tv KPIX 5 News CBS July 17, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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outside of a nonprofit. we will have all of the latest, but first let's check in with darren peck with the weather. >> well, it is cloudy as it is usually, devin, but starting out with the clouds on top of the haw kins hotel, and the temperatures will come back to the 90s, and for those who had been in the warmest locations who had made it in the 100s, but not as hot as it was inland, and we will see the temperatures the rise inland and like it was for most of the city. we will also check in on that ma marsh fire. back to you. the shooting inside of a bowling alley killed one man and injured two more last night. it happened inside of the
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grenada bowl. we have the latest from thear gg at the surveillance footage taken from inside of the bowling alley. witnesses tell me that there were two birthday parties taking place when the shooting took place. one girl turned 8 and another young lady who was turning 21. >> i was by the vending machine and i heard five gunshots and i ran out, and from there, my cousin came running out, and she said one person died immediately, and one guy hit in the chest and on the back, and that guy was my uncle. >> your kl was shot in the chest? >> yes. >> reporter: this teenager asked us to blur his face fearing for safety. his uncle was one of the victims, and the shooting killed one man and injured two adults in the 20s. the injured victims are in stable condition and they should
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survive. the altercation between three individuals and it led to the verbal altercation, and the verbal altercation and then led to the suspect drawing the gun and shooting it, and people striking three adults inside of the grenada bowl. >> reporter: it is unclear what led to the argument that ended in the shooting. the police believe that the three victims were involved in the conflict. >> the grenada bowl is large with the bar area in the center and in the back, and so to get in, you have to be 21 to get n and the birthday parties were not related to the shooting. >> reporter: even though they were not related, but they were able to witness the shooting. they were traumatized. >> we witness one or two of the incidents. >> i know that we did have one
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incident earlier in the year, but it is rare that these things occur. >> i was shocked as well as concerned, because i was there a few days ago and that is not something that you expect. >> reporter: the police say that the gunman ran away and they are releasing the suspect and not releasing the suspect at the time, but the owner say they are shutting down sunday and not sure when they will reopen. da lin, kpix 5. a mountain view officer is recovering after he was shot early yesterday. he is doing patrol and stopped a car at villa street and wild cherry lane after midnight. moments later, a man inside of the car shot the officer and sped off. the suspect crashed a few blocks away and ran from the scene. >> it is tough to see a colleague go through something like that and even more so knowing that he got up last night to work an overtime shift and something that he did not
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necessarily have to do. >> the officer was wounded in the upper body and he did not return the fire. he is a five-year veteran of the force and out of the hospital, and the police are searching for the suspect who they consider arm and dangerous. a community leader is out of the hospital and recovering at home when he was attacked outside of the nonprofit in fillmore neighborhood. betty yu reports on how this man who is working to prevent violence became a victim of it. >> reporter: these are photos of james spig snshgsolla who was beatwen a wooden plank. he says he was struck in the back of the head and then in the face by two men and suffered bone fractures underneath his eyes which he can barely open. he worked with yooet in a center and tried to keep youth from the life of violence. >> he attends the baptist church
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and he directs a program that is doing a outstanding job of training children and teaching them. we don't need this kind of destructive behavior in a community that is already challenged. >> reporter: the president of the naacp's san francisco branch dr. amos brown said that the two recently spoke about violence, drug use and homelessness in their community. >> i knew it was coming, and i was not surprise and we had talked about it personally. >> reporter: he said that friday he had spotted two men hopping the fence on mcalester street, and he told them not to congregate at the center's front door, and this is when he was hit. >> he is upset that the people would take advantage of a facility that's existing for the good of children. >> reporter: police arrived friday to find one of the suspects detained the by witnesses, and the officers are still looking for the second
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suspect, and gofundme page has been set up to help with his medical expenses. in san francisco, betty yu, kpix 5. an arrest has been made in connection with the bomb threat that was made at sfo. it is a 53-year-old man after bomb police led police to a suspicious package, b.a.r.t. investigated and now the airport is back to normal operations. and now, a man was caught on security cameras a week ago, and amar'e garland is accused of assaulting a man and taking cell phone, and the cell phone has been recover and garland is being investigated for a number of crimes in the area. shifting to the coronavirus, and by every metricha w have, and the number of people in the hospital, and the deaths and the daily case rates and
