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tv   KRON 4 News Weekend  KRON  August 13, 2022 7:00am-10:00am PDT

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>> from the area's local news station, you're watching the kron. 4 morning news at 7. >> thanks so much for joining us on the kron. 4 morning news. i promise that you'll see me in just a second year. there we go. i'm stephanie land. it's saturday. august 13. let's get started with a check on the weather with dave sphar. good morning, david. good morning, stephanie. good morning. everybody promises kept their at least hey, we're off to a pretty good start to live in the way some of that morning fog taking care of itself. look at the east bay shoreline shot here. if we all collectively blow together, i it will go away. >> it looks like mostly sunny skies today. now buckle up because temperatures are on the climb out of the stand for
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now. we have a mere about 60 going on. so it's a nice, refreshing start. lot of 50's over the real estate. 48 also covering up there, too, in a bottle. give you a contrast here were actually trailing this morning. but the kind of nice to have a couple degrees behind will make up for it this afternoon. winds a little bit of an onshore wind that enough just to keep the monsoon away, if you will, with the onshore flow pattern there it is not a socal. looks working down there around the coachella valley. a little bit up to san bernardino county as well. breaking things down for you. 77, 11 o'clock by 2 88. now these numbers are building in the early part of next week. summer starts to get on the bark. boxing gloves. so prepare accordingly. have that forecast in a bit. stephanie. much day. >> breaking news from overnight. another deadly car crash in san jose. this one happening near berle court and west hedding street around 3.15 this morning. police say the car crashed into a tree. the driver died at the scene. this is san jose's, 40st deadly accident of the year.
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and the 43rd victim. 2 people have behind bars this morning accused of killing an uber driver and oakland's little saigon neighborhood. 52 year-old patrick phone was shot and killed july 17th while sitting in his car kron four's. dan thorn has reaction from community leaders. >> the 2 suspects wanted in connection with the killing of an uber driver in oakland have been arrested and charged. police say 19 year-old major willis and an unnamed juvenile were found with help from the community. thanks. both of voted to doing that and nose little saigon community and business leader anne says crime has become a big problem in their neighborhood. the killing of patrick fung stunned area residents. it's a very heart you know, when that e happened that we have stepped in announcing the charges, alameda county district attorney nancy o'malley said
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mister fung was census lee and violently attacked while doing his job. our hearts and condolences go out to his family, friends and community oakland police chief leronne armstrong has vowed to improve safety in little saigon. the department has also recently assigned an officer to be a community liaison. says little saigon needs the support. i you know, the holidays can be continue and doing that to willis has been charged with murder and attempted carjacking. the juvenile was charged in juvenile court reporting in oakland, dan thorn kron. 4 news. >> police arrested a 17 year-old boy who they believe shot and killed someone at the 24 hour. fitness in brentwood earlier this week. investigators say the problem started with a fight thursday morning on the gyms basketball court that moved into the parking lot. that shooting left one person dead and 3 people injured. the 17 year-old is being held at the
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contra costa county juvenile detention center and faces murder charges happening today in the north bay. there is a gun buyback event in petaluma this the latest effort to try and get guns off bay area streets. kron four's camila barco is live for us in petaluma this morning with the details. good morning to you. camila. >> good morning, stephanie today the petaluma police department will be here at the petaluma fairgrounds to collect any guns that people want to turn and the process. stephanie, it's very simple. it's very easy. and people don't even have to leave their cars. take a look. this is how it all works out. all you have to do is drive up to the site here to the fairgrounds and pop your trunk. officers will ask how many guns or firearms you have where they are and if they're loaded and once you do that will turn in the firearm and you get money in exchange, here's how much you'll get if you gets turn in some handguns, rifles and shotguns. that's $100. $200 for assault
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weapons and the guns that they collected, a will be destroyed. there's no questions asked about where the goods are from or whose they are or who who the are are from. organizers say the firearms must be working and there's a limit of 3 per person. they won't accept any ammunition. they say that this event is open to certain residents living in the they say that the residents must be living in the zip codes of 949-529-4954, and 9, 4, 9, 5, 3 and a stephan. like i said, the police department will be here at the fairgrounds. they do say that the gun back buyback event starts at 9 o'clock this morning and they will be here until 1 o'clock this afternoon collecting any guns that anyone wants to turn. and again, no questions asked. all you have to do is just pop your trunk and they will collect the firearms from inside your car. i'll send it back to you. thanks very much, camila for that live report. >> the family of missing
