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tv   KPIX 5 News  CBS  January 16, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PST

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live from the cbs bay area studios, this is a kpix 5 news. >> right now and streaming on cbs and bay area, several hostages are free following a tense standoff in texas. we have the latest from fort worth. a scam targeting san francisco drivers, leaving them with a mountain of tickets, how are criminals pulling it off? >> the biggest emotional a lot of us have is helplessness. we cannot do anything. we hear about the race to contact loved ones in the wake
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of the powerful volcanic eruption. good morning, it is centigrade, january 16. let's start with a quick check on the weather with our meteorologist. well, this sunday is going to look and feel a lot like saturday did, temperatures are not budging. you will notice not much of a difference. we will see the highs go in the low to mid 60s. yes, it will be hazy. the sunrise is coming up at just about a minute or two earlier. know that it is a little bit earlier. we will keep the clouds around. we can watch the clouds filter through . that get that the had to 3:00 pm. you might get a little blue but for the most part it is cloudy today. i will be back with the
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forecast coming up in a few minutes. the police have made an arrest our after the city's first homicide of the year. this was before 1:00 am yesterday. a 31-year-old man was shot outside of business on sebastopol avenue. detectives worked until they pinned down the suspect, a 27- year-old santa rosa resident. a s.w.a.t. team took him into custody after storming his home late saturday afternoon. several people who were held hostage inside a synagogue near fort worth texas are free after a tense standoff that lasted nearly 12 hours. our cbs news correspondent has the latest. >> reporter: the terrifying hostage situation that began during morning services at a texas synagogue ended with the safe rescue of several people who were being held inside. >> the hostage rescue team
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reached the synagogue. they rescued the three hostages. the subject is deceased. >> reporter: the police were called around 11:00 am just as sabbath prayers were being held in person and streamed live. officials say the man took several hostages, possibly including the synagogue's rabbi. the man could be heard saying that he was the brother of a convicted terrorist who was being held in a federal prison in texas. s.w.a.t. teams and fbi agents were on the scene throughout the day. the rabbi has been known to reach out to those of the islamic faith. >> he has been to all of our religious festivals. we have been to the synagogue on their religious festivals. >> reporter: members of the local muslim community came out to express support for the synagogue congregation. >> we would like to tell her jewish brother that we are behind them and we support them. we condemn this act. >> reporter: the press secretary tweeted saturday evening that president biden was briefed around the day by senior officials. cbs news. car break-ins are a huge problem in seven cisco. we are learning that these are also targeting license plates. kyrsten sinema spoke to one woman who found out that somebody racked up a number of parking tickets using her stolen license plates.
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>> i noticed that my plates were gone. >> reporter: this is how katie found her car recently, without a front license plate. she believes somebody took it right in front of her home in the marina. >> today i realized i was getting parking tickets because i got a ticket on my car and i want to pay it and i saw four tickets that i did not get. >> reporter: she made this discovery online. somebody stuck her license plate on a similar white audi. that received multiple street cleaning and expired meter citations in the last week. >> this is a violation, you cannot even park your car in front of your house without your license plate being stolen. that is actually what i first thought when i saw my license plate stolen was that my license plate is now going to be used for crime and they're going to come looking for me. >> reporter: in her next-door community, she found that she was not alone.
