tv KPIX 5 News CBS July 24, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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life from cbs bay area studios, this is k&n 5 news. right now on k&n 5 and bay area, a new kwar vi planned, but some say not so fast. and also, who is getting the monkey pox vaccine first, and see if you find out if you qualify for the top of the list. and good morning, it is sunday july 24th. i'm devin and we go to the fire
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that is raging where nearly 600,000 people are under evacuation orders where there is a hot weather that is burning in a landscape that is shaped by a deepening drought. >> everything is burning because we know that california has been dry in the last few years. and it has gotten drier. >> the fire is burning in woodland oak, and many of the trees are weakened by the drought, and the fire has burned at least ten buildings and a spokesman for cal fire says it is going to take days before they make progress on real containment. with that containment comes smoke, and you can see from the ground how much, and toxic smoke is sent up in the air, and some of it could come our way. we hand it over to first alert meteorologist darren peck. >> to give you the perspective
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of where the smoke is coming from, this is a look from where the plume is coming from the oak fire, and here we are, bay area, and you can see the beautiful marine layer out there, and a little perspective of how much smoke the fire is putting out there in the atmosphere, and where it is going from our concern, and if you are watching the high resolution forecast, for the rest of today, we are fine and the rest of monday, okay, but there is going to be a shift of the wind in the next 48 hours, and by monday evening a lot of the smoke is being pulled in our direction, but that is the entire column of the smoke in the atmosphere. what we care about is what is down on the ground. and in other words, what could get directly into our lungs, which is a better story, because if we are just liking at that layer, most of the smoke is staying in sierra. we will be watching that closely, and i will have more on the oak fire coming up in the
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complete forecast, and in the meantime, the temperatures are coming up in the heart of the bay, and we will see the clouds melting back into the beaches and right back up into the low 90s to most of the inland locations where we will be into low to mid-70s, and we will see you in the forecast and full report coming up. >> yes, you can find the latest on k&n.com. and there is some wanting to taurn indian tribal ground into a quarry. >> reporter: on this map off of gilroy it is called sargent but for the native americans here, they had a different name jeurystac, and they are fighting to keep it from becoming a
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quarry. >> reporter: a holding company called sargent ranch partners are wanting it to become a development. >> and when we heard about it, we wanted to fight this because it is our sacred site, and we will fight that. >> reporter: he is the head of amah muttsun, and he said that this was built for tribal missions, and very few remain here, but it does not change the spiritual missions of the hills. >> we have no protection here, and this was a catholic, mormon, buddhist or any other religion, it would have protection, but because it is amah muttsun, it
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has no protection, and that is shameful. they should not allow the destruction of our sacred sights. >> reporter: the project was reported in 2018, and now the project is now finish, and it will be considered by the santa clara impact commission, but now it will be joined by other groups. >> it is considered one of the most important sites for wildlife connectivity. >> reporter: this is one of the key areas of passage from the coast to inland areas. >> in order to get from highway 101, they have to go through the passings, and this mine is going to lie from one of the most crossings of highway 101. >> we could not contact the partner ps of the group but they
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say it would be used to truck ranchers from trucking in and out here. >> we have plenty other resource, and we are not running out of resources any time soon, and so for an open pit grand and sand gravel site would destroy this land. >> reporter: many are planning to make their voices heard to oppose this project. johnathan randle k&n 5. >> now, if the planning commission approving the proposal, it could go to the planning board of supervisors for a final vote. and now, officials are requiring you to wear a kn95
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mask or other masks but stop short of a mandate, because 1 in 20 residents are infected. san francisco's chinatown has been hit hard by the pandemic, and recent crimes and saturday was all about building bonds between the asian and african-american bonds. and now shawn chitnis shows us how a block party was to build relations. >> reporter: hear in chinatown, there was a block party to have one way to address all of the challenges at the same time. >> me, i'm a people-person. so i am going to meet people. >> reporter: carolyn pollard has lived in chinatown for 13 years and she says that people are surprised when they find out that she is a resident of the ping puen. >> i like to bring people together, and like the older
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people, we have the look out for them. we do. >> reporter: she is volunteering at the second annual block party organized by the chinatown development center and working to improve the bond between the asian and black families is something she works together. >> we all have the same aspiration, and if we work together, we can get there. >> reporter: the community leaders say it is an ongoing job, and this event is to celebrate different cultures part of the bridge necessary for having difficult conversations around ongoing racial tensions in the city. rap music and chinese music shared the same stage, and this a development made of predominant chinese american but home to many black residents. >> us coming together, and us condemning hate, and us making investments to ensure safety and to provide residents to our small businesses.