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oakley woman-alexis kay believes the mother of her suspected killer knows where her body is located. they held a protest on friday outside the contra costa district attorney's office calling for charges to be filed against a gabe's ex-boyfriend's mother. alexis gabe was last seen on january. 26 and investigators believe her former boyfriend marshall jones murdered her that night. they think jones travel to his mother's home shortly after killing gave jones's mother, alicia clark was briefly detained in may on suspicion of aiding and abetting. but later released. >> marshall jones is but it doesn't mean the case is someone and that would his mother. lisa. >> in early june, police in seattle killed alexis's ex-boyfriend. during an attempted. arrest. they say
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jones rushed out of home with a knife and that's when officers shot him. we have reached out to the contra costa county da's office for comment. we will update you once we have a response. california is the first state in the u.s. to offer free meals to students in public schools. starting the school year, students can get free breakfast and lunch regardless of income status in the past, they had to qualify for meals based on their parents, income taxes, zip code or the level of poverty in the school's area. the universal meals program is expected to benefit roughly 6 million students. state leaders say it's important that every student have access to a meal, especially with rising inflation and food costs. coming up on the kron 4 morning news tomorrow marks one year since the massive caldor fire swept through the lake tahoe region. >> we take a look back at what happened and the recovery effort still happening today. plus, vice president kamala
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harris returns to her bay area roots this week making a stop in oakland. the big announcement she made addressing the future of commercial space travel. and after the break, it's crunch time for president biden. will he follow through on his promises for student debt relief? how long he has le
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>> this sunday marks one year since the caldor fire started burning more than 200,000
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acres near lake tahoe. it costs california. 1.2 billion dollars to put out this fire considered one of the most destructive in california last year in december, father and son david smith and travis shane were arrested for starting this blaze. investigators say a bullet they shot hit an object and hot fragments fell into dry grass, igniting that dangerous fire. >> because of the dry feel an and just very dense vegetation was able to take off pretty quickly. and then, of course, we were drawn down with if you remember at the time we had the dixie fire going at the same time. you know, having a lot of the resources kind of scattered throughout the state is is makes it difficult as well. >> travis shane, one of the suspects in this case faces an additional charge for illegal possession of the machine gun. firefighters continue to make progress on the deadly mckinney fire in siskiyou county that's burned just over
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60,000 acres and is now 90% contained. 4 people are dead. 10 others injures at injured and 185 buildings destroyed. >> somewhat mild summer coming your way for today. lots of sunshine. temperatures in the sunshine. temperatures in the upper 80's will investig where's mommy? oh, oh hey sweetie. mother nature is at work, but father nature is here. i'm hungry. okay... let's see. oh, how about some smucker's natural? first ingredient real strawberries. ugh, he hit the window again didn't he?
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it's something we pride ourselves on at folgers... yeah, i said folgers. >> welcome back. taking a live look outside at mount tam this beautiful morning. we're expecting it to be a pretty hot weekend with even more warmer weather through next
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week. now, dave spahr standing by with live look at the forecast now. good morning to you, david. good morning, stephanie. good morning, everybody. nice shot to get things started. as we watch the fog start to peel away from the bay area. there's the east bay shoreline going on there for you. >> and we could go ahead and call a kind of mild still kind of summer. this is august. so we're used to these kind of things we haven't had to be in triple digits. spoke too soon. this week ahead, going to be quite interesting as we see things start to really warm up temperature check for you. 60's cover the east bay shoreline. fremont the cool spot. 54 56 livermore valley up to san jose. sorry. santa rosa at 50 center, san jose. 58 56 covering san francisco. so on storm tracker we some of those showers holding together in the south socal. some thunder shower activities you can see on the coachella valley. also, that's the monsoon. and that's going to be kept at bay. it looks like as we go ahead. but our temperatures are going to be climbing. here's a look at futurecast for to see kind of the lower level moisture.
