tv KPIX 5 News CBS January 9, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PST
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is now on kpix5 and streaming on cbsn bay area, crooks bust into a san francisco home in middle the day. we talked extensively with the two young women, sisters who were hiding inside. >> i thought they would hurt us and i thought i couldn't leave. i thought if anything, i could distract them for a second and my sister could get away. >> plus a plea from several bay area mayors and restaurants to help his assist airflow. >> really important we keep the pressure on. you don't get anything if everybody just agrees to give
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up and go away. >> and the need for cobra testing keeps growing across the bay area. what you need to know to get tested. good morning, it is sunday, january 9th. thanks for joining us, i'm devin fehely. let's take a look at our weather. >> watching for patchy fog this morning. it's not as widespread as it was. yesterday morning, but we still have some areas to keep an eye on and it's cold again. santa rosa is 37 and that's one of the locations where we are watching for fog. none of the reporting stations on here have fog on it but if you look at the visibility map you can see the number for santa rosa is down to less than a mile and look at the inland viral valleys. those are the areas we will watch through the morning to see if any fog develops. right now, we are going to see another batch of high cloud show up by the afternoon. so won't be as pretty blue sky as yesterday was. we'll be in the upper 50s with clouds. i will see with the rest of the forecast is in a few minutes.
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>> a brazen home invasion in san francisco. the thieves broke into a home in broad daylight as two sisters had in their bedroom. we spoke with the family about their ordeal. >> reporter: security video it shows the suspects gray color car backed into the victim's driveway, and the outer mission ingleside neighborhood. the robbers make their way to the front door and appeared to use some sort of tool to break the gate. all the while, two sisters are inside at night: 30 a.m. on tuesday. >> the thumping and things like moving around kept going for another five or so minutes. and i thought it was weird. so i went to, i was really suspicious already, so i got on my phone and i got a bottle of sock a and went upstairs and i called out, like mom, dad, is that you?
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>> reporter: when nobody answered, she woke up her sister and called 911. the victims did not want to share their names for privacy revision. >> i had in the closet because i didn't know what to do. i was really scared. >> reporter: her sister could now hear the robbers downstairs, outside the bedroom it just feet away. >> what did they say? >> there's a whole another place down here, he was yelling at someone else, and they just, they started knocking down the door. rebecca sisters shared this photo of the damage to the bedroom door. when one of them screamed, it scared off the suspects who left with cash, jewelry, handbags and sentimental items. they hopped into a waiting getaway car and sped off. the car appears to have a tent or some damage on the driver side near the front tire. >> i thought they would hurt us and i thought i couldn't leave, i thought if anything i could
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distract them for a second my sister could get away. >> reporter: the family said police believed they were targeted. >> the police told us and my mom, she was like, why did this happen to us? we don't even look like much. and they told us, they target asian households. >> reporter: the family has since added a number of security measures including reinforcing the front door. the sisters say they first figured out that someone might be breaking and when their dog started barking. we did reach out to the police department but so far have not heard back. bay area politicians and restaurant owners are out for the dire warning they say many independent restaurants and bars could go out of business unless congress steps in. as kpix5 reports, several mayors are among those asking for federal relief. >> reporter: many bars and
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restaurants say business is slowing down because of the omicron variant. almost 2 years and the pandemic, some business owners say they are running out of time. saturday night at revel and roost in downtown san rafael, the latest covid surges keeping his restaurant pretty quiet. >> with omicron it almost feels like march, 2020 but people are be more cautious so they are going out less. >> reporter: on average they are doing about 50% of the business compared to pre- pandemic levels. >> what can i get for you? >> reporter: some people are avoiding restaurants because it's too cold to eat outside. >> we want to protect the people around us, stay home, stay safe. >> reporter: she says her family is mostly ordering takeout. >> we go out maybe once a month, maybe, maybe once or twice a month, at most, but we try to stay at home when we can and just dying in. >> reporter: with your customers and rising food prices, the restaurant industry says it needs help.