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>> reporter: mayor london breed acknowledged the stress on small businesses and her newly appointed d.a. promised the neighborhood she would do more for them. >> our office is dedicated to keeping everyone in san francisco safe, and no longer will we allow people to walk around feeling like they are going to be targeted because of who they are. >> reporter: for those who have called this place home for years, they already see a way to share this neighborhood and benefit from each other's contributions. >> we should all get along and live with each other. >> shawn chitnis, k&n 5. >> mayor breed attended the block party, and the mayor had an awful lot to say to the federal response for the monkey pox outbreak. >> i think that negligent had something to do with the fact that it was targeting the lgbtq community and it is notha we
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have not been here before, because san francisco was left on our own to figure out solutions. >> the san francisco department of public health says it is going to be prioritizing the first dose of monkey pox for those at risk, and the expanded eligibility of those without gender. to sexual orientation to date, only 7,700 vaccines have been distributed, and this is compared to 77,000 global merges. this is coming as the cases have been rising in recent weeks, and the disease has expanded to more than 16,000 cases from 75,000 territories. the last global emergency was in response to the covid outbreak
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in 2020 in response to covid. a small plane crashed outside of readville, and the pilot was taken to the hospital with life threatening injuries and while it did not damage any homes or anyone else on the ground, it has renewed called for the airport to be shutdown. as da lin has reported, the airport is a hazard to the east san jose community. >> reporter: the workers removed the wreckage from this elementary school fence, and the neighbors say this crash is another reason why that readville airport should be shutdown. >> this is number seven. there were others that they were talking about, so maybe number eight. >> after the crash, neighbors demonstrated against the
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reid-hillview crash. >> i was trying to get a nap, and i heard it explode, and everybody in the house kept saying that a plane fell, a plane fell. >> reporter: this woman has lived across the airport for 50 years, and the plane crashed near her house, and she said it hit a pole near her house. she worries about pollution, and the effects of her 5-year-old granddaughter clarissa. >> it is making her angry, you know. i don't want to have the sight of it on all of these kids. >> reporter: she limits the play time. >> the children who live within a mile and a half of this airport have a high amount of iron in their blood. >> reporter: the airport had switched from leaded to unleaded fuel. >> we are concerned about these kinds of things, too.
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>> reporter: walt operates a flight school, and he says this is an asset around the airport. >> we train lots of pilots. >> reporter: he says it provides about 300 good paying jobs. the airport provides search and rescue operations near the airport. >> reporter: opponents have tried to shut it down for decades saying that the risks outweigh the benefits. >> we have 52,000 people who live here and this is unique and not true for years and they should close it. hopefully this week. >> reporter: they have a contract until 2031, but many want it closed much sooner. i'm da lin, k&n 5.
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reid-hillview stopped selling fuel in response to the community, but on thursday, there is going to be a hearing on how the fuel affects the people who live throughout the bay area. a marathon got under way a half mile ago as runners will go across the golden gate bridge and through the presidio. they started at 6:30, and second round starts at 8:30. strap on your skates and get ready to roll down memory lane as we visit the bay area's last official rolling skating rink as they close later this month. and nationally, this weekend has been a scorcher, and we have the details coming up later this month. and taking a look outside. we will be right b loaded with our world famous pastrami,
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started to skate as a kid in the 1950s and he discovered golden's gate in san ramon where he earned the nickname roller danceman. with that, the skating has not changed much with the hip hop and other slastin through as some roller dance, others cruise, and a handful hold on to the wall for dear life. but for the seasoned skaters this feels like home. >> the minute i get on the floor to roll, everything, you forget everything that is going on, and whatever is bothering you, it just comes into place. >> reporter: that is why it is so hard for the self-proclaimed o.g. skaters to accept that this gathering place is going to close after being opened for so many years. the owner said having to close
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during covid hurt, and so few coming back after it lifted, it does not make financial sense to reopen, and it will be converted to housing. >> this is the last roller rink in the whole bay area and it is sad, because that is what brings it together. >> it is hard, and so it will be cool tonight, but later tonight,ly be sad. >> reporte b time for one last roller rink and one more adults-only roller rink skate before the lights go down for good next saturday. katy nelson, k&n 5. taking a look outside, it is a beautiful weekend weather-wise, and we hand it over to darren peck. >> a few moments ago, you mentioned the intense heat wave across the rest of the country, and it is a story that we will cover in a few moments, and it is a national story, but it is unprecedented in the areas of