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whatever the marine layer is left, it kind of evaporates away. there you have what's left of the monsoon. just some scattered clouds up in the mountains tomorrow. a little bit more of an effort from the marine layer here. then again in the afternoon, clearing out and not much activity going on in our mountains. but whats happening behind the scenes is temperatures are building today. sunny and nice warming, 70's bay 90's going on inland. hey, it's august. we get this thing tomorrow. warming mid-nineties work in inland near 80 for the bay and 70 start to happen at the coast. enter an early next week. early part getting hot near 100 or 80's by the bay backing off a little bit towards the latter portion of this week. ahead. temperature check for you. today will do 70 to san francisco turning mostly sunny. nice. 76 oakland and 83. meanwhile for san jose cross the water, geography, we have some lower 90's going on the far east bay up to the north bay. 88 85 for napa and 91 for santa rosa. of course, those 70's hugging the east
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bay shoreline. give you just a sample of what we're talking about the next few days come out like this. 94 in your sunday, 96 for monday. and we're keeping the building going on. we'll have that 7 day forecast for you in a bit. stephanie, thanks very much. dave. >> vice president kamala harris made a stop at oakland's chabot space and science center during her visit to the bay area friday as kron four's dan kerman explains. the vp is promising to streamline the regulatory process too. encourage more innovation in the commercial space industry. >> during a visit to oakland, chabot space and science center. vice president kamala harris who also chairs the national space council. so the government must deepen and strengthen its partnership with the commercial space industry. and to do that, it must bring regulatory rules into the current century. we must write new rules that allow flexibility to incorporate the innovation that is occurring in real time. the vice president says it's become clear the u.s. is not moving fast enough to take
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advantage of technological advances. we know that we really are quite behind in terms of maximizing our collective understanding about how we will engage on the technology of today. >> and what we can quickly and easily predict will be the technology over the next decades. harris says the public private partnership in space is already benefiting people on earth. >> the with tracking hurricanes are identifying wildfires and she says there's more to come. a new generation of satellites will help us fight the climate crisis. bice tracking allowing us to see the patterns. >> a greenhouse gas emissions. and to see that in real time, the national space council will meet again next month. >> dan kerman kron, 4 news. >> democrats pass a major health climate and tax bill along party lines. now the inflation reduction act is headed to the president's desk. it's designed to lower some health care costs, fight
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climate change and reduce the deficit. the roughly 370 billion dollar package is far less than what president biden initially called for. but republicans are calling this all one big spending spree. >> inflation reduction act is going to dramatically improve the lives of everyday americans. a lot of spending up front, lots of debt up front. >> and then maybe savings 8 years from now. how is that going to put out the fire of inflation? >> the bill passed with 0 republican support. student loan payments are scheduled to start back up again at the end of the month. no word yet, though, from the white house on plans to forgive those debts or offer an extension on those payments. the white house previously said it could forgive up to $10,000 in student debt per borrower. the naacp says if the administration truly wants to help close the income gap between black and white
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americans, the administration must act quickly. they say failing to act could hurt democrats in the midterm elections. >> average black has about $50,000 in student debt. really think about this as an opportunity, right? opportunity to bring more people into our economic system. voters are really getting inches. >> the white house press secretary says president biden will have something to announce before august 31st. so we'll stay tuned for that. a federal judge unsealed former president trump's mar-a-lago search warrant. the fbi seizing nearly a dozen sets of top secret documents from trump's home. but the former president denies any wrongdoing and says the documents have been declassified. our correspondent brian entin has the latest on this investigation. >> the details of the mar-a-lago search warrant has been secret until now. the judge unsealing the documents. and while there isn't much detail, there is a generic list of what the fbi took out.