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the independent restaurant coalition and 25 current and former u.s. mayors including the san rafael, oakland and san francisco mayor sent a letter to members of congress on friday. they are asking the feds to give out another round of the restaurant revitalization fund. last year that fund held more than 100,000 restaurants. but it ran out of money and 177,000 applicants were turned away. >> they could close. they did a survey a couple months ago and out of the people that indicate a, 85% warrant sure they could continue. >> reporter: they say the expert is a long shot. >> it's important that we keep the pressure on. you don't get anything if everybody just agrees to give up and go away. >> if we just did a little bit now, it would carry to the next three to six months and i think from there, i think would be we would be safe. >> reporter: time is not on their side but all d see cong will act.
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in addition to the three mayors here in the bay area, mayors from l.a. to chicago to philly signed that letter to members of congress. happening today, san francisco schools will be receiving shipments of hard-to-find at- home covid tests. an organization called the tipping point is giving out thousands of at-home tests and masks to teachers. the teachers union held a sick out demanding safer working conditions and weekly covid testing. and to the frustration to many parents, school districts across the bay area are returning to online learning with covid cases on the rise. starting on monday, hayward unified will attend virtual classes. they will do that for we can and reevaluate. in the hotel students return to in person learning on january 18th. please call 911 for life- threatening emergencies only.
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that is the plea from the san francisco fire department. the chief says that too many people who have covid or the flu are flooding it's 911 call center. officials say you should only dial 911 if you urgently need help. >> please don't call 911 to ask for a covid test or because you have a cold or minor flu symptoms. we really want to keep our ambulances available to people having a heart attack or stroke so we can get them to the hospital. >> the response times by ambulances is also being affected by staff shortages. several paramedics are under quarantine after they were exposed or tested positive for covid. for information on how to find a covid test, vaccine or booster shot, check out our research resource guide. new questions and calls for justin are merging an accidental shooting date death tree in north hollywood. but a stray bullet from police went through the wall the
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dressing room occupied by 14- year-old valentina peralta. they called for the officer to be prosecuted. >> based on the video and his colleagues telling him, slow down, slow down officer john jones, stop. >> why is a police officer armed with an ar 15 to begin with? >> we stand proudly and stand strong with them. >> her parents brought flowers to her public viewing yesterday at a funeral home. she will be laid to rest tomorrow. still ahead, the rescue that help to reunite a dog with its owner months after the animal went missing. and what we are learning about a bizarre incident that sent two flight attendants
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russ. >> dogs are strong and smart and they can survive a very long time. we did not know the situation with this dog or how long he had been out there. >> try four months. russ's owner, a traveling nurse, was in tahoe when the fire swept through, forced to leave when the city was evacuated, russ ran off, never to be seen again. until now. on a mountainside, stuck in snow five feet deep. >> so i followed the tracks and all of a sudden saw this dark shape underneath the tree. and then he opened his eyes and i'm pretty sure i screamed. i'm pretty sure elsa heard me down the mountain. >> reporter: the volunteers walked me through their uphill battle on snowshoes and with a sled to get russ to safety. >> i petted him under the chin a little bit and then he just did that, you know where dog rest their head in your hands. >> the sweetest thing on the planet. just the most amazing dog.
