tv KPIX 5 News CBS September 18, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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>> life from the cbs bay area studios, this is a kpix 5 news. news. >> we have ran across the bay area with the potential for a record amount of the next couple couple of days. we have your complete forecast. several oakland families are looking for for answers after a fire they say should never have happened.
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d up onplto sacramento around this way. there is no thought for what is going to happen to them next. > >> the help of support being offered to a group of migrants being sent to california from texas. > >> thank you for joining us. right now we have unusual september storms and it is reaching the bay area. let's get get to our first alert meteorologist. >> widespread rain already this morning. it started a little after midnight. we will pickup a a quarter of an inch of rain in the north bay. we take a look at at the doppler. you can see a lot of green and yellow showing up equally spread across much of of the bay area. first, here is
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how we have done so far while you have been sleeping. got 2700 already. once you go further south, the totals have not added up. it is nice to see cupertino's register. san ramon has registered hundreds of an inch of rain. if we go back, you you can see how those places have at least gotten something. there has been a widespread arrange showing up bay area wide. it has been the northbay valley's that have seen dusting. dusting. in terms of today, it will go like this. on-again off-again showers. they will stay with us through the remainder of sunday. there are plenty of times it is not raining, you can get outside. it it is like the showers can pick back up again very shortly after 4:amed ant. it is ndy. this advt es thll see 35 mile an hour gu there. back to you. > >> 10 days ago it was 117 degrees in the mountain valley. residents are preparing for up to an inch of rain. johnve to ao to changing conditions. >> reporter: after such a dry year you would think people in the business of growing plants
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would welcome a little rain. but, in the wine industry as always, timing is everything. there was no calm before the storm at this winery in st. helena. the place was packed as visitors enjoy the glorious weather in the outdoor venue. do do you think it is because they know tomorrow it will be raining? >> yes, of course. >> reporter: for the president tom davies, the storm needs a chance for his workers to get a few days rest. they have been picking nonstop for weeks. >> it was almost like an avalanche of fruit ripening all at one time. >> reporter: 75% of >> reporter: 75% of his crop is in and the warm weather made all all varieties of grapes ripen at at once. there is not room to put anything more, that is where where the rainstorm may help.
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>> >> this gives us a chance to get get caught up. we get some things permitted if we need to. we can maybe get a half day off to some of the crew. they have been working literally around the clock. >> reporter: that is the good news. the not so good news is fr the fruit on the vine. getting a a little bit of a drink late ine season would be good for the vi. it is not ideal for the grapes. the grapes will draw up some of that water and that is not what we want to have happen right now. pulling and water now will only dilute the sugar levels that growers have worked so hard hard to achieve. then there is the threat of mold if it is not warm enough after the storm to quickly dry the berries. so warm warm temperatures and the northerly wind would be nice. davies admits that like all farmers, he is a bit of a whiner whiner when it comes to the weather. >> we are just looking for that perfect weather, the perfect ripening. when anything just seems to push a little bit over the edge, we tend to lose a
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little bit of sleep. this has been a very unusual year. >> reporter: unusual? sure. the growers have pretty much given up on the idea of usable. these days they are scrambling to try to react to the left curveball mother nature serves that. in napa valley, kpix 5. > >> in oakland, several families displaced by a fast-moving grass grass fire spent saturday cleaning up. the fire spread quickly along highway 580 near 35th and macarthur. the fire damaged five homes. some families are staying at hotels. they tell kpix 5 that the fire could have been, should've been prevented. they say it was the second fire in the same location location in the past two years. >> everything was remodeled seven years ago. >> reporter: joanna roberts has a cottage gone. are two tenant survived but they lost a cat and and everything else. the front house where joanna lives has minor fire damage. >> this is more than just shelter. this is memories. this is my grandfather walter.
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>> reporter: her grandfather built the homes in 1921. >> i was asked if i'm going to rebuild and i said i do not know. everything is so expensivt ld. y er hat g febe years d thi >> reportother homeowners are assessing the thdawi stay for the next few months. the fire on friday damaged at least five homes. a few of those those burned to the ground. >> this used to be the man cave.