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a neighbor recently wrote that his rear plate was stolen. it was replaced with another one. his original license plate was put on a car almost identical to his. that car is now getting parking tickets. >> earlier this afternoon, the car in front of me had a broken window. yes, i'm definitely worried about that. i now have to check my license plates. this makes me not really want to park my car in the streets anymore. >> reporter: and katie has to contest the tickets, get new plates at the dmv, and get a new street parking sticker from the city. >> i do not think we should let this type of lawlessness go. this is not okay. i understand we live in the city and things happen and the city. we have crossed a line. >> reporter: in san francisco, kpix 5. now we look at san francisco. the city is cracking down on events due to the omicron surge. the threshold for mega events is now lowered to 500 attendees indoors and 5000
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attendees outdoors. now, beginning february 1, people 16 and older must show proof of vaccination and a booster shot to attend mega events. when the demand for vaccines intensified, the access for families have gone down, making it impossible for families across the country to get vaccinated. rite aid says that it is tackling the problem by offering walk in vaccinations throughout the month of january. last week was the kickoff for the program. hours are 10:00 am until 3:00 pm on saturdays. the vaccine is available for kids ages five and older. check rite aid.com for locations. satellite images show the spectacular eruption of an undersea volcano near tonga early yesterday morning. the eruption happened about 40
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miles outside of the country's capital city. plumes of ash rose like a mushroom cloud above the pacific ocean. a boom could be heard 500 miles away in fiji and in new zealand. this was as far away as alaska. this is how it looked from space. tsunami advisories were issued from japan, hawaii, alaska and the west coast. the eruption created the biggest tsunami threat the west coast has seen in more than a decade. this is how the surf looked in half moon bay. authorities urged residents to stay away from beach harbors and peers. yesterday morning the santa cruz harbor was inundated with seawater damaging multiple boats. the same harbor sustained tens of millions of dollars of damage in 2011 after an earthquake in japan. let's go back to the conditions that cause the synonymy advisor in the first place. look at the before and after pictures from the underwater eruption. it cut the internet leaving people around the world largely in the dark about how the islands were impacted. san mateo county have the largest tongan population in
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california. kpix 5 is in redwood city. we spoke to several who were worried about friends and relatives back home. >> reporter: communication from tonga is cut off. a lot of tonga americans are waiting for updates and telephone calls from families. >> we try to get a hold of the family. there was nobody. >> we tried to call. nothing. >> the biggest emotion a lot of us have is helplessness. we cannot do anything from here. >> this woman does not know how her family is doing. the only information is showing self unfitting and flooding. >> it just is very scary. >> reporter: these are some of her family memories. >> we are just kind of playing the waiting game and hoping that we will hear from them soon. >> reporter: phone connections are down on the small island nation with 100,000 people. this is the senior pastor in
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san carlos. after the volcanic eruption, he says the telephone lines on the main island worked briefly before going down. the stories he heard from family and friends are not good. >> black rain coming down from the sky. they found that they were little rocks. >> reporter: the pastor came to the u.s. in the 70s. he said one thing about his people as they are resilient. >> they will believe something good will come out of it. we believe that god will protect us. god will protect our little island. >> reporter: they do not know how to help and they do not know what people in the islands need. once they can establish communication, the community can then organize and come up with specific plans. in redwood city, back to you.
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kpix 5. >> the synonymy advisory forced 100 people to evacuate from the berkeley marina until 6:00 pm last night. we spoke to evacuees and experts concerned about the potential impact. >> reporter: after 7:00 am, residents at the marina got an earlier start to there saturday than they planned. >> i joe by patrol boats and also walked up and down the docks. they had loudspeakers telling us to evacuate immediately. >> reporter: 10% of the boats have people who live on board. berkeley police evacuated around 15 residence. some have lived here for more than 20 years.
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they said the water was calmer today and other times when they were still able to stand their boats. >> usually if there is a storm you feel something. this is placid water. >> reporter: to help residents ride out the advisory away from their homes, the red cross came here with supplies and stayed on the marina while they waited to go back to their boats. >> we are always here to help people in need. this is especially for the folks like here today in the berkeley marina. >> reporter: the california geological survey was observing the water to see what the impact might be. they noticed at least three surges in the waves. there was even a subtle whirlpool of water that visitors may not have noticed otherwise. >> i have seen a couple of boats try to come into the water like three or four times. they go back out. the currents are too strong. >> reporter: staff left without reporting issues. the potential for damage to property and danger to people nearby required them to study the scene. >> the marina office called my husband said they would be several more hours before we were allowed back down on the docks. >> reporter: in berkeley, kpix 5. in sausalito, floodwaters crept into the streets near the campus marina on the north end of town. the police were stationed making their that people knew what was going on. up the coast, there was a
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strong surge with winds and tides. despite the e sys a ch. susest. to the experts we, they did not believe the effects, how far and wide they were. >> the volcano itself is relatively shallow. the amount of water was likely displaced, it was not a huge amount. it is surprising that it reached the west coast. the simple physics of it i really unlikely for anything like that to happen. but yes, it did reach the west coast. the eruption was very powerful. there are reports it was heard as far as alaska. there were sensors that picked it up around the world.