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covid rates in the matter of months and the test positive rates statewide is nearly 17%, and up 16% this week, and despite the rising number, b.a.r.t. is to lift the mask mandate tomorrow. earlier, california lifted the mask mandate, but b.a.r.t. did not. the state's transportation agency board would have to be approved by the board. the president arrived from the trip to the middle east late last night. he discussed a number of issues including human rights, climate change and oil production. he met with members of egypt, the united emirates and iraq. he also reassured the gulf state region to produce more oil
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welcome back. the time now is 6:11 and to the fire watch. the crews continue to battle the fire in yosemite and it is battling 11 fires since. and the containment is 11%. and now, because of the fires, smoking is not allowed in the park. it is only allowed in cars and where permitted. wood and charcoal fires are only allowed in certain camp fires. in northern california, in
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shasta county, they say that fire is only 80 contained up 65% just hours ago. i had destroyed 12 buildings and burned over 300 acres. in the east bay, progress being made on the marsh fire causing air quality problems in pittsburgh and nearby towns. this fire started in late may and burning over 200 acre, but it is burning peat which is maybe why they made the rare decision to pump in water from the marsh from the delta and that is going to give the fire nowhere to hide for the next couple of days. this is a look at the aerials of the smoke in the area, and people say they cannot go outside because of the falling, and the toxic fume, and neighbors should see relief in about a ek.
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de ia lee smoke coming off of t marsh, and with the 24-hour time lapse, so you ski the smoke emanating better. there is the power plant in pittsburgh, and it is not as thick and dense as yesterday, but it is still enough smoke coming off of this that we are reading the unhealthy levels of par pa particulant matter. and there is definitely a pattern if you are looking at the air sensors from antioch, you will see how it is spiking a little bit more from last wednesday, and then thursday, and that was the worst day if you can remember when we went
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into hazardous levels of air quality a few time, and then we saw the last spike a little better in the evening yesterday, and so go easy on yourself outside and it is going to be an issue as the winds drives the smoke coming from the fires in those communities. as for the rest of the areas, it is far less of the marine layer and no fog this morning and most of us waking up to clear skies, and we don't see the depiction here as we look at the visualization of where the fog is over the bay, and we are waking up to relatively clear skies, and temperatures are not where they would expect from the low to mid-50s today, but for the daytime highs today, it is going to be feeling cooler. livermore, 10 degrees cooler today, and it was 100 yesterday, and we are get you down to 90 today. and concord, 91, and oakland 73,
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and notice the pattern here, and you can feel the difference today most from inland communities of alameda and contra costa and santa rosa, you will barely change, because you were 94 yesterday, and 93 today. and 84 in san jose which is a few degrees cooler. the shoreline is going to be upper 70s and low 80s in redwood city there at 81. keep it going to mid-80s today and tomorrow, and cool down a little bit with san jose to low 80s in the daytime highs wednesday and thursday, and the rest of the microclimate, it is a similar story here to keep the temperatures low. and east bay and north bay valleys, your numbers are going to be in the mid-80s for thef t f t going to ben anice w 90 it oi eling bresterd forome u 10re
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cooler. >> i thought that it was interesting in the smoke of pittsburgh that i noticed the same thing that you pointed out that while there is smoke, it is seeming to be thinner than recent days. >> yes, the time lapse looked be better this morning than yesterday so that the technique that they are trying, hopefully it is doing its job by flooding that marsh, and hopefully it did make an improvement today. >> fingers crossed. >> yeah. all right. moving on. a north bay training dog is celebrating a milestone with style. the dogs wore their best track suits and leg warmers and the event returned in person after the pandemic forced it to be on hold for two years. sports is on the way, and we have a block of nothing but baseball straight ahead. a superstar turned down nearly a half billion and we will tell you how much and who it was, and speaking of superstars, alex
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inning, rowdy revs up, and sit downment cobb fires past willie adau mis, and it is one-run strikeout baseball and no help from the offense when darin ruf had his solo home run, and his second in consecutive days, and san francisco on the board and 1-0 until the eighth. bases loaded and then mike yastrzemski who hit the grand slam tonight prior, and then the pitcher balks, and yastrzemski didn't have to do anything. and dominic leone comes in, and it is kolten wong when he paints the black, and sit down looking, colton. and the giants are the winners and they have won 6 of 8 to move within a game of the last wild card spot. all-star update, the giants' starting pitcher carlos rodon is
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not going to pitch tuesday in dodger stadium due to blister and split fingernail, and rodon cited the injury history and the desire to pitch in all of the second half starts as the reason for missing the game. the fans in astronaut suits means that the a's are facing the astros and they were. martin maldonado, see ya. that is a grand slam off of jared koenig, and his only mistake, because he had no help, and this is because justin verlander was vintage. the next inning, verlander retired three more, and then he made it look easy, but it was elvis andrus who was making it look easy, and they were shutout for the fifth time this inning.