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>> he's here, okay, what's next? we didn't really think about that. so i look over at lyons, and i go, how do you feel about writing down on the sled with him? we sled down and we kind of tipped over. and we decided that was the end of the sleigh ride. >> reporter: the end of an adventure and now the beginning of many more for russ. >> it was still heartwarming, especially around the holidays, the end of the year, the year was so hard on everybody. and then just to have this really happy ending and to be able to be part of that was, it was pretty special. >> rescuers were able to track down russ is on her with the help of a microchip and a missing dog report that was filed last summer. also in the sierra, thousands
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of customers are still in the dark two weeks after big storms. the snow shut down major highways in the sierra foothills on christmas weekend and left people stranded in their homes. they are still working to restore power to 7000 customers. some have no running water so they can't base or wash their clothes. others are burning firewood just to keep warm. >> you want to stay warm this morning, in the north bay valleys in the east bay valleys, temperature of dip back down. it's called out there. a real pretty view from the top of the sales force tower. we are not looking at any clouds at this point, those are for the inland valleys. we are going to track where you are likely to hit some fog and where you just going to be waking up to low clouds. 37 degrees in santa rosa right now and 36 in livermore. we have two spots on the map this money, where everybody is
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in the mid-30s for those three. but everyplace else? it's mid 40s. actually a little bit warmer this morning that was yesterday at this time and the fog is not as intense. so if you look at the visibility sensors, the reading for santa rosa is less than a mile. that means you want to be aware there's going to be fog on the road up there in and around santa rosa and in concorde you have the same thing. it's doing okay in the tri- valley. so no dense fog advisory issued for the national weather service this morning's that's a subtle improvement this morning but you may want to give yourself extra time. daytime highs will climb up into the mid-50s but it's not going to be perfectly sunny. even though you can see the extent where the mid-level clouds are, not just reading fog, but where's that stratus? that cloud deck that comes in from the central valley? you will wake up to it over here. this is why concord has visibility down to half a mile and you might see fog develop but it will clear out as we get into the late morning and early afternoon. we will pull in some high clouds on this leading up to this next system which will try to bring rain here even though
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i want. we can put the future cost. you will see the rain that gets read in that line of cosby differently. we can pull a ford and that store misses us, the one behind it misses us, the one after it misses us. they are all getting pulled back up into the pacific northwest and away from us. so we are missing out on the rain opportunities because the storm track is being redirected into the pacific northwest. and a closer inspection on monday shows us we start out with a few clouds but even at that, by the time we get past sunrise, thus the 7:00 hour, we'll be looking at clear skies. we don't have a significant impact in terms of clouds for the next system. that brings us to how likely is it are we going to see rain in the next week? what about beyond next week? there's two ways to look at that. this is the six to 10 day outlook for precipitation and not just preservation but the confidence of precipitation will either be above average or below average. it's no surprise here over what
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we just saw, we are shaded in the deeper colors of tan and brown. the further you get into those colors the higher degree the confidence is that percentage is going to be below average. let's switch this now. we are going to go from 6-10 and look at 8-14 and watch the map change. like a potentially for the next two weeks, we stay in that shade of higher degrees of confidence of below average of precipitation. it's just a way of acknowledging the odds look like we are going to stay fairly dry. the seven-day forecast, it looks that way. sunny, mid to upper 50s for daytime highs going across all of our microclimates as well. so we are entering into a pretty quiet. here. we were so busy october and certainly in december. it appears to be a dry january so far. >> it looks like a really stable period. looks like you copied and pasted the first day all the
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way across the week. >> there are subtle differences there on daytime highs. >> just a little bit. up and down one and two. thank you so much. now to a bizarre incident in the south bay. alaska airlines says two of its flight attendants were taken to hospital on friday after a mysterious odor was reported on board flight into san jose. they met the crew at the terminal. they didn't find anything unusual. the airline says that no passengers were affected. the plane was pulled from service and is now being evaluated. coming up, upper echelon opponents for st. mary's and the cal golden bears and those usf dons, they keep adding to the win column. plus, the news we have been waiting for for over 900 days. clay thompson is back today. his first game ever at chase center. steve we
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>> how is that for a source? from the man himself. he will return today against the cleveland cavaliers after years of rehabbing both an acl and achilles injury. it will be the first time he has played in chase center and it comes against the cavaliers organization. he has plenty of history against. please bring the kleenex. it's going to be an emotional night. >> it will be one of the most emotional nights of my basketball life and if it's not emotional for the rest of us, you can imagine how clay is going to feel. it's not going to be easy but it will be very special. >> college hoops, -- couldn't find any offense from the gaels last night from byu. st. mary's shot at 29% from the floor. that's not going to get the job done against anyone, especially byu. there's treva now, contents, three the old-fashioned way. just 43 points for st. mary's as they lose 52-43. gaels also turned it over 19 times. they are 12-5 on the season. usc the other day, they hit
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number five, ucla and berkeley. the other difference in this one, one of 14 from deep with the bears and 15 turnovers. here is one of them. tiger campbell, johnny meanders his way in, double clutch and he has the ez 2. 60-52. to the hilltop, san francisco hosting san diego. the dons -- and this is it to the corner, knocks it down, he did it on offense and defense. second half, dons her up 15, he will coast to the other way with one hand. a little scoop, 27, a game-high for him. 88-73. the thin ice melted yesterday and because of it, the sharks may be holding onto a lot of cash. san jose has attempted to terminate keynes contract.