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cave. this was the barn doors right here. >> reporter: the fire destroyed alex's in law unit. >> there is a point in time that that i will cry about that. it has not hit me yet. >> reporter: there were not enough firefighters and he turned from homeowner to a volunteer firefighter. >> i am giving you this hose, knockout this fire if you can use the hose. i am grabbing the hose here. i am dragging it as far as i can literally standing here in these crocs and i am trying to use that hose to knock to knock down the fire and not building. >> reporter: once firefighters arrived, they took over and saved the main home. >> i cannot breathe. i did not have a mask on at the moment. now it is hard to breathe, it is it is hard to see. >> reporter: neighbors say this is the second time since 2024 fire to break out in the same area. investigators believe a small homeless encampment next to the 580 freeway at 35th avenue started the fire two years ago. even though firefighters are still investigating the new fire, neighbor suspect the same cause. cause. >> this is the last fire and nothing has been done since. >> reporter: the survivors are glad nobody was seriously hurt. >> that sucks. but you know, nobody died. >> reporter: again, the fire is under investigation. one firefighter heidi related injuries and was taken to the hospital. in oakland, kpix 5. >
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>> a reward has increased for information leading to the third the third suspect in the murder of a beloved security guard. it is up to $40,000 and there is a preliminary hearing scheduled on on monday. he was working with the news crew in oakland providing security when he was shot and killed in november. the the police arrested two suspect and a third suspect is at-large. at-large. >> we do not have any idea who is specifically behind this. we do understand that about eight of the immigrants that came to sacramento were directly from the state of texas. >> it is not clear who spent a false small group of migrants t. to sacramento. kpix 5's betty
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you spoke to individuals helpine migrants arriving in northern california. >> reporter: in the past two days, venezuelan migrants took flights from texas to sacramento. they had no choice in where they were going. a grassroots organization called norcal resist shared this photo of newly arrived migrants helping the group distribute food and goods at the monthly distribution sacramento. two other migrants help the group deliver this couch to newly settled immigrants. their journey to northern california has been confusing and tiring. volunteers are helping. >> when we met them they had just gotten to the food bank. they had to walk for about an hour on interstate 5. they were
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given shoes and something to eat eat and they were picked up. basically, they were exhausted. >> reporter: two groups landed at the sacramento international airport after getting released from a detention center in laredo texas. they were given detention papers that set them to what was supposed to be a shelter. it turned out to be an office building for catholic charities of california. >> luckily the security guard there has been very nice and he pointed them to the food bank. the second group that came in on on the evening flights, obviously the food bank is not open 24 seven. it was closed at that time. they were sleeping in in a park. we met them the next day when they got here. we put them in a hotel. >> reporter: it is unclear whether this is part of a political stunt or a mistake on the part of ice or u.s. customs and border protection. the group group said it will give the migrants about a week to decide if they want to settle in sacramento or make their way to their intended destinations. this includes florida and new y. new york.
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>> we have people at the airport airport keeping an eye on them. we do not want anyone to walk at at night on interstate 5. that is incredibly dangerous. they know that these folks do not have money. they do not have telephones. >> reporter: kpix 5. > >> the republican governors in florida and texas claimed they are trying to call attention to the biden administration's immigration policy. the florida governor has not world out working with governor greg abbott of texas to arrange futue transportation. > >> here in california, governor newsom was the federal government to step in. >> what ron desantis is doing is a disgrace. disgrace. it is almost monster is. i say that quite thoughtful. he has kids. i have kids. you saw the young girls with backpacks no older than his children, my children being used used as political ponds. he is now using it to fund raise. >> newsom has challenged desantis before to a debate. > >> this is prompting questions about the country's capacity tos asylum-seekers. this is the
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topic today on face the nation. >> now that the trump era remain mexico policies have been struck struck down by the courts, migrants have a right to claim asylum and they can wait in the united states until they have their day in court. where did they go in that period of time? that is something we have yet to yet to get an answer to. this is is since the courts are so backlogged with cases for a variety of reasons. we are going going to talk about this very complex problem on sunday with johnson, the secretary under president obama. >> you th
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now is 6:14 a.m. a powerful storm battered western alaska and it will dip into the bay area today and tomorrow. check out this video of the wet conditions in nome alaska. remanence of the pacific typhoon typhoon has been causing widespread flooding and high winds. it even lifted homes off of their foundation. there are no reports of injuries or death from the storm. > >> back here at home we have our our own system that is developing in the pacific, with perfect aim and really beneficil amounts of rain. this is for all all of northern california and it is really centered in the bay bay area. the first alert doppler's lit up this morning. that is the yellow and green. you can see the heavier bands of of rain on here. we have already