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red, and expressing the median temperatures in the last seven days that is warmer than any on record before we compile the messages, but what you may have missed in that story is parts of california at home which experienced the heat wave which are not as intense as that. we got off easy in the bay area, and not that bad, and the area for the bay area shaded in white which show that the temperatures were on mark in the last seven days and not really talking about intense heat, and on the other side of the state in the sierra foothills, we are showing up in deep of the map, which on the scale comes in on top of the scale which is another area which expressed that hottest median temperature in the hottest days that go back to the 1970s which is a big factor in the fire this morning. so to bring you back to the oak fire, and by the way, this is from the network of cameras through the alert fire, we are watching the last 15 minutes
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this morning. so you are seeing the oak fire in near real time in terms of the behavior in the early morning sun from the east that you are seeing illuminate from plume of smoke. it is going to be a lot to cover from the next three days if not more, but the primary concern as you are seeing the large amount of smoke as you will see it come over here, and in the forecast for monday, the high resolution smoke forecast shows us that a lot of that is going to be pulled back our way by the second half of monday and mainly in the upper levels which is a scenario where we see the smoke without having to breathe it, and if we are looking in the upper levels a lot of it is going to be seen in the scenarios, and that is a area that is a big concern for many people understandably, and live picture from mount diablo to mount tam, and there is the smoke and fog filling in the areas of the east bay this morning and we have widespread
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gray to begin this morning and temperatures in the mid-50s for most locations now, and we will do exactly what we did last year for the highs as the clouds melt back to the coast, and it is more sunshine than anything else, as the temperatures climb up into the low 90s, and san jose and 86 in santa rosa, and range from the bay shore to oakland and around 80 in the peninsula. and from oakland to san jose, the mid-80s in san jose, and as we are looking at the microclimates, even though it is looking at the 80s for the rest of the day, it is going to be in the mid-80s for the rest of the week, and so will the north bay valley, and see you in the next half hour. over to you, devin. >> the second half of the giants' season has been thrilling, but not off to a
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great start. a late night drama in the city of angels and more with when you need help it's great to be in sync with customer service. a team of reps who can anticipate the next step genesys technology is changing the way customer service teams anticipate what customers need. because happy customers are music to our ears. genesys, we're behind every customer smile.
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because you are three games above .500, and e first three were hitters counts, and mookie betts takes alex woods deep, and wood only needed one more strike to get out of the inning, and he knew that the pitch was okay, and the next batter was a full count, and another blast, and trea turner's 15th of the season, with back-to-back homers of l.a. and that is what is so hard about the lineup, because so many hitters can make you pay. and they have three former mvps and one of them freddie freeman and he has four mvps if you count kershaw. the giants down to the last out, and joey bart, the plopper drops and scores a run, and all of the sudden, giants have the go ahead run at the plate. this is how it ended, austin slater, and cue up the robo on. and questionable strike three call, and slater didn't like it,
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but it does not matter, because the dodgers win, and now, the giants are 0-5 at dodger stadium with the hopes of avoiding the four-game sweep today. bucket head give away at oakland, and the a's had the bases lo ahey tk advantage, and seth brown with the routine ground ball, and confusion, and everyone is safe, and the former a, and marcus semien, and piscotty is charging, but he just missed it. a run scored, and he cut the lead to one. and vial ma chooen at the plate, and look at this catch. it is splendid by josh smith, although, it is not a smart catch, because it cost his team a run on the tag up, and for the first time since may, they have won three straight. and look at the sweep of the rangers today. the quakes are hot. and san jose picked up seven
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points in the last four matches entering last night, and could they keep the run going against the quakes. and up at providence park, scoreless at the 47th minute, and the pressure against san jose, and it is hometown kid with benji snow conmish, and now, take a look at this goal, and with the header, that gave portland the lead that was never relinquished, and the timbers went 2-1, and they will host the real salt lake next saturday. and now, in minnesota, they were able to resume play in minnesota, and no problem for tony finau, and with the toe of the putter out of the rough, why not. he saves par, and he is seven back of the lead. it is a tough score to catch with scott piercy, and he is