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to remove the $23 million cap hit remaining in his contract. yesterday was placed on waivers. other teams are going to have 24 hours to claim him. if unclaimed. the nhl players association is expected to file a grievance on his part to prevent the contract termination. the sharks have been trying to move on from cain, looking to trade him for months according to sources. the cause in terminating his contract is due to a breach of league covid protocols with him believed to have traveled on to vancouver while in said protocol. no more can, but the sharks have thomas hurdle. san jose and philly last night take on the flyers, third. down 2-1, the initial tip, hurdle, puts it in. how about that? his second cold again, it's tied at 2. over time we go. 211, hurdle. going to keep it. fires, sinks it, that's a game- winner and a natural hat trick.
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the sharks win 3-2. they host the red wings on tuesday. and to the cowboys and philly, san francisco could jump the eagles in the standings were they to lose and sf were to win. the cowboys had no issues with philly in both games this season. here's deck prescott, prescott's fifth passing touchdown of the game, a career- high. without all the great cowboys quarterbacks in years past, 37 touchdowns on the season, that is now a franchise record. cowboys rule 51-26. the chiefs defeated the broncos 12 times row. broncos looking to take the lead and instead melvin gordon smash, he costed up, and there's nick bolton, the other way we go. 86 yards, chiefs win 28-24.
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that's a look at sports us money. of course the big news today, clay thompson taking the floor for golden state. have a great. >> reporter: the city warning about fake covid test sites. what one county is doing to ease the overload. plus, the new safety regulations announced more than two years after deadly fire in southern california. here's a look in
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welcome back. thank you so much for joining us. i'm devin fehely. let's start this half hour with a quick check of our weather. >> slightly weather this morning for some of us and slightly less fog. it's still cold and there's still patches of fog. so let's get a look at where they are. temperatures are down to 37 in santa rosa, that's cool. it's 36 in livermore. the concord yesterday, that was you. you were in the mid 30s and today it's only mid-40s. want to bundle up in the inland valleys and you want to plan on patchy fog. visibility readings in san jose are down to 3/10 of a mile and concord, you have improved up to a mile but the point is, even though there's not a dense fog advisory like there was yesterday, you still have to be mindful you might hit fog that slows you down. a few clouds today and daytime highs in the upper 50s.
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i will be back with the rest of the forecast coming up. california's covid test positivity rate is soaring. new figures as we can show it's at 21.7%. it means basically one out of every five people who get tested are in fact infected with covid. that is nearly 10 times higher than just a month ago when we were down to 2.2%. on saturday, governor avenue sums put out a response plan to help boost state testing as well as support front-line workers. and to strengthen the state's healthcare system. this comes as the need for testing spikes and more people struggle to find the test. kpix5 caught up with one san mateo testing company working overtime. >> reporter: the event center is once again where everyone wants to be. not to get the vaccine, but now to get tested for covid-19. and staff who run the site tell us even with appointments required, the demand remains high and they expect thousands
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more will come here in the weeks ahead. >> my son who lives with us has covid, he tested positive. so, he has been quarantining. >> reporter: whether you are recently exposed to the virus by someone you know, >> everyone responsible to stay safe and not causing trouble for other people. >> reporter: orbited the requirements of where you work or go to school, covid testing brought plenty of people to this county site now run by the company virus is. >> what we are finding is even with antigen test, it does not detect omicron at its earliest infection. >> at the san mateo marriott. they will oversee the survey. with the clients walking up and testing now, they are able to get in and out much faster and back to the rest of their day. i've seen a lot more happy
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clients as they are exiting the premises. >> people park and then walk up to complete a pcr test themselves, keeping long lines off the road. >> i would like to take a test almost every day if i have time because i want to ensure i am safe for other people. >> reporter: the county is testing around 8500 people a week and they plan to increase that number by four times. they say the site could test as many as 10,000 people a day. >> it's important that we just protect ourselves so by doing that we are protecting others. >> reporter: since appointments are required, you are encouraged to sign up well before you know you will need to get tested and expect results to show up in about 72 hours. >> the company's labs are working to get results closer 24 hours up to her to do but samples do remain valid for up to a week. looking life out at san francisco with covid tests flying off the shelves and appointments few and far between, city officials are warning about fake testing