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already gotten a quarter of an inch of rain in santa rosa since since we started around midnight. there has also been rain in the south bay. some places in the santa clara valley valley have already gotten measurable rain. they have at least hundreds of an inch in places down near cupertino. look look at the futurecast. now we are just in this for about the next two days. we will keep a chance of scattered showers going. there will be times where where the intensity picks up, the focus gets a little more in line with the bay perhaps as weo through like sunday night into monday morning. but, we are not going to try to time the individual cells. we are going to believe that it started and it is pretty much not going to p just like this on again off again until we finished monday. one we add the totals up, they still look pretty good another 8/10 of an inch of rain to go. that will put us at about about you know, that will put us us about an inch and a quarter. when you look at the rest of the the bay from golden gate south, we are looking at about a half an inch still. may be a could be be a quarter of an inch or half an inch to the south bay communities. san jose is coming in with for tens of an inch of
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rain. there is about that much to go. the other item 2 discusses the wind. it has already picked up. it will get stronger as we get into the afternoon. the brighter the shades of red and purple, the stronger win. you can see the streamlines showing you this is a southerly wind. it is interacting with the terrain out out here along the coast and in the hills the most. as we played played the afternoon watch, the screen line up in here, this gets us into about 3:00 or 4:00 pm. there will be god at about 30 miles an hour. we will feel those winds kind of rushing up through the heart of the bay whether it is east bay shoreline shoreline or the peninsula. if you look where the wind advisory advisory is, it covers basically basically that location
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of the peninsula. and, it deals with the coast and the northbaye city is included in the wind advisory. i think you should also consider the peninsula ande east bay shoreline. is vulnerable to gusts in the 30s today. that is enough to blow some long patio around and maybe maybe get some debris on the road. >> that is the system right there. the reason why it has got got the decent amounts of rains is because there is a connection connection here. with that long stream of clouds heading up towd the south. you can actually pick pick out the organization of the the storm just from reading where the higher concentrations of water vapor have been pulled inland. it is like dropping dye into a stream in that way. if you trace it back, you can see there is a good amount of moisture getting pulled from the the subtropics. that is why there is rain to work with. this this is about a category two atc two atmospheric rating. two is moderate and two is beneficial. five is the stuff that is problematic. if you are on two, that means you get more rain ant is beneficial. daytime highs are are staying relatively comfortable. we will be in the mid-70s. this is not a winter storm. there is some light snow in the scenario. so here's the seven-day forecast. and, you will notice that we still have our two first alert days, today
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and tomorrow. today for the widespread rain and tomorrow it could be occasional isolated thunderstorms mixed in. and then then we will quiet things down d clear things out through the remainder of the week after that. by the time we get toward saturday, daytime highs are nearing 90 again for our warmer inland east bay locations. we are going to go right back into sunny and warmer than average and no fire season is not over. we will be focused on that as we we go through late september. >> i was expecting a more rain at my driving from san jose today. it was mostly clear.
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there were a couple of bands. one is the heaviest rain? >> late morning early afternoon. afternoon. san jose always gets a little bit later. this is because it is south and there is is a little bit of a rain shadow shadow effect. anybody who lives lives down there knows it is from the santa clara mountains all around you. the timing for san jose has always been late morning before the more meaningful rain arrives. that will be in the next few hours. >> thank you. > >> saturday was california's 38th annual coastal cleanup day. day. volunteers were eager to do do their part at beaches around the bay area. i spoke with nirsvoeers who helped. who helped. dozens of volunteers volunteers scoured the beach and and the dunes at ocean beach. they were looking for the trash that sadly litters so many of our treasured outdoor spaces. >> we are here for coastal cleanup day. is an annual event run by the coastal division. >> statewide, it was a similar scene. this is the 38th year running. volunteers will collect collect tons of trash for a massive cleanup that left volunteers wondering if more could not be done to prevent pollution in the first place. >> >> all of the companies that are are producing these products are are responsible at a certain level. >> reporter: michael supports policies that would limit the amount of plastic waste. fewer plastic straws and utensils and food packaging means less to
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waste on the beaches and in the oceans. >> using aluminum cans instead f plastic bottles, that type of legislation i feel it would go a a long way to help reduce the at of plastic that ends up on our beaches, and it would prevent im happening at the beginning. >> a long-term prescription for the health of our natural world would be this. >> early numbers from the day are coming in. 27 volunteers, excuse me 27,000 showed up acros the state. they picked up 220 pounds of trash and recyclables. recyclables. > >> sports is on the way. the 49ers preview ahead of seattle today. pl
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i believe prop 27 is the right thing to do. i had experienced being in shelters at a young age. having nothing. prostituting. we don't choose this life. i never knew what safe was until i came to city of refugee. people that's coming through these doors are trying to break the cycle. prop 27 will help provide more funding for places like this and help people get off the streets. it feels good to have a place to call home. support prop 27.