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and now, juan soto has turned down a 15-year $440 million deal from the team. the nats are planning to entertain trade offers and he has already 117 big league homers at just 23 years of age. and rory mcilroy is the odds on favorite to win the open, and 54 holes later, h ste co-leader and looking for the first major in eight years. and cam smith is owning a two-shot lead to end the day, and ended at four-back, and now shane lowry the shot of the day nomination at hole 9, and shot of the day nomination indeed. first back-to-back eagles and tied at 13. viktor hovland had the putter working early on hole 4, and
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birdie indeed and perfect read of the green, and part of four straight birdies for hovland and another shot of the day nomination. this is belonging to rory mcilroy out of 10 out of the bunker in for eagle, and mcilroy matched hovland with the 66, and those are the co-leaders with 18 holes remaining, and mcilroy is trying to win the claret jug for the first time since 2014, and hovland is going to be teeing it up for the first major win ever. here's who is in the hunt, two cams are sitting 4 strokes under, cam young and cam smith, and masters winner, scottie scheffler is 5 off of the lead. and finishing with the track and field world championships. from oregon, the highlight of the night. the men's 100 meter and the also known world's fastest man, fred curly from texas, and he wins the photo finish, and marvin
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bracey second, and marvin tromwell third, and an american swept the marquee event for the first time in 31 years. that is sports, and i'm charlie walter. have a great day, everyone. still ahead on kpix 5, an update on the deadly shooting inside of a crowded bowling alley in livermore. tonight, the families of the victims of the uvalde shooting
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live from cbs bay area studios, this is kpix 5 news. welcome back. it is 6:27 and thank you so much for joining us. i'm devin fehely. let's start this half hour with the quick look at the weather with meteorologist darren peck. >> we will notice a cooldown today, devin, particularly if you are inland. inland alameda county is going to be cooler, and the same that we will see sunday and monday that we saw saturday, and the east bay shoreline, and the upper 70s peninsula and the low 90s for places like livermore and concord and santa rosa. and with remid-50s, and it is clearer, and we are not seeing as nearly as much low fog and clouds in the bay. so less of the marine layer, but we will get cooler even though
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we put two degree signs on the 95 this morning to emphasize apparently or make it look like glasses anyway. so that is the indication of inland and notice of looking cooler today. this is the day time highs now, and coming up in the complete forecast in a moment. >> we have an update on the deadly shooting in livermore where one man is dead and two more injured. it happened in livermore at the bowling alley. the gunman killed a 28-year-old man and injured two more adults in their 20ed. the two wounded are in stable condition and expected to survive. the witnesses say that the shooting happened where there were multiple birthday partys the, and police believe that all three victims were involved in the original conflict. >> i was by the vending machine, and i heard five gunshots and i
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ran out, and then from there, my cousin came out running, too, and she said that she was like, one person who died immediately, and one guy hit on the chest, and in the back, and that guy was my uncle. >> reporter: now the police are still looking for the suspect ll ran away, and police have i accountability. they are hoping to learn more today when the state investigators are releasing a preliminary report. alex gainer has more on the search for answers. >> reporter: more than seven weeks have passed since a gunman killed 19 children and two teachers inside of uvalde's robb elementary school. this afternoon, the victim's families are to meet with the texas house committee investigating the incident and afterwards the lawmakers are going to release their report, and it is expected to focus on
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the delayed police response at the scene. surveillance video from inside of the school show the officers waited 77 minutes before moving to take the suspect out. >> basic law enforcement 101 is that you go to the threat. >> reporter: the head of the texas department public safety faulted the texas police chief arrendondo for his lack of law enforcement. >> the only thing that stopped the officers from entering room 111 and 112 is the commanding officer who decided to place the lives of officers ahead of children. >> reporter: and the officer has denied telling anyone to standdown and he never reported himself as the incident commander. the teacher who survived said that others bear some responsibility. >> there were tons of people in that hall waichlt i don't see how people can just blame one