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they were not just seismic sensors but sensors that measure sound that is inaudible to the human ear. >> reporter: wendy mentioned there is a possibility of another big eruption. it would be bad news for the island of tonga. the west coast would have 11 hours of warning before any subsequent tsunami. we are learning about a surfer who had to be rescued about 300 feet off shore at san francisco's ocean beach. park rangers say he is okay but is being evaluated for exposure to the cold water. rescuers say the raids were so powerful, they broke apart his surfboard. the time is 6:13 a.m. still ahead, a big wet mess in the east bay. it is not related to the synonymy alert. plus, we have a special hunter tasked with specific out the rear and most expensive delicacies in california. we are counting down to the matchup between the 49ers
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welcome back. the time now is 6:15 a.m. now to a freight train derailed in los angeles on saturday afternoon. it happened around 4:15 p.m.
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near the university of southern california health sciences campus. the union pacific train had 17 container cars and no passengers. the company says an investigation into what went wrong is now underway. no crewmembers on the train were hurt. we have shown you plenty of flooding video this morning from around the coast. this one has nothing to do with the synonymy. a water main broke last night creating a huge mess between bay and west streets. while some of the rarest and most expensive truffles in the world are being grown right here in california. in order to find them, you need a very special hunter. reporter kimberly cruise is in san luis obispo. >> reporter: in this 10 acre piece of land, filled with 2200 holly oak trees, you can find one of the most rare mushrooms in the world. it is not visible above the ground. you need a special navigator. meet lola. she is one of the key
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components in truffle hunting. >> the truffles are underground. we teach the dogs to locate, i might even have one, these little tends. these little tends have pieces of truffle in them. we teach the dogs to find these originally. eventually, they bury these underground. the dogs in the truffle orchards will smell a truffle and go to it. they will indicate by tapping their foot or digging. they will put their nose on it. that is how we know a truffle is there. >> reporter: when you think a black truffles, you might think of southern france. now you can add templeton to the list. >> let's try it. >> reporter: brian and denise knew it would take patience and hard work to cultivate this crop. >> we are learning that the normal cycles about six or 10 years. it has been almost exactly 6 years to get these size of truffles this quickly. it is really exciting. >> reporter: time is not the only obstacle ingrowing this. the winter black travel is
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known to be rare because of how much attention needs to go into growing them. >> there is irrigation and we have to keep the evasive rodents and other things out of the orchard. >> reporter: six years later, the leap of faith they took was worth it. >> yes, we found these four within a few hours today. who knows how many we will find. for restaurants, these are in high demand. they are about $1000 a pound. >> reporter: now that they are starting to see truffles go, the end goal would be to begin selling. in templeton, back to you. while you notice the weather has not changed over the last several days. we keep pulling and these high clouds. sometimes we get great sunsets. they do not make the afternoons look pretty. the reason why we keep getting the cloudy days is from a system down here to the south. there is a little bit of rain
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out there. there is the circulation. it has been locked out there for the past several days. it keeps during the high clouds our way. if we take the future cast and we played through tuesday, we are still looking at the same scenario by the time we get there. for the rest of this holiday weekend, today and tomorrow, both on martin luther king day and today, we will keep the clouds streaming in. it will be hazy and you do not notice a whole lot of change. that includes the daytime highs. these numbers are going to look and feel very familiar. 61 degrees today for redwood city. we will go to 62 in san jose. we will be in the upper 50s in the inland valley's in the east bay. we will make it to 60 in santa rosa. that is exactly where we have been and how this has been
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playing out. if we want to get a look at the bigger picture beyond just the clouds coming our way and you can see that same system and the satellite. let's look out into the pacific, broader. the future cast picks up on the the next two which are lining up out there. there is a very familiar pattern here. those storms continue to get coldwell to our north. it is not just here but it is over the next week, we are going to let this play all the way through, almost the end of january. that is january 25. the reason the storms keep getting pulled away and we keep enjoying sunny weather which is the complete opposite of what we were doing last month, how do you have two months that are so completely opposite? you can see why that is when you get a pattern in the atmosphere. there are two bull's-eyes on here. you have the one obvious one out there. it is deep blue and it shows where you have low pressure. that is where the storms are developing. it is the red bull's-eye over us that is driving things. that is the block. there is a center of high- pressure arrest. watch how that develops. that will play out over the entire week. look at now through friday. it did not really change. now it even looks a little bit more like saturated. you really have these two bull's-eye. the center of high-pressure is
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in the absolute perfect praise to block all of the storms from getting here. everything has got to go up and over. by the time we get to thursday and friday, it is more intense than it has been. so under that scenario, we probably will see more sunshine. we look at the forecast, we are clearing up the clouds. the time we get to thursday and friday, it is sunny. it will not warm up a whole lot but it will be a little warmer. amateurs in san jose will go into the upper 60s. as we look across the climate, we see the same story on here with the northbay valley's warming up into the mid-60s. we will keep the temperatures in the upper 50s. at the beaches, that is it on the forecast. back to you. the fate of the world's top tennis star is coming up next. coming up next, we have a rundown, the nfl playoffs are underway. we had a wild finish to open up the postseason. the raiders and
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good morning and welcome, two teams squared off yesterday that have not had much postseason success in the 21st century. the bengals have my had any success. the raiders had not won a playoff game in 18 years. to the queen city, look at that. there is the shuffle.