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running away with the tournament, and his approach on the par 5 12th, and sticks it for the makable eagle putt, and piercy is the leader with a six-shot lead you can watch the final action on k&n right here today. women's golf in the sun flower hats, these fans were ready for day three of the evian championship in france. the shot of the day is on the approach at 11 from charlie hull hall, and great name and great bounce tied for sixth at lfdz under. brook henderson made this for putt at one of the birdies on the day. she has a two-stroke lead, and headed into the final round. to scotland we go, at glen eagles golf course. and darren clarke off to the par 1, and he is 9 under for the tournament, and tied with
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englishman paul broadhurst and one of of the six birdies of the day, and clark and broadhurst are sharing the lead. have a great day, everyone. coming up the weather has been mild for the weekend, but it is not that way for the rest of the country. and scholars are watching their mother support a family on a shoestring budget, and while they a
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here's why tribal leaders urge you to vote yes on prop 27. the act provides hundreds of millions every year for permanent solutions to homelessness, mental health and addiction in california. prop 27 supports financially disadvantaged tribes that don't own big casinos. by taxing and regulating online sports betting for adults 21 and over, we can protect tribal sovereignty and finally do something about homelessness in california. vote yes on prop 27.
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live from cbs way bay area studios, this is k&n 5 news. welcome, because it is 6:32 and thank you so much for joining us. i'm devin fehely, and let's start out this hour with a quick check of the weather with darren peck. >> and thank you, devin. we have been watching sun come up on the west side of the bay area, and the clouds are filling up most of the communities here, and you are feeling a lot more sun than the rest of the communitiment and there is a lot more color there, and we have most of the mountains covered there, but the clouds have filled in most of the valleys, and the bay or the inland valleys or the bay, or the inland valleys or the east bay, and this morning, it is the mid-50s, and it will melt down to the beaches, and we will have
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the temperatures going back to low to mid-80s and the bay, and we will have the complete forecast with the temperatures coming up in a little bit. >> thank you, darren. and across the country, millions of americans are dealing with extreme heat, and wendy gillette reports. >> reporter: it is sizzling across the northeast. >> warm as hell. >> reporter: triple-digit temperatures hitting the region for first time in six years. >> too hot. too hot right now. >> the high heat did not keep some away from the routines in some areas, but in boston, the marathon has been postponed for a few weeks. >> i have been hydrating knowing that i would have to take it a little bit easier than i had hoped, because the heat and the humidity is dangerous. >> reporter: keeping cool in public pools in cumberland, pennsylvania, is more challenges, because the hours
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are reduced because of staff shortages have forced the lifeguards to work longer shifts than usual. >> with the high temperatures come big crowds and more pressure on the lifeguards sitting up there in the heat can be dangerous. >> reporter: in bell air, kansas, those in one community believes that the heat wave killed 1,000 fish in a pond. >> when the water level drops and the oxygen level drops and the heat with the really hot over 100-degree days, it takes a toll on the water. >> reporter: mariposa county, california, the heat is fueling the oak fire that erupted friday forcing 6,000 residents to evacuate. >> this is the first time in my life i have had to evacuate, and this is different and a lot of anxiety. >> reporter: at least 2,000 homes are threatened. wendy gillette, cbs news. and as wendy said, it is
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forcing people to evacuate out of their homes. it is threatening several mountain communities, and so far, zero containment. in the east bay, a group of thieves used a car as a battering ramp to break into a popular ice cream shop in oakland, and the brazen break-in was caught on security video. >> reporter: this video shows how a car broke into the ice cream brigade, and as you can see, this is no accident. two people get out of the car, and clear a path to get further inside, and the car backs outside and clears a path in the process, and rams the atm, and then two people drag out the aeshgs tm and leave the shop rank issed. >> the atm was right here, and it is ransacked. >> reporter: the owners are
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disheartened and -- >> it is like starting over. >> reporter: they have been in diamond district for 12 years. they tell me they had one break-in the first ten years, but the third time they have been hit in two year, and the hits are escalating. >> the first was a rock and they took the register. and then they shot a gun through the window, and stole the change out of the register, and this time, they aggressively got worse and drove a car through. >> reporter: the people got off with $500 from the atm, but in the process they cost upwards to $500,000. >> and i would like to say we will get to rebuild and now it happens again. >> we have employees who will