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a former president trump's residents on monday. the list includes 20 boxes of files, classified ts sci documents which stands for top secret, sensitive compartmented information. the highest level of secret document, 4 sets of top secret documents. 3 sets of secret documents. 3 sets of confidential documents. photos, handwritten notes, information about the president of france and a grant of clemency for roger stone, palm beach county, federal magistrate judge bruce reinhart signed off on releasing the documents, which includes a list of 3 possible charges removal or destruction of records, obstruction of an investigation and violating the espionage act. former president trump has not been charged with a crime and denies any wrongdoing. a true social he posted in part number one, it was all declassified. number 2, they didn't need to seize anything. they could have had any time they wanted without playing politics and breaking into mar-a-lago. it was in secured
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storage with an additional lock on as per their request. sources tell news nation the classified documents were located in 2 areas. president trump's office and a storage room off an interior hallway near the pool. >> still ahead on the kron, 4 morning news residents in bay point celebrate a new fire station in their area. we take in in sweet. take you inside that new facility after this. i'm bringing back my spicy chicken strips. while i'm at it, my most popular former employee, mark hamill. well, what's my motivation? to not get fired again... i can work with that. actors! spicy chicken strips and me, mark hamill, back for a limited time. without the right start to your day... your morning could hit a wall. that's not the door.
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>> a new fire station opened in bay point this week. and city officials say they hope the new facility improves emergency responses in that area. the contra costa fire department closed former station 86 on willow pass road wednesday after more than 70 years of service, that station became run down over the years, making it unsafe for firefighters to use. but on friday, the fire department said hello to this. a new beginning and a new 13 million dollar facility and people living nearby shared that they're feeling pretty grateful. >> i care for 85 year-old father. i can't tell you what this means to me. my father sleep so much better knowing that these men are here. >> and caught fire factor
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cancer prevention into the station's design. there's decontamination showers and specialized x tractors to pull contaminants out of firefighters, clothing. the facility also has modern exhaust extraction systems to help take any harmful diesel particulates out of the station building. still ahead on the kron, 4 morning news here from the san francisco native kicked off a plane after her eczema is mistaken for monkeypox. >> and as we head into the break, if you're looking for something fun to do this weekend, we have an option for you. it sounds really delicious and fun. this is the chocolate and chalk art festival in berkeley. it starts at 10 this morning on shattuck avenue and you can make your own chalk art. eat chocolate and spend time with with your family members at the street festival and it is free to attend.
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>> good morning. welcome back to the kron. 4 morning news. let's kick off this half hour with a look at our forecast. dave spahr is in the weather center with the very latest. what we can expect as we step outdoors day. okay. good morning, stephanie. good morning, everybody. not bad for the start. a little bit of a fog leftover just a touch sfo for you. >> a little fog off to the distance and the hills. but we have no delays bein reported there at this hour and really no major traffic in our home front. it's down in socal that we see some showers kind of hold it together that were there overnight. there you're
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on shore, winds in place on a nice breeze. and that's important. we're going to have that today. we won't have as much of that going forward. yes, it's the building of the familiar heat. spike has been a while since we had one of those things and it's summer lower. 60's covering a good chunk of the east bay for right now. 56 livermore. 54 fremont feeling good in lower 50's. you can see up there the north bay with 56, san francisco. your breakdown today gets us to about 88 by 2 o'clock. now by tomorrow, we'll probably see some lower 90's working here in quickly bouncing through the 90's to perhaps near 100 early in the week that we flip over 2nd half. we'll put all that together for you coming up in a bit. stephanie. thanks very much. dave. >> a california woman says she feels humiliated afternoon getting kicked off a flight because the airline apparently thought she might have monkeypox. that's what she's claiming. it turns out that she had eczema. now she spoke with kron four's gayle ong and all this. >> and i just broke down
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immediately just from like chain jacqueline when it says she was temporarily pulled off a plane after spirit airline personnel suspected she had monkeypox you so and that was just trying to make myself a small as possible, is trying to hide my face with my hair. just. >> in my mind, everybody was staring at me. the san francisco native and her wife boarded a plane in los angeles almost immediately. she says a flight attendant asked to speak with her is like i need to ask you about. >> your national. in winds case it wasn't bunkie box. it was and this is what monkeypox looks like. >> this photo shows what winds eczema, rash look like that day. when says she had an outbreak the day of her flight. that's like the face. catch it. the saw. >> i've got some like so this year and says spirit airline employees asked her to provide proof of her oakwood medical documents from her doctor. i didn't. >> just it's a cream. >> after showing your a skin cream, she was allowed to