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that he is going crazy, second quarter, cincinnati leading 13- 6. this play should have been called that because a whistle blew. instead, joe burrell was running out of the room. he flings and finds tyler boot. the raiders respond right before the halftime. derek carr to zay jones, 14 yards hitting past, it is 20-13 at the pranks, cincinnati. vegas was trailing by 10 in the fourth. jackson, 26 yards, this led to the fourth field goal of the game. it is 26-19. look at him look for jones. it is intercepted by jermaine pratt. the raiders have a goal line stand. 26-19, losers, bengals, first 12 when in 31 years. >> i wish we would have
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executed a little bit better. >> i even talked to their players and it was like all right, here we go again. if you would have asked me, i would have bet that we would just go down and score so i could get back. >> [ laughter ] >> i am glad defense made the play. >> stark and burrow, the temperatures were below zero in buffalo. josh allen was hot. allen scrambles. he looks like he is about to step out. he is about to throw it away. no, houdini finds dawson and he knocks it, 7-0 bills. josh allen had more passes than incompletes. look at allen to the formal 49er emmanuel sanders. this one was over before fans had time. there were five touchdown passes for island. there were four incompletions. buffalo scored. they rule 47-17. this is the first playoff matchup between these two teams
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since 1995. i will set it at for him to have. this is the subplot to the plot which is two very even teams meeting in the wildcard round. let's go back to last sunday. i want to talk about jimmy g. he kept the 49er season alive with a late touchdown drive. did he keep his 49ers career alive as well? trey lance is waiting in the wings. this could be it for jimmy in the bay area. before that news check, if this is the end, a deep playoff run would benefit both sides. >> it is mutually beneficial for us, for jimmy to play well. obviously, this is the season. jimmy is our quarterback right now. we are trying to win a super bowl with jimmy. we do not know what the future holds in front of us. him playing well will benefit and bode well for us and himself personally. >> sidney crosby and the penguins are visiting the shark
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tank. they tied at one with crosby handling nifty. look at jake. there is the game-winner. pittsburgh wins 2-1 in ot. look at basketball. this is the tier one wind that helps you get in the big dance. usf hosting byu. look at the cougars. he sinks it. 68-65, byu after trailing by 10. final seconds, look at this. desperation, he off the front of the room. the tip was too late. 71-69, cougars when. they need at least one more win between consecutive, byu and st. mary's. they are in good shape at 15-3. can saget went to santa clara yesterday afternoon. the second half, can sacco was
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cruising. look at this seven footer just coasting to the bucket for the slam. can sacca put up 115. the score was 115-83. they will be the number one team in the country when the new rankings come out in the country. stanford traveled washington by 21 in the second half. with eight minutes left, it is a six point game. the former cardinal hits his only bucket of the game to push the lead to nine. the huskies hang onto when this one 67-64. it snaps stanford's four game winning streak. playoff football today, right here on kpix 5. it is the 49ers at the dallas cowboys. it is at 1:30 p.m. that is sports, have a great day. tennis star novak djokovic has lost his final appeal of the deportation order in australia. that means he will not be able to defend his title in the australian open which starts tomorrow. the serbian athlete and world
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number one jake had tried to cancel his visa for a second time. a panel of three federal judges sided with the parliament in a ruling. no further appeals are possible. novak djokovic is not vaccinated against the coronavirus. the government said he posed a risk to public health and order. today he said in a statement by email that he is extremely disappointed but he will respect the ruling. and still ahead, -- >> i saw four tickets i did not get. this behavior and lawlessness is not okay. >> talk with a mountain of parking ticket
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live from the cbs bay area studios, this is kpix 5 news. >> the time is 6:30 3 am. thank you for joining us. let's start with a quick check of the weather with our meteorologist. well, another day that finds the highs coming into the low to mid 60s with a few clouds. it will be a little hazy. you will not notice much of