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person. >> reporter: arrendondo is on administrative leave with his job on the school district. earlier this month, he resigned from the elected position on the school council. alex gainer, cbs news, new york. here in the bay area, the pandemic has had a big effect on students and teachers. john ramos stopped by an east bay school district's job fair as they are trying to rebuild the workforce from the ground up. >> the great resignation has tried to fill the void since thousands have left the school district, and they are scrambling to build the void. many schoolteachers are gone as of the pandemic, and some out because of economics and others because of the pandemic. >> they have realized to do other things, and people are making different choices, i guess. >> reporter: at this job fair in richmond, it was more of a
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trickle than flood, and administrators are finding that the new applicants have never worked in the schools before. >> they are coming from different fields. they are not coming from the different districts, but different vocations, and they want to come into education, and so we are excited about that. >> that is the case for mary vargas, a wedding and event planner who is drawn to teaching by the importance of the job. >> i have school-aged children, and it is so important the role of being a teacher, and i think it's encouraging to me that i would be a good fit for it. there is definitely a need there. i want to help kind of the next generation of kids. >> reporter: karina saltiga has a more practical ambition, she is wanting to skip the daily commute and wants an office job closer to home. >> i am a young mom, and i want to have an opportunity to keep an eye on my child, and i don't want to miss those opportunities basically. >> reporter: and something like this close to home would work
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better? >> yes. it would work for me and my husband. >> reporter: for lance winston, it is about returning home, because he wants to be a coach and teach history or social studies at one of the schools he attended, and h knows what he is looking for in the classroom. >> someone like me. i struggled in reading and writing, and there were teachers here who took a specific interest in me, and now you want to go back home to where you came from and now you want to give all of the experience back to the younger generation. >> reporter: that is music to the ears of dr. sylvia greenwood who heads up the certify kated teachers, and they have lost so many in the rang, and so it means a lot to bring back the teachers. >> and other principle ps and administrators want to come back to teach with those they graduated from, there is a great sense of fulfillment when that happen, for when they come back
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to see that there is a need and to support the children. >> reporter: in richmond, john ramos, kpix 5. >> besides the district, they are looking for food service and janitorial staff as well. the job a fairs will be held the nex two saturdays at deshawn middle school. and now, there was a civic center at the post office to be hiring more workers paying between $18 and $25. >> i was looking for a job, and i was recently doing the in insta cart and i thought maybe i needed more consistent hours. >> those interested in opportunities with the postal services in oakland can apply online with at the usps online. and according to the
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monkeypox cases, the cdc is saying that there are probably more case than reported, because of the highly contagious amount and the lack of vaccines. shawn chitnis is looking at the cases of the vaccine inequity. >> reporter: once again, the health providers must look at the underserved communities for the unprotected, and the lack of vaccines is. it is not just on race and education, but where you live in the bay area. >> it is not that they don't want the vaccine, but they are not feeling important enough to access it. >> reporter: this is the project director of the east bay and trying to figure out how to get those in need to get the
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monkeypox vaccine. >> i am just as fearful as anyone else, and just as inquisitive to find the facts and share them with the masses. >> reporter: just like the covid vaccine, it is not mattering to bring it to the people who need them, but it is to bring them to the people who need them. >> so as long as we do it with a equity lenses to those communities who have not had the access and opportunity toac >> reporter: other nonprofits shared the concerns earlier in week to call for enough doses to be set aside for the underserved. wednesday and thursday, people stood in line in san francisco and berkeley with just a chance to get the vaccine. >> i am lucky enough to have flexible hours to stand in line for three hours in the middle of the day. >> i was lucky enough to have a flexible work schedule to work
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with the internet connection for three hours while waiting in line. >> reporter: and he says that project aids with the mobile clin sick one way that the vaccine is going to reach those most in need. >> this work is like me being the person that i needed two other people. >> reporter: reporting in oakland, shawn chitnis, kpix 5. this is a live look now in san francisco, and later today, the aids foundation is going to be holding the monkeypox event, and giving out 500 doses of the vaccine and currently more than 2,000 people are on the waiting list. coming up how these students rising above scholar is sharing details about her own childhood trauma as a way to inspire others.