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sites. san francisco public health tweeted this out. unauthorized covid-19 test sites are popping up throughout the city. we know the demand is high for testing, please use authorized testing sites or fda approved rapid tests. no word from the city on where those testing operations were found or how it plans to crack down. parents are expressing concern about how the pandemic is hurting their children's education. test results stated wider in every measurable category. as compared to the 2018-19 school year. the south bay education advocacy group says the data confirmed what many parents suspected, that it's simply not as effective as in person instruction. >> state testing is showing mo the education and achievement gap year the group says it
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school systems need tutoring programs and additional targeted instruction to help the kids catch up. three fraternities are having their recognition revoked by uc berkeley because of hazing. a student affairs spokesperson tells the san francisco chronicle that the universities chi phi and theta delta chi have been stripped of their status until 2026 and the chapter sigma alpha f at line, officials did not share what kind of hazing activities led to the punishment citing federal and state privacy laws. the body of a missing skier has now been found at the northstar ski resort. 43-year-old rory elliott it was reported missing christmas day. the search was called off after six days because of extreme weather. authorities said that there was no way he could survive the severe winter conditions. he was found dead early yesterday. u.s. coast guard is out with new safety regulations following a deadly scuba diving boat fire.
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34 people died after the boat caught fire off the santa barbara coast more than two years ago. the new rules require improved boat fire equipment, escape routes and devices on board to ensure a nightwatchman remains alert. the fire led to criminal charges and calls for tougher regulations for small passenger boats. leading it democrats gathered in las vegas to pay tribute to former senate majority leader harry reid. president joe biden along with the first lady, house speaker nancy pelosi and senate majority leader chuck schumer in attendance. the president was joined by former president barack obama to eulogize the former senate majority leader who died on december 28. >> harry cared so much about his fellow americans. and so little about what anybody thought of him. it was all searchlight, no spotlight. >> you wanted harry in the foxhole with you. his willingness to fight by my
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heavy rain has made all the difference for salmon population in san marin. there spawning at a rate not seen in years. >> reporter: what a different six months can make. they were almost bone dry, and other so much water running through them, that salmon are spawning like no one has seen for decades. it was a testament to the unpredictability of nature that after the second driest summer in state history, the salmon
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should have such ideal conditions for spawning. >> the most exciting thing ever. >> reporter: and return was part of the group taking a creek walk for the first time in her life, she got to see the fish doing what nature intended. here, a female is preparing a nest in the gravel as three males jockeying for position nearby. >> i've never seen and i've been wanting to witness this for a long time. so this is a total thrill to be able to see this in action. >> reporter: seven watchers have been afraid of what this season would be given the alarming intensity of the drought. but so much water is flowing at exactly the right time, it is making for the perfect set of conditions for the at isyearans we are seeing fish 25 or 30 years and in some places, further up the watershed then we have ever seen them before.
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>> reporter: the director was painting a dark scenario for the salmon this summer, but says the remarkable turnaround of the greeks has brought the population back to its normal levels and then some. >> there used to be 35,000 fish they caught this great. it's so good that we can celebrate maybe 500, 600 fish, but every time we can get at least that, we are on the road to recovery. >> was a first for 10-year-old kelly as well and she said it helped to be with a group that could explain what was going on. >> it's so many facts that i get to go home and tell my dad so many facts. >> reporter: it is a cruel factor nature that these fish will all die once the spawning is complete. but the fact that they were able to finish the cycle means their purpose for living has been achieved. and the thousands of their offspring will begin the process anew. as long as there is enough water to bring them home again.