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anything that is different today from what we have been doing over the past few days. we can look at the forecast just over the next few hours. it is on-again, off-again cloud. you kind of have the layer where the high clouds are coming in. yes, underneath the clouds we will have moderate air quality. we are going to have some of the haze that we are trapping and from the center of high- pressure. we will look at the seven-day forecast coming up in a few minutes and see if any of this changes anytime soon. several hostages are now free after being held inside a synagogue near fort worth texas. this and in a tense standoff that lasted nearly 12 hours. our cbs news correspondent deborah has the very latest. >> reporter: the terrifying hostage situation that began during morning services at a texas synagogue ended with the safe rescue of several people who were being held inside. >> the hostage rescue team reached the synagogue and they rescued the three hostages. the subject is deceased. >> reporter: the police were
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called around 11:00 am just as hostages were being held in person. a man took several hostages, possibly including the synagogue's rabbi. on the lifestream, the man could be heard saying he was the brother of a convicted terrorist who was being held in a federal prison in texas. s.w.a.t. teams and fbi agents have been on the scene throughout the day. the rabbi has been known to reach out to those of the islamic faith. >> he has been to all of our religious festivals. we have been to the synagogue on their religious festivals. >> reporter: members of the local muslim community came out to express support for the synagogue and congregation. >> we would like to say toward jewish community brother that we are behind them and we support them and again, we condemn this act. >> reporter: the white house press secretary tweeted on saturday evening that president biden was briefed throughout the day by senior officials. cbs news. right now car break-ins are a huge problem in san
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francisco. now thieves are also targeting license plates. kpix 5 spoke to one woman who found out that somebody racked up a number of parking tickets using stolen license plates. >> i noticed that my license plates were gone. >> reporter: this is how katie found her car recently, without a front license plate. she believed that somebody swiped it right in front of her home in the marina. >> today i realized that i was getting parking tickets because i got a ticket on my car. i want to pay it and i saw four tickets that i did not get. >> reporter: she made the discovery online. somebody stuck her license plate on a similar white audi. that car received multiple street cleaning and expired
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metered citations in the last week. >> it is a sense of violation that you cannot even park your car in front of your house without your license plate being stolen. that is actually what i first thought when i saw my license plate stolen was that my license plate is now going to be used for a crime and they are going to come looking for me. >> reporter: in her next her community, she found that she was not alone. and neighbor recently wrote that his rear plate was stolen and replaced with another one. his original license plate was put on a car almost identical to his. that car is now getting parking tickets. >> earlier this afternoon, the car in front of me had a broken window. so, yes, i am worried about that. now you also have to check your license plates. >> it just makes me not want to park my car on the streets anymore. >> reporter: katie has to contest the tickets, get new plates at the dmv, and get a new parking sticker from the city. >> i do not think we should let people do this. this type of behavior and lawlessness is not okay. i understand we live in the city and things happen in the city. we have crossed a line. >> reporter: in san francisco,
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kpix 5. satellite images show a spectacular corruption of an undersea volcano in tonga early this morning. an underwater volcano erupted outside of the capital city. plumes of ash grows like a mushroom cloud above the pacific . a boom could be heard 5000 miles away in fiji and new zealand. it could be heard as far away as alaska. this is how it looked from space. tsunami advisories were issued from japan to hawaii to alaska and the west coast. the irruption created the biggest tsunami threat the west coast has seen in more than a decade. this is how the surf looked in half moon bay. authorities urged residents to stay away from each harbors and peers. yesterday morning, the santa cruz harbor was inundated with seawater, damaging multiple boats. the harbor sustains tens of millions of divers and damage in 2011 after an earthquake in japan. san mateo county has the largest