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not have jobs, and vendors who cannot supply us, and all for nothing. >> reporter: there has been no update from investigators since mondayk and the shop is the going to remain closed for a while. >> the people who come out the look are blown away by what needs to be done to get back up and looking. >> and up next the, meet the students who are scholars above rising about what it is going to take to get back on the right track. committee member adam schiff is going to join us, and the president's covid
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a san francisco icon is saying good-bye the unique situe creme brulee man as he is known is serving up desserts for years and w an ailing neighbor that he is taking care of. >> these are plain. >> the creme brulee man spread traded in the dessert as he says good-bye to the bay area. >> i guess you don't find out when you are leaving the impact that you can have on people. >> it is the taco style dessert
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consumption. >> he is leaving to help his wife's father who has brain cancer. he says it is tough to uproot yourself and leave the customers who have become like friends over the years. >> i have always gone to his carts when he was up in port mason and i am really sad that he is leaving. >> curtis is going to hold more pancake partys the east, san diego and san jose and others. >> i am going to get people to host me, so i can plug in the extension cord and stuff. >> he hopes to start a trend. >> yes, yes. reac out to neighbors and the people in the community, and then just make friends and build
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bonds, that would be, i don't know, i would die a happy person. that would be amazing, and be so powerful. >> the dessert cart has brought joy for so many for so many years, this final parting could not help but be a little bit bittersweet. >> taking a look outside, it is like looking at deja vu as far as the weather and we hand it over to meteorologist darren peck to get ready to wind down the weekend. >> this sunday morning, devin, it is line like classic july and what we have been doing for the last seven days. and cloudy in the marine bay, and we are filling in the gap, and in the valley, and the dull gray, you are waking up to, and the great vantage point, and the top of mount diablo, and the foreground of what is like 680 in the valley there, and walnut creek, you are down there under that, and that is mount tam,
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there and you see the beautiful view from all of the cameras, and that is what it is looking like, and how widespread are views? santa rosa has it up to nap pa and this is how it is going to melt back by the morning, and it is going to melt back to the beaches and the coast, and get a sunny day again, and to the bay, and we will get it back tomorrow night, and we will repeat the pattern again, and the temperatures in the mid-50s, and no surprise, and going to the daytime highs, and basically low 90s, and the mid-80s down in the south bay, and to 84, and numbers in bay shoreline, and widespread whether it is 65 in the city or 84 in redwood city, and oakland is 72, and it is going to be a sunny day here, and all of the while, this is from yesterday afternoon, and
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you could see this like this, and you can see the marine layer there, and what i wanted to see was the amount of smoke coming off of the oak fire, and from now, that is getting pulled from the east of us, and one way to look at this is from looking at the satellite from last night show you the view over the last 15 minutes, and that is this network of cameras available to keep the eye on the sky from these fire, and that is this morning from the oak fire. it is going to bring us up to now, and that is what it is looking like in realtime. it is another busy day on the fire, and we will continue to watch it closely. we might see some of the smoke in the sky in that by the time we get to monday, and the second half of the afternoon, but it is looking it should stay elevated, and we shouldn't have more smoke inhalations from that throughout the day today. but it will be streaming today. and today, you will stay in the
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mid-80s like we looked at today, and this day is going to be repeating for the next seven days. in oakland, 70s, and the city does not budge either. and the microclimates and the east bay to the middle 80s and warm up again next weekend to around 90, and the northern valleys will do the same thing, and you will stay in the 80s where things stand on the forecast for now, devin. >> all right. it does not get t hot, but it is summer after all, and so what you would expect. >> those numbers are classic, and considering story that you shared about the heat wave happening for the rest of the country, we have gotten off so easy here, and not for eastern side of the state where the fire is burning, but here at home, heat? we haven't had to deal with much. >> and the quick mention, a marathon this morning and cooler up here in the city, and that is probably ideal for the runners. >> it will stay in the mid- to upper 50s for the run, and cloudy, too, but the stragglers
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will have sunshine when they come across the finish line late morning. >> thank you. more than 53 million people in the united states work at low wage job to data from the brookings institute. this mornings rise above have watched their mother struggling for the essentials. >> reporter: the mother is hustling around. >> translator: i am proud of him no doubt. >> reporter: and their mother is living in a nice home with a real kitchen and light-filled room, and that is a big change for this family who has seen more than their fair share of hard times. >> there is a lot of disadvantages and limiting, but it is a way of becoming stronger. >> reporter: in high school, she was cleaning houses with her