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>> good morning. if you missed e forecast i am here to tell you r will be a factor in the 49ers home opener later today. 49ers sizable favorites right now but they struggle e weekago. it ally started co a monsoon in the fourth quarter. the 49ers quarterback trey lantz lantz struggled in those conditions. he threw for only 164 yards and the interception.
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with the teams underwhelming performance, there has been a lot of criticism from former players like steve young and former coaches like mike marked. marked. how does the team deal with the outside noise? >> honestly, we do not hear it. anytime you lose, there is a lot lot more outside noise and anytime you when there is outside noise telling you how good you are. when you start 0-1, everybody feels that. nothing really changes. we do not make it something it is not. not. we do not say let's try harder because you like to feel like you do that every single day as well as he can. you have got to figure out why you lost the week before and try to do better. >> the bears were facing notre dame. the second quarter, look at jack find j michael. there was an 18 yard touchdown and the the bears were up 7-0 early. the
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the irish quarterback finds michael mayer for the go-ahead . notre dame is on top 24-17. the final seconds, this is a hail mary. they need to get it off. he fires that up there. it is deep enough, in the air, batted down may be. it is incomplete. check it out one more time. watch number three in the white. white. that is jeremiah hunter.e has it in his hands and he just slaps it down. he cannot really it in. we waited 55 years for the matchup and it was a dandy. notre dame 24, cal 17. arizona is in berkeley next week. the country's top-ranked team has local ties. bowers in georgia is is high alone. second quarter, e georgia quarterback throws it up. look at bowers hauling it in. let's see the replay. it happened like a ballerina. georgia was up 21-0. bowers was not done. huge day for him. third-quarter, breaks it tackled tackled and 78 yards to the house. that is his third touchdn of the game.
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48-7. the game of the day came between appellation state and troy. they were down to as time. chase does not have the difference. you figure game over. look at this. christian horan into the end zone, that is is how it ends. 32-28 in favor of appalachian state. the mountaineers upset texas a&m last weekend. and now there was that. today is the final matchup matchup against the dodgers this this season. it cannot come soon soon enough. san francisco is just 1-12 against the dodgers. former giant and fan favorite hunter pitts cruised in on the scooter. he was honored with a plaque. third-quarter, the giants have the giant 6 foot 11. 11. he goes down to a knee. he bounces it into left field. the dodgers are up 4-1. the next batter was turner. look at the center field. another run
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waltzes into make it 5-1. the giants gave up four runs in the third inning. they do not want to see the dodgers for a long time. next inning guess who? turner. his third hit of the night. he draws in another run. the giants have not beaten the dodgers and oracle park since june. since june! they win 7-2. the oakland a's were in houston. houston. look at this fan, using using his hat to secure the foul foul ball. the first inning, its it is kyle irvin pitching. look at houston's tucker. smashing. the score was 3-1 in favor of the astros. urban knew it was gone the second it left the bac.