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report the plane because the whole ordeal humiliating. you could have that after break out, you could get a heat rash and >> and up in the position that i was in. it's not hard to show people compassion so hard to give people the benefit of the doubt. and i think that we could all use that right here. >> reached out to spirit airlines for comment but have not yet heard back. gayle ong kron. 4 news. >> happening today, the san francisco department of public health says there are 2 new walk-in clinics for monkeypox vaccinations. what is happening as occur? brook hospital from 08:00am to 03:30pm. and kaiser will also provide vaccinations for patient and non patient walk-ins at its clinic on geary boulevard at 09:00am this morning. and the legionnaires disease outbreak in napa county is traced to 2 more sites. the county says it's discovered high levels of the bacteria in a pond at the
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embassy suites. napa valley hotel investigators say the cooling tower in napa county hall of justice is also a hot spot. medical experts say legionnaires disease is contracted by inhaling small droplets of water that contained the bacteria. it cannot be transmitted person to person. 13 people have tested positive with legionnaires traced back to napa county. and since july, most of those people have recovered. but one person passed away. they died. 2 people remain in the hospital. a familiar face is returning to run for commissioner of the san francisco school board. one of the 3 recalled board of education members made the announcement recently. and in a story you'll only see right here on kron 4 news. she explained why she's decided to run again. kron four's haaziq mod-yoon explains. >> are you sure that you want to >> go through this all over again? >> i know that it's going to be a fight and will never we don't know the outcome and i'm ready for that fight.
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>> gabriel lopez announces that she is running again for a seat on the board of education to the san francisco unified school district a 13 year educator and former sf usd school board. president lopez was one of 3 school board members recalled earlier this year in a bitter special election. so how did she reached the decision to go back for more? >> so in consultation, with families, with community leaders, with their students, my heart has always been dedicated to schools. it has always been dedicated to education. to porter's of the recall accuse the former commissioner of making decisions that did not have education as the primary focus for students, which they say contributed to the learning loss while students were at home instead of in class during the pandemic recall, supporters also claimed that she mismanaged the budget as board president. however,
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lopez thinks that she will have a better chance at countering those attacked during a general election. this will be our first opportunity during the general election to see where san francisco voters are. i recognize that the past 2 special elections are really out of the ordinary, which is why we saw such a low turnout. san francisco mayor london breed appointed 3 into a board members who were backed by supporters of the recall. 2 of those commissioners recently got the endorsement for the upcoming election from sf parent action organization. the 3rd appointee and shoe did not. the executive director sent kron 4 a statement that reads, quote, we are a consensus based parent organization and our families reach proud and enthusiastic consensys to support clean committee and lisa wiseman ward. we did not reach consensus to endorse any other candidates running for the school board election. while
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we do have some support for and shoe from parents in our membership base, it was not enough for an organizational endorsement, unquote. more reasons. lopez says to run for her previous seat on the board. we now have an opportunity to reinstate our positions, reinstate our campaign and give the voters the opportunity to choose for themselves. who is on the school board? has made you kron? 4 news? >> here in california, governor gavin newsom is proposing the state's last operating nuclear power plant continue running for up to 10 years. he says the move is needed as climate change puts additional stress on the current energy system. you may recall just 2 years ago, a record heat wave caused a surge in power use for air conditioning. that over text california's power grid. well, several monumental groups protested the governor's latest proposal to keep that nuclear power plant open. well, nuclear power does not produce carbon pollution like
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fossil fuels. it does leave waste that can be dangerously radioactive for centuries. the fate of a bill that would legalize safe injection sites in parts of the state, including oakland and san francisco is now in the hands of the governor. state capitol correspondent eytan wallace spoke with supporters and opponents who have very different demands of the governor. >> time is running out for the governor to make a decision on this bill. a bill supporters say will help people battling addiction. but one opponents argue will only make matters worse. >> we're looking at the reality on the ground in several california cities. the visual views needles along sidewalks and the streets serving as a reminder of rampant drug use impacting some of the state's most populated areas. but backers behind the proposal senate bill. 57 say the bill would help those who are battling addiction by creating safe injection sites where drugs can be used under get the drug use off the streets. get
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people into treatment and we need to save people's lives. democratic assemblymember matt haney of san francisco co authored the bill, a bill that already passed both chambers of the legislature and now is sitting on the governor's desk as part of the proposal. the injection site will be part of a 5 year pilot program in the city of oakland, the city and county of los angeles and the city and county of san francisco. it's about saving lives, which is most important. it's also about getting this open air drug use off of the streets, getting people help getting people connected to treatment, our neighborhoods, our cities. >> under siege. he says the concept has worked in other parts of the country, but others including democratic assembly member jim cooper, who will soon take over as the criminal county sheriffs say the sites will only hurt the people who need help just really going down the wrong road. >> well, it may sound good. it doesn't work. injection sites do have a magnet effect. why? because annex know the dealers are going to be there so they can purchase their product.