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mother for extra income, and the family lived in a cramped basement apartment as the mother was recovering from multiple operations. >> translator: she continues to push, and it is difficult to know that she the necessity is so big that she continues with the pain. >> reporter: and the financial struggles are huge. >> i have a lot of perspective in life, that it is the american dream, and you work hard and then suddenly, you will be middle-class, and everybody is chasing a dream, but it is not as easy as it seems to be. >> reporter: and seeing their mom suffer physically and emotionally was not easy for her. >> i learned what was right. >> reporter: until the college internship at a occupational hospital showed it could be possible. >> it was five minutes from my house, and seeing all of the people coming there, it is when it clicked, hmm, it was not just
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my mom, but it was many people who are neglected. >> reporter: seeing people in need, inspired her career path, working for s.i.e.u., a union who inspires lower working personnel like her. >> i am in charge of employment insurance, and worker and health and environment and safety and racial justice. >> reporter: it is a big title. but she says is her commitment to work boils down to one special person. >> my mom made it very clear, if you give, you will get back. >> reporter: and maria agrees. >> translator: i know that anything that she puts her mind to, she will accomplish. >> reporter: for students rising above, i'm elizabeth cook. >> and she continues to help
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out enjoying themselves. it is back after a two-year break in the pandemic, and k&n was there enjoying food and the community in downtown oakland. >> this is one of my favorites and also. >> and this woman has memories of attending the festival, and now returns this year as a festival. it is oakland don't play, and she remembers opening the first store. >> oakland don't play started as a clothing line, and it is for us to voice our stance. there were a lot of things going on with the gentrification, and discrimination, and i wanted to find a way to say something about it. >> reporter: jackson says it gives people a chance to show their oakland pride. >> this is a new drop, and there is a big skate population in oakland and this is my way of paying homage. >> reporter: and by day, jackson
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is a programmer at salesforce, and then she pours her passion into oakland don't play. >> i had a couple of opportunities to eat and drink water, and nonstop, people learning about the company and making purchases. >> reporter: turn people turned out by the thousands to sample food and drink. >> my friends are here, and the a arts and the cultures are here, and why not. >> reporter: how are the fries? >> really good. deep fried, i love it. >> reporter: people of all ages enjoyed the festive tis including double dutch and roller skating, and we caught up with rapper mr. fabb as he strolled the streets. >> a lot of companies and businesses suffered, and so to see the people having a chance to see the products move, and watching some of the friends that i know and local vendors to have a chance to sell some of the merchandise, it is a lot of empowerment through friends and
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family and love. >> reporter: betty yu, k&n 5. >> it is a newly finished project in hollis ster, and then to add biking and cyclists on the road, and it was to slow traffic, and use the street as a drag stripping, but it went slig slightly askew as there were a few curves. and at 12:30 this afternoon, you can catch it on our streaming service s and on our sister
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it is 6:56 and time for a look at this morning's top stories. governor newsom has declared a state of emergency in regard to the oak fire in mariposa county. it is burning ten miles west of yosemite, and so far, it is burning 16 square miles and 6,000 people are under evacuation orders. and the world health organization has declared a state of emergency for monkey pox. and the feds have received just under 8,000 vaccinations. and the san francisco marathon kicked off this morning, and the runners will be
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going across the golden gate bridge and then back into the city through the presidio. we watched a gorgeous sunrise this morning from on top of the west side of the santa clara valley, and watching that early morning light. how widespread are the clouds? we can show you, and the resolution forecast will show you going back to the beaches and early morning beaches except for the west side today. the seven-day forecast shows you that we are not changing this, and it is low 70s in san francisco, and low 80s in oakland and sun through the next seven days, and in the inland valleys, we will go to the upper 80s for the next seven days. >> all right. thank you, darren and thank you for joining us. "sunday morning with jane pauley" is next on k&n 5. enjoy the rest of your sunday.
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genesys, we're behind every customer smile. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ good morning. i'm jane pauley, and this is "sunday morning." you can thank steel mogul andrew carnegie for so many of our beautiful old libraries. but 1930, carnegie's money had built more than 1600 libraries around the united states. but those dusty
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