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so cool to see those unique pictures of what those creeks can look like. when we have had 200% of the average amount of precipitation which is how we got to that point. okay. how is san jose waking up, clear skies. that is of you and you got a little colder this morning because of that. but at least it's clear skies and we are not dealing with any fog down there, clearly. beautiful view from the top of the sales force tower looking out east toward oakland and the berkeley hills. san jose, the name is number is 40. we are keeping out of the 30s for now but it's 36 in santa rosa, is 36 in livermore, we have some cool numbers for those inland valleys. we can pick out a few numbers on here. 44 in hayward right now, across the bridge, 45 in redwood city, more mid 30s showing up for this north bay valley. so there is fog, you are likely
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to encounter it in santa rosa and concord. those of the two places. napa you are doing much better this morning than you were yesterday. you can see where the areas are to watch the fog. north bay valleys, inland east bay valleys and while that dissipates by late morning, watch what shows up at atomic and into the afternoon. that's a deck of higher clouds coming in from the pacific so it's not can it be a perfectly blue sky day today. we will have high clouds that show up and just another way to look at the layers. related the visibility on the ground that we looked at the high clouds coming in afternoon, these are the mid- level clouds will be around for much of the morning. you can see how they are kind of filling in those inland valleys. you will wake up with more cloudiness over in the inland valleys, not necessarily has to be fog on the ground. there's the dissection of the clouds. okay. as far as daytime eyes, is going to mid to be upper 50s for most locations, a chance of rain shows up here. that's what it looks like on that satellite. on the few tickets which can read the rain and thus clouds and say, not coming here. or the one after that, or the series of lives. going for two north for us. the first on a monday, just
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clouds there for the morning hours on monday, you can see we're going to miss it. and even by the point we get to 7:00 in the money, those clouds are gone and for monday, it will be a mostly blue sky day today. long-range forecast again from 6-10 days, it shows us there's a high degree of confidence that we are going to see below average precipitation. but if we switch that from six- tie-in two 814, we see that, not only stick around, but even grow in extent a little bit. so now it's covering more of california. for a little while here, the confidence is starting to grow. we are going to be out of the rain came. that's what it looks like in the seven-day forecast. sunny skies, mid to upper 50s, few low 60s for san jose, a few low 60s for the numbers in the north bay valleys. no big changes, and no rain for
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the next seven days. >> we will take it. thank you very much. a group of boy scouts in pleasanton is renting up christmas trees for a good cause. nearly 100 boy scouts and adult volunteers picked up over 100 1000 trees. the trees go to an area to be mulched and use for landscaping. it's their biggest fundraiser of the year with donations for the service for this year going from $10-$100. shuttle to the boy scott scout who shot it. how would east bay group is using jazz music to inspire and empower students.
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grooving. >> the joy i feel here, i don't get that joy anywhere else. >> for some, gives joy. others, music produces power. >> i see the power of it, i see the strength that it gives young people, and i see that it opens the world up to young people. >> reporter: like michalak dempsey. >> music is my life. i'm grateful for the environment. it's very encouraging and they want you to be your best self. >> is a pianist and has been for 13 years. four of those years, spent right here at a place where mentorship and music merge. uptown jazz, nonprofit founded in oakland and 94 celebrates jazz music and introduces its rich legacy to young people. >> it is not a band class. it's a way of living. it's a way of life. >> reporter: they come here to learn, play, and explore jazz music. >> i think it has helped me
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express myself. >> i can't imagine my life without her. uptown is like home. >> reporter: a home where there wasn't one. >> our house was undergoing some renovations but covid broke out so we were out of our house, we were accounts jumping, we are doing different things we can go back to home. so for us, me and my siblings, music became our home. >> reporter: it's how they communicate, swinging notes, tapping, finding their individual sound. although each young musician may not pursue this professionally, >> it is the influencers. this music is the influencer of all genres, all popular music. >> reporter: the key is making sure each student finds their own beat, blending and composing a language we can all speak. >> magic. music is magic. it does things he would never expect for it to do. a big milestone for the james webb space telescope.