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fourth inning, the oakland a's strike. chad goes way upstairs and slaps at the opposite way. going, going, and gone. the solo solo shot for bender, houston was down 4-3. can the a's pull off a comeback? two runners on, it goes to right field, a no-doubter. three runs a shot brown's 23rd of the season, the a's when 8-5. earthquakes jeremy jeremy had a free kick, 24th minute. a little bit of stutter and yes. this was
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>> live from the cbs bay area s. this is kpix 5 news. >> welcome back it is 6:30 2 am. am. let's start this half hour with a quick check on the weather with her first alert meteorologist. >> we have a quarter of an inch of rain since midnight in the north bay. that is santa rosa's total. when you look at the doppler, you can see there is a lot of rain on your already. everybody has something. we have have picked up 100th of an inch of rain in the santa clara valley. this is at least for cupertino. we have seen it bay area wide. it has been much more more noticeable in the north bay bay so far. it is going to over spreader every.for e day we will talking about on-againshowers. m item to discuss that went into effect at 6:00 am was the wind advisory. you can see how much brighter the colors are for the mountains down the peninsula. this is also the coast in the north bay. watch what happens the afternoon. southerly winds will be watching through much of
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of the bay. we will see gusts up up to around 30 miles an hour in in places like san mateo. there is a wind advisory that goes until tomorrow morning. the clor we are to the water, it is primarily focused on the coast.e is a lot more rain to go. we will have all that in the first alert forecast coming up in a few minutes. back to you. > >> in london all eight of queen elizabeth's grandchildren, the young royal stood together to look at her coffin. prince william and harry were joined by by their cousins. now king charles requested that harry and harry and william who were military veterans be in uniform. uniform. it was the city's coldest night in months. thousands came to pay their respects. president biden and first lady jill biden are now in in london for the state funeral tomorrow. the cbs reporter ian lee has the latest. >> reporter: ars iii is hes tate and foreies ming to lo
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elizab in the fi ve ard to spto the ey at tonight. the massive line of mourners still stretches for miles around the river thames and across the british capital and it has for days now. what does it mean for you guys to pay pay her respects? >> this is a small gesture for her life of service. it is nothing really compared to what she has done for our country. >> >> we will do it again and again again and again to the end of the earth for the queen. >> reporter: those lining up hae less than 24 hours to see the queen lying in state. the doors will close ahead of tomorrow's funeral. princes william and harry along with queen elizabeth's other grandchildren stood vigil around her coffin saturday night as mourners passed by. >> it was lovely to see them altogether united. this is what family is about. >> reporter: the queen consort camilla is also paying tribute to her mother in law. >> she had the most wonderful blue eyes. when she smiles you know, they light up her whole face. i will always remember that smile. >> reporter: an unforgettable smile wrapped in unforgettable 70 years of rain. >> the official funeral service happens tomorrow morning at westminster abbey. the queen
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will be buried in st. george's chapel on the grounds of windsor windsor chapel tomorrow night. you can see live coverage of the the funeral. it starts at 2:30 . here on kpix 5. this is a live look at the cathedral in san francisco. if you do not wake up up in the middle the night to watch the funeral live, the cathedral will host a rebroadcast starting at 10:00 am. the public is welcome to attend. > >> a magnitude 6.8 earthquake struck southeastern taiwan. the quake trapped three people inside of a toppled building. ar train was knocked off its tracks tracks at a station. on a mountainside, 400 tourists are trapped with no power and no cell phone service. it is
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unclear how many people are injured. this is the largest amongst dozens that have rattled rattled the island since last night. one of the earlier quakes quakes measured 6.4. > >> here is a look at the moment the earthquake started happening. you can see a chandelier swaying rapidly and other furniture moving around. the geological survey has issued issued a tsunami warning with a 185 mile radius of the epicente. the epicenter. > >> here is the moment a gymnasium the ceiling fell. reports are coming in that multiple buildings have collapsed. rescue crews are assisting people in affected ar. we will have an update for you with the latest developments as we get them. > >> now to the were in ukraine, new outreach following evidence of russian war crimes targeting civilians. our cbs reporter is there and you may find some of the engines is disturbing. >> reporter: it is the smell that hits you. in this pine forest on the outskirts of a buy area, there is overwhelming and unbearable death on an industrial scale. this is where russia came to hide its crimes. these are the men and women who are determined to uncover them.
