tv CBS News Bay Area CBS September 28, 2022 3:00pm-3:30pm PDT
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>> it is a story that involves parents and families about tell us what you are seeing the bow >> reporter: right here on the scene, we have seen families that have reunited in oakland about let's take a live look right here, a pretty big school campus here in oakland. officers officers going methodically through the classrooms on campus campus making sure that there is there is not a threat, it does
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not appear that that is the case. obviously, a huge police presence here about some oakland police officers just came by us us and monday of officers on ground here as well. evenly federal investigators are all about of this investigation. childrenare ay. know that far w to eden medical center. we do not know if they were staff members or students who were injured in the shooting. a couple of moments, i talked to s to parents. this is what they hd to say. >> panicked, scared. i was thinking the worst. i'm still
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shaking, i was still nervous. i was on campus. we just heard shg heard shooting but i did not think to look around about just turn around to see the school and i just here that somebody was shooting. they did not let anybody in. >> reporter: the shooting happened at a facility chaired by bay area technology that is also known as abbe tech here in. in oakland. is right next to i-80. we are also hearing that there is a day care center on this property as well. potentially, hundreds of families dealing with an incredibly terrifying ordeal arare pito leme re. we ow t meanlyon oing to o
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. we want to let our viewers know. at the top of the hour, we need to go back to the beginning about this is a shooting situation, that happened with one or more gunmen got out of the car and startedo started to fire. getting the injured to local hospitals. we understand that there are as many as six victims unconfirmed. one victim is reported to be in in critical condition. we are understanding that the injuriese from minor to critical. we are g are awaiting for a news conference from oakland police we want to let you know at home, home, stay away from the area. let police and first responders do what they are trained to do
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while they reunify families at t at that reunification center is about so many people with heavy hearts here in our community. we we want to let you know that wel continue updating this story throughout the day. all of the angles at the story as we look at the people who are wounded, the survivors and the situations situations about > >> we'll move on to the other big story in our country, a floa with her cane in. we have a look right now, ian is bringing storms and even threats. there it is. powerful winds happening inside and outside. if they have have not evacuated, they are hunkering down. let's get over to first meteorologist, darren . darren peck. >> came onto shore right about noon as a category 4 around the
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center of that wall. and has now now progressed and lynn. it is t is not we can do a whole lot. everything that would have gone along with us, the amount of ran of rain, has all played out as it would in a forecast for the last 36 hours. if we switch from from the life updating radar, just to get an idea how the stories were to treat florida for the next few hours, we can watch it just rake right across the central part of the state, weakening as it goes. by the time it finally crosses, that is is thursday at 3:00 in the afternoon, we would have seen it it weakened from its category 4 to a tropical storm. even though though it is going to the carolinas after it sits over th, it will not regain the intensity
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intensity with which it just pummeled florida. this will still be a big story going forward for the next several days. we still have yet to uncover what has taken place in terms of damage. we will have much more coming up. we have also a reporter on the scene. we we will check in with jason allen in his report. >> reporter: darren, the hurricane made landfall a couple couple hundred miles from the south. we have been expressing wind gusts here, some driving rain at times. this is a huge sm that has impacted all the way from the northern border of the state down to the florida keys. hurricane ian has arrived. a pol a powerful storm that is expected to millions of floridi. of floridians. satellite imagery
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imagery shows lightning as ian approached. officials are warning of dangerous flooding. >> some places are going to get two feet of rain. >> reporter: flooding began on the streets of naples while ian ian was still offshore is about downed power lines sparked the . the storm. if they had not gotten out by this morning, it was too late. >> i have urged floridians who have made the decisions to shelter in place, stay indoors and stay off the world. >> reporter: it has been pushinr out of the bay thisswng areusuah t.these these michigan residents have never experienced a hurricane. >> we want to see if we can get a good glimpse out of anything over here. >> reporter: fema has hundreds
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of boots on the ground and has d has provided food and water supplies. >> this is not just a 48 hour ordeal bo this is going to be something that is going to be there for days and weeks. >> reporter: expected to move across central florida sometime tomorrow. >> you can find us on air and online 24 seven at kpix.com. if you like to help donate, go to s to cbsnews.com/redcross. > >> coming up, a warm welcome for for the warriors a very long way way away from home. > >> plus, this. how the singer wh singer with
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victims with apparent gunshot wounds. all those victims were sfd to local hospitalcurrently unknown spoke >> what we do not know, where are the bad guys? you can bet, we have crews on the ground as parents are to gather and wanting to get unified with their children. as soon as we get that information, we get it to you. you look for how the community comes together and and you see that in real-time on real-time on your screen, people people holding each other in oakland while there are calls to to quell the gun violence. again, we want to reiterate, this was a shooting that happened near a complex at the schools about parents are told to be getting to a unification center as we ask more questions. > >> we remember the things that g us together during the situations. we continue to celebrate hispanic heritage month with a singer that has dep
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has deep california roots. >> [ singing in non-english ] >> reporter: with every note lupita belts out, she continues to keep her family's legacy ali. legacy alive. >> there are just so many layers layers of the significance. even significance. even having the legacy with my grandfather and singing his songs. >> reporter: lupita's grandfather was beloved mariachr mariachi singer. he died tragically in a plane crash in 1957. her father, also following following in his father's footsteps starred in over 80 pounds as an actor before passing away in 2009. >> watching my dad perform on s, on stage, on film hearing his rs his recordings. every time i
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hear a mariachi, that takes me to a special place with family. >> reporter: now lupita is makig her own way see her songs of her heritage. >> how he could just connect with them and take them to thise this place, it brings you to fay to family. you can laugh together, you can cry together and celebrate together. it is just such a good feeling. >> reporter: lupita was born and and raised in southern california and graduated from ucla in 2017 with a degree in ethnomusicology. before she losr lost her professional music career and performing across the the country ever since. >> [ singing in non-english ] >> reporter: her album was nominated for a grammy award.