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population of people from tonga in california. we talked to some in the city who were worried about friends and relatives back home. >> reporter: communication is cut off. people are waiting to have phone calls from family. >> we try to get a hold of our family. there is no connection. >> we try to write and call. no luck. >> the biggest emotional a lot of us have his helplessness. we cannot really do anything from here. >> reporter: it is agonizing not knowing how family is doing. the only information out of tonga was cell phone video showing flooding. >> we have an emotional fear. >> reporter: michelle works in rapid city. these are some of her family members in tonga that she is trying to find. >> we are hoping that we will hear from them soon. >> reporter: internet and phone connections are down on the small island nation of 100,000
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people. this is the senior pastor at the first tonga assembly of god in san carlos. after the volcanic eruption, he said the phone lines on the main island worked briefly before going down. the stories he heard from family and friends were not good. >> black rain coming down from the sky, they saw that it was little rocks. you know, they get like they see that it is raining rocks. >> reporter: he says his people are resilient. >> we believe something good will come out of it. we know that god will protect them. we know god will protect the little island. >> reporter: they do not know how to help. they do not know what people in the islands need. once they get establish communication, then the community can organize and come up with specific plans. in redwood city, kpix 5. the synonymy advisory first more than 100 people to
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evacuate. this was the berkeley marina saturday morning. people sleeping inside their boats were ordered off. the red cross tended to them while they waited it out. >> they drove by in patrol boats and workers were on the docks. they have loudspeakers telling us to evacuate immediately. >> we are always here to help people in any kind of need. this was for the folks in the berkeley marina. they needed assistance. still to come, we have the rarest and most extensive truffles grown here in california. this morning, we will introduce you to a special hunter tracking them down. plus, students are rising above and we will introduce you to one scholar who is tripling down on her achievements. on face the nation, larry hogan will be there along with
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a senator and a mayor. you can see
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some of the rarest and most expensive truffles in the world are being grown right here in california. in order to find them, you need a special hunter.
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we are in san luis obispo county. >> reporter: on this 10 acre piece of land, there are 2200 holly oak trees. you can find one of the most rare mushrooms in the world. it is not visible above the ground. you need a special navigator. meet low low. she is one of the key components of truffle hunting. >> you cannot see the mushrooms. we teach the dogs to locate these little tends. good girl. they have pieces of truffle in them. we teach the dogs to find these originally. eventually, we buried these underground. that dogs will eventually smell a truffle and go to it. they will indicate by tapping their foot on it or digging a little bit. they will put their nose on it. that is how we know a truffle is there. >> reporter: when you think of winter black truffles, you think of southern france. now you can add pendleton to the list. >> let's try it.
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>> reporter: brian and denise knew it would take patience and hard work to cultivate this crop. >> in 2014, we started this. it has been almost exactly 6 years to get this size of a truffle. >> reporter: time is not the only obstacle when dealing with this fungi. the winter black truffle is rare because of how much attention needs to go into growing them. >> we have to deal with ph, irrigation, we have to keep them away from rodents and other things. >> reporter: six years later, the leap of faith to and brian took was worth it. >> who knows how many we will find? these are in high demand. they are $1000 a pound. >> reporter: now that they are starting to see truffles grow, the end goal would be to begin selling for production. kimberly cruise, kpix 5.
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well, you notice the weather has not changed a whole lot over the last several days. we keep pulling and high clouds. sometimes we get great sunsets. they do not make afternoons look pretty. the reason why we keep getting the cloudy days is from a system down here to the south. we can watch it on the future cast. there is a little bit of rain out there. it has been locked out there for the past several days. it keeps throwing the high clouds our way. if we take the future cast and we played all the way through tuesday, we are still looking at the same scenario by the time we get there. for the rest of this holiday weekend, today and tomorrow, on martin luther king day and today, we will keep the clouds streaming in. it will be hazy out there. you do not notice a whole lot of change. that includes the daytime highs. these numbers will look and feel familiar. 61 degrees today for redwood city. we will go to 62 in san jose.
