooling down tomorrow and then even more and more dramatically on tuesday. the meantime, a lot to deal with in the fire department. starting in monterey county. 97 today, winds gusting to 24 miles an hour. bright humidity. cooling down tomorrow. still 90 degrees and the air and quality sufferings in the
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bay area because of high pressure pollutants in the east bay, where there is a spare the air alert posted for unlevel of particles in the air. it is warm. sanfrancisco, 75 degrees, just about as warm of a city in concord as it iin san jose. here is what is happening, high pressure weakening over the eastern pacific. while it will still be warm tomorrow there are clouds on the way and especially on tuesday. things will really come down. back in the 80s, inland finally coming down. in the meantime, a warm day on monday. future cast, 1:00 in the afternoon. point reyes down to the peninsula. cooling to the coast, but, headlines, warm again on monday. not quite as warm as it was today. cooling off, 15 degrees inland on tuesday and then the rest of the week remains mild. overnight tonight, the numbers
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will be near 60 degrees. warm night in the bay area. and, forecast high for tomorrow, well above average, 80 degrees in the city. 10 degrees, concord, still at 98 tomorrow, 94 in san jose. oakland, 87 degrees. 12 degrees above average for this time of the year. down to the south bay, the temperatures mostly in the middle to upper 90s. morgan hill gets all of the way up to 100 degrees. the shoreline, nice and mild. 74 degrees, half-moon bay, having up 880, 680, the numbers, walnut creek. livermore and 102 in brentwood. the temperatures in the middle 90s. elsewhere in the east bay in the north bay. low 90s will do it. unless you get close to the margin of the bay and the ocean. the temperatures at the beach middle 70s. around the bay, 80 degrees in san francisco, 87 degrees in
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alameda. up by the fires, now, it is 97 degrees. relief, it is on tuesday. the temperatures in the middle 80s by then. keeping them there. now, the numbers after tomorrow, going into the 80s inland. now, falling from the middle to upper 60s at the beaches. . now, man, week 2 in the nfl looks a lot different than week one. a different winner. >> very special. >> a different loser. >>s yes. more and more for the team. game 1. look who is back in the big league and look who is finishing on a high note.
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friends. now, i went straight up. close to it. i was yelling. throw the kid, throw the kid. they got the kid in the water. so, and then the mom jumps shortly. the boat is on fire. >> two other people on the yacht dove into the water as they were rescued. everyone involved in that. it is okay. >> high school football player from massachusetts is crediting his apple watch. he used the watch to check his heart rate after feeling chest and back pain. it was still 125 beats a minute two hours after practice. he was rushed to the hospital because of organ failure. he is now recovering, it turns out he might get a job out of the whole thing. >> i said hello, he said hello i am tim cook, the ceo of
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tomatoes can tell you they grow in all shapes and sizes. one is out shaping them all. check this out. it is shaped like a duck. a woman found it in her yard. her husband said he had to see it to believe it. since then they grown fond of their garden-grown duck. >> a lot of times you will find a tomato that is joined but never one with a peek. i am trying to find out how i can make him survive but i don't think there is anything that i could do. >> they don't know how to preserve it but they know one thing, they will not eat it. >> no way. >> we'll be right back. ,,,,
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