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in celebration of hispanic heritage month, lupita recently performed with the symphony. >> those were my parents' songs. it is just this feeling that comes over you. >> reporter: this included a bl a bilingual performance of, be true to me. she will spend the rest of the year performing with with stops in chicago and all over california. and of course,s course, always looking to what is next. >> i think that i could be this latina michael blay, bringing those classics but in spanish. now i can see that vision comine coming true. >> reporter: with this music so close to lupita's heart, she
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hopes to keep the genre alive and at the forefront for the next generation. deanna franco, franco, kpix 5. > >> your warriors touchdown in tokyo and signed autographs fors for fans. the team has two preseason games in japan this friday and saturday. vern glenn shows you a former 49er was also involved in another. > >> this is the volkswagen red and gold report. >> time-out for the red and gold report. the 49ers get an extra day to prepare for the rams thi. that is a good thing because they have a lot to clean up. social media, sunday night, just blew up when it stepped out of the end zone for a safety but it it was worst than what happened in miami. the dolphins' punch or or kick it off into the end zon.
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end zone. tweeted, my cheeks have a big w tatted on them. and and now some free toilet paper. sharman replied, those cheeks are going to need something soft. with the reading loan report, i am vern glenn. > >> cloudy at the golden gate this afternoon. we are seeing the level really start to fill back in here. it looks great at the coast, it looks great right here. most everywhere else is looking like blue skies and sunshine. you can see the clouds clouds trying to grieve over the the hills there. the rest of the the city is even looking at clear skies. the temperatures are doing what they have been doing for the last two days now. now. which is stand pretty much right on the mark for average.
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in fact, a little below average for this time of year. concorde at 83, right on the mark. they will go down to the mid and upper 50s. we will see the numbs for thursday afternoon. it is slightly warmer near the water tomorrow. we will get back to the low 70s for san francisco. while we notice a subtle return to temperatures that get us back back to the yellow and orange on on here, this is the map that visualizes where you are in relation to average. we are going to be a little bit above that for thursday and friday. 84 84 would be average for you right now. you did 80 yesterday. yesterday. right around 83 toda. 83 today. friday is 91 and that is where we start to hit the to. top there. nothing to be seen here out in the pacific. is
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going to stay fairly quiet. we will watch the damages go up and and down a bit. san jose staying staying put. you might warm up t a bit to 85 on friday but it does not last long. microclimates, it is the same s. same story. we will come back dn back down to mid-80s by the wee. the weekend. > >> still ahead, celebrating a beloved bay area figure.
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kevin: i've fought wildfires for twenty years. here's the reality we face every day. 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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>> we continue to follow breakig news out of east oakland. the mayor just tweeted that all sixg six shooting victims are adults. adults. we want to underscore that, they are all adults. they are being treated at local hosps local hospitals, we understand. the shooting happened near a cox near school campuses. it has been a very busy and active scene. to say the least, tense d tense and terrifying for parents, students and teachers who that as the bullets flew. > >> other community news now, kpix 5 wants to wish a very happy birthday to ranger betty., betty. today, she celebrated with students at the school named in her honor. >> happy birthday to you! happy!
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happy birthday! >> that school remained after her last year after she turned . turned 100. that, after everything she has accomplished, accomplished, the school is her. her biggest. >> i never dreamed. i love it. >> betty retired earlier this year as the oldest park ranger in the united states. get this, during world war ii, worked as a a clerk. she was also crucial in in developing the rosie the riveter park in richland. > >> a bagel business expanding all thanks to you. next, how ouy did what it
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>> we continue celebrating hispanic heritage month. we knot know that latinos are well represented in the bay area sports. coming up at 5:00, sarah sarah will show you how they celebrate their heritage every time they step out to play. > >> a berkeley based business is and it is all thanks to you. the the owner tells us, 470 differet 470 different investors saw the story and contributed more than $1.4 million just because they saw a need there. the owner exps owner expects the plant to openn
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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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captioning sponsored by cbs >> o'donnell: tonight, we're here in florida, where hurricane ian made landfall as one of the most powerful storms to hit the u.s. in american history. roofs torn off homes, cars submerged under water, and dangerous winds knock down power lines as an enormous hurricane ian engulfs florida. cbs' manuel bojorquez is in hard-hit fort myers. >> reporter: the area of this hotel is now part of the gulf of mexico. >> o'donnell: catastrophic storm surge, floodwaters could reach as high as 18 feet. the weather channel's jim kantory battles dangerous winds in punta gorda. he joins us. the latest storm track.
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