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the work is exhausting. they have been at it for months now. nothing could prepare them for this. >> everywhere you look in front, front, behind, either side, thee are shallow graves. the bodies of people killed her for the past seven months or here. some of them, they are military. most most of them are civilians. >> reporter: wooden crosses mark mark the graves. most are numbered. if you have names. like this entire family, a youne is buried next to their six-year-old daughter. in this gate, this is the chief war crimes prosecutor. they are exhuming the bodies. some bear the signs of torture. >> translator: we found parties with a rope around their neck and hands he told us. this individual thought he would end up in one of these grades as we. he is weeping. he told us he had had been in prison for over 100 days. this was by russian
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soldiers. >> translator: they tortured meg electric shocks. my nose is shattered. some of those imprisoned with him, they did nt get out alive. >> reporter: he believes they will be found here in this massive burial site that haunts this town. deborah patterson, cbs news, ukraine. > >> ukrainian forces are pushing. forces are hitting towns and cis with artillery strikes at the other side of the russian border. russia has been shelling shelling a wide stretch of ukraine. > >> still to come, an
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sierra nevada foothills. 73,000 acres have been burned. that is more land than san francisco and and oakland combined. it is 21% contained. more than 11,000 people have evacuated. one of accu we made the emotional journey to check on her home of more than 20 years. it is located in one of the neighborhoods hit worst by the fire. jamie and her family were forced to evacuate their forest hill home and it had been 10 days since she was lost their. since the mosquito fire took over the canyon that porters her her property, that happened. she she decided to make the 45 minute drive to check her home. her nerves turned to a sigh of relief when she saw that it was still standing. >> this is the only house they know. there is lots of memories and here. the idea of it being lost is just crazy. >> in her backyard, a firelight visibly marked the grounds just yards away from the house. her home is still standing and that is not the case for her
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neighbors. the blaze continues to burn through her town. >> it is hard. you do not really really appreciate what you have until you do not . hongwe can m the next week or so. i do not k. not know. > >> let's pick up the view on the the first alert doppler and watch the fires that have arrived from the northbay. the showers are coming in and that will help. we have already picked up about a quarter of an inch of rain. that is just the start. it will keep going for the next two days. we will see scattered showers coming through through on monday. we will not have it as widespread as it is right now. this is one of the more impressive time frames of the storm in terms of its ability to have widespread reign reign over much of the bay. we play it forward and there is sunday going through the late morning and afternoon. that is 0 is 1:30 p.m. you still have
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spotty showers in the northbay. we will take it into the evening. sunday night into monday, monday unit is there are are plenty of brakes on here. then we are getting into the afternoon. you can see more thunder storms pop up. these will likely be isolated thunderstorms tomorrow. there will be scattered showers, on-again off-again. we cannot take it out until we get to tuesday. this is where things finally start to wind down. there will be plenty of time to get outside when you do not get rained on. this is opposed to when you do. over the next two days, the chance of rain will stay persistent through monday and when you add it all up, we have got about an inch and a quarter for the northbay. we have got more to go. we will pick up half an inch of rain from the golden gate south for most of the locations in the south bay and in the east bay getting about a half an inch of
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rain total. when you look at the the way this storm is just perfectly situated right off the the coast, look at the spinning clouds. if we look at the water vapor, you can already see the beautiful low-pressure area on the regular satellite when you look at it. when you look at it and what it is doing to the wind, we will understand why today has a wind advisory on it. it. within that circulation, you you get the counterclockwise spin. look where we are in relation to that. we are on the edge of that. you have that low spinning out here. everything is is getting pulled up from the south in front of it. this wraps wraps back into the low. the closer you get to the low, the stronger the winds get. over the the next few hours is the low comes on shore, we are going to really feel that. this is going up from the south, racing over the topography of the peninsula and then out into that low. is the system moves onshore, watch the wind migrate in the northern northern part of the bay. this is why i have got the wind advisory today. you have got your 35 mile an hour gusts and places like fremont, redwood ci, san bruno. and because it is a southerly wind, it is a slightly slightly different direction than how these are normally oriented. normally it is a northwind or northwest wind. it will behave differently with the the ground winds. you get stronger wind gusts that time if
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if you are south of the mountai. the mountain. so it is enough for an advisory. that is enough that lawn furniture gets blown around. there could be debris on on the road. it will be stronger stronger on the coast and through the mountains of the peninsula. that covers the wind advisory story. the system is also going to get a nice little bump in rain. this is because it it has an atmospheric river attached to it. picking up the same circulation, when you look at where the higher concentratis of water vapor are, you can seet you have gotten atmospheric river that has a narrow rib iron iron of higher concentration. that one is moderate. we put in on a scale of one to five. this
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is a two. one of the characteristics is that you gete beneficial rain. it is not too much to handle and it is more than the storm we had earlier. daytime highs today stay relatively comfortable. we will be in the mid-70s. it is not like a nasty winter storm in terms of temperatures. there are are two first alert days just to to draw your attention to the roads today. there will be slick slick services and minor ponding ponding of roadway water. monday monday it is the isolated occasional thunderstorm we want to draw your attention to. then we are done. it will be sunny and warmer. as you play this through we will be back up near 90 again for daytime highs. this this is by the time we get to next weekend. we are back to sunny and warm. >> i know most of the rain today today and tomorrow, still a chance tuesday? >> tuesday has a chance. i have
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a drop on their. we might have lingering showers left over. it every search you make, every click you take, every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified.