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ceremony yesterday, and the park connects crissy fields which includes trails and picnic areas and also beautiful views of the golden gate bridge. and now, looking at this beautiful giant window of the bay with a couple of things that you can see here, more blue sky. so, we are going to be looking at far less in terms of the fog and a little bit here through the city, and the immediate bay area shorelines. i don't want to move on without addressing this continuing nuisance here. this is time lapse of the last 30 minutes of the smoke coming off of the marsh fire. it is better than yesterday. we are not seeing as much smoke coming off of this as we were yesterday at this time, but still enough cumulative smoke, and we have air quality issues
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to start the morning for kcontr costa county, and when you get to pittsburgh, you will see the oranges and the reds showing up, and go easy, because the air quality is still unhealthy here thanks for the smoke coming off of the fire, and more likely to see the breeze take whatever smoke comes off of the marsh fire today, and continue to push it back through the same communities and another day unfortunately with that. the other stuff in the sky, and the low clouds, and you can see it go back to the early morning and early today, and more sunshine than anything else today, and the overwhelming majority of it, and right now, the camera over the south bay, and santa clara county, and san jose is in there, and that is just haze, and you won't have direct sunshine, because of the haze in there, but there is no clouds in that view. it is not looking that dramatic
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when you are down there looking up. the temperatures out there in mid-50s for just about everybody, and notice the cooldown in there, and if you are inland to alameda county, you are 10 more degrees cooler, and when you hit 100 yesterday in livermore and 80 in the daytime, and this is a roller coast e because you really warmed up, and right now, we will bring you down to average, and cooldown to many low case, and concord down eight degree, and san jose was 88 yesterday, and you will be 84 today, and little bit cooler and not so dramatic, and low 90s inland and mid-70s and low 80s bay shore here, and then we will see the numbers getting cooler. so we will get into the 80s for thursday, and san francisco and oakland not showing it as dramatically, but it is low 70s for the rest of this week, and we will see the same pattern for
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our hottest inland valleys, whether it is the east bay valleys or the north bay valley, and the low to mid-90s today, to eventually mid-80s for the day time highs to some of the warmest spots. this has been a nice summer temperature-wise since we hit the solstice, and we have not had too many intense spikes, devin, but not widespread or sh fi,e arengout t back king othe impact of the hue manslaughter because of the smoke, and also, some animals living in that area, and you know in some ways to looking at how long it took for the firefighters to take the steps to put it out. >> think of the regulations that go into that, and especially in one sense diverting water away from the delta which is conten shoushgs and obviously, they will get it done, but some forms
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that need to be filled out in tripoli kate before you can take the water out of the delta, and i am glad they are trying something like that. >> yes. the cdc said that adults experienced some significant trauma in their adulthood, and this week, rising above scholar is in that group, but as elizabeth cook explains, she is turning the pain into positive motivation for others. >> someone gave me the opportunity. >> reporter:. >> reporter: bianca's tears give way to something else. >> it is hard somedames. >> reporter: to determination, and seeing the mother of two through some tough times. >> there are days when i feel like, am i worthy of grace? am i worthy of good things happening to me. >> reporter: good things like watching her own daughters
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thrive in a family home that is much different than the one she grew up in. >> we didn't have running water. we didn't have electricity. we had rodents and roaches. we didn't always eat. the only meals we received were at school. >> reporter: and those were meals that she and her siblings looked forward to as they pan handled with her parents on this street corner in berkeley. >> it was all of the time. and we went to school, but we were panhandling from the time we were out of school to late in the evening, and on the weekends, and it was a cornerstone of my childhood. >> reporter: and now it is a painful memory. >> sometimes when you are living in storm, you don't know how bad it is, and then when you are out of it, you can see. >> reporter: the opportunity to get out of the storm came when she was placed in foster care. it was when i was 11 1/2, december 6th, 1976.