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we will be in the upper 50s and low 60s in santa rosa. that is exactly where we have been and how this has been playing out. if you want to get a look at the bigger picture beyond the club coming our way and you can see the same system in the satellite, let's look into the pacific, broader. that is where the actual storms would have to come from. the future cast pics on the two which are lining up out there. there is a very familiar pattern here. those storms continue to get pulled well to the north. it is not just here in the near term but it is even over the next week. we are going to let this play all the way through, almost through the end of january. that is january 25. the reason the storms get pulled away and we keep enjoying sunny weather which is the complete opposite of what we were doing last month, how do you have two months that are so completely opposite? you can see why that is. this is when you look at the big pattern in the atmosphere. there are two bull's-eyes on here. you have the one obvious one out there.
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deeper blue, this shows where you have got low pressure. that is where the storms are developing. it is the red bull's-eye over us that is really driving things. that is like the drop in the atmosphere. watch how that develops. i will let this play out for the entire week. i will go from now until friday. it did not really change. in fact, now it looks more exaggerated. you have really got these two bull's-eyes. the center of high pressure is in the absolute perfect place to block all of the storms from getting here. everything has got to go up and over that. by the time we get to thursday and friday, it is even more intense than it has been. so under that scenario, we will probably even see more sunshine. when we look at the seven-day forecast, we will clear out the clouds. by the time we get to thursday and friday it is funny. it does not warm up a whole
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lot. temperatures in san jose will go into the upper 60s. as we take a look across the microclimate, we see the same story on here. this is with the north valley warming up in the mid-60s. we will keep the temperatures in the upper 50s. at the beaches, that is it on the forecast. back over to you. this week's students thing about scholar has a special connection to the nonprofit. she is an advisor serving other young people of color. >> reporter: rosa trained her new puppy how to shake pause, walk on a leash and adopting her new four like it family members one of the many projects she leaned into since the start of the pandemic. the 24-year-old holds down three jobs. she is an administrative associate for a richmond-based nonprofit and an advisor at a newly minted school board member for the school district in her hometown of santa rosa. >> my full-time role as a full- time role. that is 40 hours a week. my other jobs about 10 or 15 depending on where students are. my board position is only a six
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hour meeting a month. >> reporter: she ha s miem. edbr shace wants to serve other youn people of color. this is especially those in the latino community. >> that felt like full circle. >> in high school i believed you could change the world. now, i realize that i will get very burnt up very quickly if i think about the world. if i think about one individual person, that ties into my job at sra. there are six students i will serve. >> reporter: these are six lucky students she is guiding through the college application process. this is familiar territory for the georgetown university graduate who is the first in her family to go to college. >> i was not born into a circle where that information was given to me. it was not going to be given to me by my parents. making sure that those resources are not just inexistent but are also
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accessible and students know that they exist, that to me is the next big part that not only georgetown but other universities like it really need to work on. >> reporter: part of that work includes making sure that her students know that private schools are an option. >> i see my direct role being helping helpg toen up those conversations. >> reporter: these are conversations she hopes will also lead her students to serve their communities. >> if respect can be given, we have something to work off of and continue to work on. >> reporter: for students rising above, i am elizabeth cook
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♪ and the nfl says the
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super bowl will go on as planned in los angeles. this is despite the covid surge. it will be held on february 13. over 70,000 fans are expected. attendees will need to provide proof of vaccination or a negative covid test. they must wear
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and thank you so much for joining me this morning. we will be back next weekend. cbs this morning with jane
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pauley is here on kpix 5 coming up next. en y the rest about covid-19 the more questions and worries we have. calhope can help with free covid-19 emotional support. calhope can help with free covid-19 emotional support. call 833-317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today. - hi mommy! - hi honey! oh i missed you! you just want to video call the kids. ok. ♪ hush little baby...♪ ♪...don't say a word...♪
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call 833-317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today. 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." this week marks a year since joe biden was sworn in as the 46th president of the united states. it has been a year marked by some major legislative victories, but plenty of disappointments, too, all

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