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kevin: i've fought wildfires for twenty years. here's the reality we face every day. duckduckgo: this is a crisis. we need more firefighters, more equipment, better forest management to prevent wildfires and reduce toxic smoke. and we need to reduce the tailpipe emissions that are driving changes to our climate. that's why cal fire firefighters, the american lung association, and the california democratic party support prop 30. prevent fires. cut emissions. and cleaner air. yes on 30.
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across the bay area celebrated n independence. on saturday in the the mission, san francisco's low low rider community came out not not just to honor mexican independence but all of the latino communities that exist here in the bay area. kpix 5 gives us a look. >> reporter: part of celebrating celebrating independence is our independence that we have the prenup to the crews that are enrolled on mission street. >> i love it. i think it is great. yes, everybody gets together and shows off their cars. >> reporter: the bay area's low rider community revving it up on on mission street celebrating hispanic heritage inner-city. this is their unique culture and and art form. >> here in san francisco we have have always had this. it has
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been a big mix compared to other other urban cities in the united united states. we honor you know know all of those countries celebrating those events. >> reporter: while is accepted and celebrated aspect of hispanic culture, it was not always like this. the people who who love low riders fought to get there independence, culture, culture, and their automotive art. >> the city was concerned about oslo writing. i got arrested about 13 times. through a federl court case we were able to get our rights to be able to cruise. cruise. there is nothing wrong h it. >> with a mix of backgrounds comes the mix of music. [ music] and was celebrated in the mission over the weekend. >> we want to showcase and have people have pride and not be embarrassed to be brown, to be latino. [ music ]
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>> san jose's regional medical center celebrated fiestas marking the presence of latin american countries. the hospital hospital held an event just outside of its stores. community community members and city council workers came out to enjoy the mariachi band. there was dancing, food, games and even some new screenings. > >> it takes two to tango. two couples were crowned tango world world cup winners in buenos aires. over 500 participants from all over the world competed competed in two
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the forecast. the good news is it does give workers a few days of rest. it gives them a chance to get caught up. if the weather weather is not good enough after after the rain, there is the threat of mold. several family spent yesterday cleaning up their damaged homes after friday friday paws fires in oakland along highway 580 near 35th and macarthur. some of the family suspect the fires began at a nearby homeless encampment. > >> groups of migrants arrived in in sacramento after being released from a texas detention facility. it is unclear who sent sent them. this happened shortly shortly after the governor of florida sent others to massachu. to massachusetts. the texas governor put groups on buses to washington dc. > >> world leaders are in london to pay respects to queen elizabeth at her funeral tomorrow. the queen's eight grandchildren stood around her coffin last night. thousands of mourners have been lining up for for days to view the casket. > >> a magnitude 6.8 earthquake hit taiwan earlier today. buildings and bridges have collapsed and there were at least three people trapped under under the rubble. the united states geological survey has issued a tsunami warning with any 185 mile radius. > >> it into the first alert doppler and you can see the rain the rain showing up today across across much of the bay area. it has been focused in the north bay. it has been fairly consist.
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90% of the profits go to out-of-state corporations permanently. only pennies on the dollar for the homeless permanently. and with loopholes, the homeless get even less permanently. prop 27. they didn't write it for the homeless. they wrote it for themselves. good morning. i'm jane paulie and this is "sunday morning."
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