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i remember the date and the time, and 3:30 in the afternoon, and they pulled my brother and i out of class, and we pulled out of the house that we lived in and that is the last time that i saw that time >> reporter: she was then going into a future that would be heartbreak from her siblings and then joy and success. she was adopted by a kind and loving mom, and she was helped through college and graduate school, and career opportunities led her to l.a., and chicago where she met her husband, a police officer. >> no justice, no peace. >> reporter: and now the social justice movement, and the young people at its center are calling bianca towards a career in public service, where each day, she has the opportunity to use her past as a way to help others to seek a better future. >> what can i do? i wake up every morning with what can i do with my education, with my networks, with my opportunities, with my voice tor
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themselves. >> reporter: for the students rising above, i'm elizabeth cook. >> bianca serves on a local school council in chicago, and she is considering looking for another school position, and she wants to come to oakland to run for mayor. if you want to learn more about students above scholars, you can learn more by going to my tribe has lived on this land for 12,000 years. we call it oleyumi. you call it california. our land, our culture, our people
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once expansive, now whittled down to a small community. only one proposition supports california tribes like ours. while providing hundreds of millions in yearly funding to finally address homelessness in california. vote yes on 27. tax online sports betting and protect tribal sovereignty and help californians that are hurting the most.
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it is california craft beer week. the breweries across the bay area are showing off the best brews, but right now, it is not the beer that is just the precious cargo, but the cans, too. and we are shown how the aluminum shortage is changing way that craft breweries are doing business. >> at s27ales in san jose, the crafters are taking pride in their craft. >> it is probably the best seller. >> reporter: but he says that part of the craft these days is getting his hands on cans. >> cans is the biggest problem for us.
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>> reporter: brewers are dealing with a can shortage caused by pandemic manufacturing slowdowns and increased demand on the aluminum supply chain, and domestic request for aluminum was up 25% in the first quarter of the year. >> the demand skyrocketed that it outstripped the supply. >> reporter: so before the aluminum shortage, they could order the big palates like this one behind me, and now they have to wait for the suppliers to alert them when it is available, and paying more per palate. >> when it comes to the cans, they want to be paid up front, and when we are ordering aluminum cans, the $5,000, to $7,000 to $25,000, they are available in that moment, we are putting out huge amounts to have those cans in the building waiting. >> reporter: he says that the san francisco brewering community is tight knit, and they are banding together to do
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it. >> and so we were messaging, do you have any incoming, and can we borrow those, and they would work together. >> reporter: but he think that the challenge is coming to any end any time soon. >> realistically, one or two more years. how do you plan to get to work tomorrow? hop on b.a.r.t. or drive or how about an intertube? some people in colorado got to work by tubing. this is an annual event, and thanks to two buddies who challenged each other in 2008 to get to work without a car. now, who knows if all of the folks who in wet clothes went to work, but that is their choice. although the sand castles can be knocked down, you would not want to do it with this work
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of art. these sand castles were built at imperial beach in south san diego. the castles were built and stretched to sea lion and octopus. the festival is getting the name from the public celebration first mornings are our time, and i couldn't let stiff joints slow me down. so i started taking osteo bi-flex every day because it has joint shield... ...clinically shown to improve joint comfort within 7 days. osteo bi-flex - available at your local retailer and club.
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more in a hospital. grenada bowl in livermore is where it happened and multiple birthday parties were going on. a man was shot while stopping a car, and the police officer is out of the hospital now, and the suspect is at large and arm and dangerous. a man was attacked outside of a nonprofit, and the victim said that he was beaten by two men with a wooden board. the police have one person in custody and looking for another. the police have arrested a 53-year-old man linked to a bomb threat at sfo friday. hundreds of travelers evacuated the international terminal after the threat led police to a potentially incendiary device. nnor nally. is back open and crews are fighting washburn
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fire since it broke out last week. it is 39% contained. the area is restricting smoking and camp fires. and this is a view of the salesforce tower cam. and it is not filled in with fog and smoke, but it is a few degrees cooler for places like san jose, but then you continue to cooling for tnext few days. when we are looking at the microclimates, mid- to higher 90s and some of us will be cooler like the tri-valley, and the cooling trend will continue in the inland valleys as well. you will be in the upper 80s for the seven-day first alert forecast. >> thank you, darren. and jane pauley is up next on kpix 5. enjoy the rest of your sunday.
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because happy customers are music to our ears. genesys, we're behind every customer smile. ♪ good morning. i'm jane pauley, and this is sunday morning. if you are planning to join the crowd today at the beach, maybe take in a movie, it's our unfortunate duty to remind you covid is still very much with us. in fact, infections are on the rise. now, of the millions of americans who will contract the virus, many will
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