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two weeks after launching from south america, it successfully unfolded its giant gold mirror. at 21 feet in diameter, is the largest mirror nasa ever built but it's size created a unique problem. the youth mirror was so large it couldn't fit inside of a rocket. so they designed it origami style. the more light the mere can collect, the more photons the telescope can collect. the engineers in palo alto developed the primary infrared camera. it's supposed to help scientists learn about the evolution of the universe. the world's largest tech show is wrapping up in las vegas this weekend from flying cars to fitness trackers for your cat, this year's showcase did not disappoint. we break it all down. >> reporter: the number of in- person exhibitors expected at ces 2022 was half the 2020 show. but after an all virtual 2021, the consumer technology association which produces ces was happy to be back in las vegas at all. >> the technology industry is
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ready to get back to business. >> reporter: samsung was a wrong the big presents with gadgets generating buzz. the freestyle protector just under two pounds but able to protect up to a 100 inch screen and the latest addition to with s 21 smartphone family, the more affordable fe 5g. they discussed updated phone as part of a comfort tech trend in the screen have a pandemic era. >> it's like comfort food, except gadgets. it's the gadgets that we know, we love, we feel the most comfortable with, but tweak that little bit to make us feel even better about spending more time with them. >> reporter: automakers on the move. general motors unveiled chevrolets new battery electric silverado pickup truck in an online presentation. it set to go into production in spring, 2023 with a range of up to 400 miles on fully charged batteries. bmw displayed the i x flow with
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ee technology which changes the vehicles color at the touch of a button. >> you choose the clothes you wear the, you choose your social media status, you choose the color of your car. >> reporter: sony showing off the latest electronic vehicle. they presented it's car copter concept that runs on hydrogen based fuel cells, topping out at 155 miles per hour. at slower speeds, john deere unveiling its first self driving tractor. >> it's real, it's ready, and it's helping farmers today. >> speaking of a slower pace and rest and relaxation, holders perfect filled bathtub technology soaked up ces agenda, able to draw bath on command through your smart phone. >> the minute you step in your front door, that bath is ready to go i your perfect temperature or if you have kids, it can keep the water lower for them, the temperature lower for them. >> reporter: a pejic pandemic era focus. showing off an activity tracker for your cat, part of a suite of digital products for the
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well-connected pet. 105,000 square-foot los angeles mansion could become the most expensive property ever to sell in the u.s. this exclusive hillside oasis in bel air is set to go to auction next month, the starting bid is $295 million. it spans nearly 4 acres from a 360 degree view of the ocean and alpine's, the home known as the one includes a niku, solo salon, spa, 10,000 square-foot sky deck and a private running track.
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type for a look at this morning's top stories. san francisco police believe a family hit with a home invasion in broad daylight was the liberty targeted. the suspects made off with values like cash and jewelry but fortunately no one living in a house in ingleside neighborhood with her. some babe area restaurants and bars say they need more help from the feds to stay afloat during the pandemic. the mayors of san rafael, oakland and san francisco are joining a call for aid from congress. san francisco schools is targeting shipments of at-home covid test kits. an organization called the tipping point is giving out thousands of at-home tests and extra ppe to teachers and families. with on the con variant continuing to spray, new statewide numbers show the
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covid test rate positivity is now nearly 20 to%. that's close to 10 times the percentage that existed just one month ago. clay thompson is likely to return to action tonight. the star player has been out with injuries ever since game six of the nba finals way back in 2019. golden state takes on the cleveland cavaliers at 5:30 at chase center. a live view on w, thus the camera up above the tri-valley. you can see the lights of 580 stretching out in the distance. so we are seeing some of this mid-level cloud started fill in those inland valleys again but it's clear skies for san jose and it's clear over the east bay right now. bundle up if you are in the inland valley. 36 in santa rosa and we are reporting fog at the airport. that clears by the late afternoon. >> think you dare and i thank you for joining us. cbs sunday morning with jane and polly is up next on kpix5. enjoy the rest of your sunday.
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captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, committed to improving health for everyone, everywhere. ♪♪ [trumpet] ♪♪ >> pauley: good morning. i'm jane pauley, and this is "sunday morning." it's been said journalism is the first draft of history. during the trump years, that draft was sometimes found in sensational headlines that tended to generate more heat than light. now a group of actual historians is considering
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