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and they operate and really feeling that it's a love that it's a free zone and that makes causes. i'm erin tragedy. at a thursday press conference, the governor was asked whether he will sign the bill that's on your desk. i just found out yesterday so i haven't a chance the governor has 10 days to either sign the bill into law. >> or veto it reporting here at the california state capitol. a tall wallace kron. 4 news. >> coming up on the kron, 4 morning news, former san francisco police commissioner john hamasaki announces his plan to run for san francisco district attorney who he's running against coming u former
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police commissioner john hamasaki announced his plans to run for the city's district attorney position. >> he made his candidacy official at city hall friday. this after chase, a recently announced that he will not try to win back his old job in november. how a key has been critical of current da brooke jenkins, drug policies as well as her close relationship with mayor london breed, who appointed jenkins to the role. and here's a look at the people who say they're running in november special election, former san francisco fire commissioner and civil rights attorney joe alioto. he announced after incumbent brooke jenkins came under fire for being paid for more being paid more than $100,000 for a
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consulting work for a group that bankrolled the recall of chase a 2 other candidates. murray's and austin hill say they'll fund there are other their run, but they have not their run, but they have not yet offici i wish that shaq was my real life big brother. what's up, little bro? turns out, some wishes do come true. and it turns out the general is a quality insurance company that's been saving people money for nearly 60 years. for a great low rate, and nearly 60 years of quality coverage- go with the general.
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that right? good morning, stephanie. good morning, everybody. hey, i'm in your block. shot on like pretty kind of cool. here's a shot from sfo. by the way, a little bit, the way some background fog, as you can see. but that's pretty much all mixed out. meanwhile, san jose state give you another impact or shot of what it looks like in london already clearing out for what is going to be a pretty pleasant weekend. although sunday bumping up those temperatures and early in the week, look out, summer clears its throat. you'll see it in the seven-day forecast. heading up the tahoe to looks like 86 by monday tuesday about 82 partly cloudy. a little note there for the monsoon trying to push a little bit. this is going to be it's for the 6.10, probably until this low gets going out there offshore. that will impact us giving us some relief towards the end the week. i'll show you that a bit right now. lower 60's along the east bay shoreline. fremont the cool spot. 54 62 antioch, 50% rosa. 56 for san francisco. just a couple tropical notes of this is something they're kind of watching in the western gulf of mexico. quite a bit of a
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nice cluster of thundershowers. more notably here. this blog, you see there has the potential to become something tropical as well. again, every this is far away from land here. but some of whatever that becomes maybe come something we want to watch out of the corner of our eyes because you'll see this in future cast for going forward with everything we lose the impact of that offshore low that we had earlier in the week. then wednesday, things start changing. we have a little curvature going on here. this is going to help out later on. there's some of that moisture i spoke of that system. they're looking southwestern mexico. that may be that tropical moisture might be in and around the neighborhood. here's the for this extent of the monsoon. then we play out the 2nd half of the week. we get some better clearing and here with this low helping out and that will be a reduction of temperatures clearing up the skies a bit as well. 4 zone forecast coming to the saturday. 72 san francisco. let's keep it in the 60's along the coast, although we'll pop a couple maybe close to 70 today. 75 for burlingame, 79 foster city, lower 80's in this pocket here
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for palo alto, redwood city. 82. meanwhile, the south bay also lower 80's morgan hill already racing hit 91 east bay shoreline, upper 70's there to the south. looks like a little more valley upper 80's. 89 going on. walnut creek, concord, you have 91 today. we'll see a lot more 90's tomorrow. 73 for berkeley. the 75 still got a little bit of the insulation from the onshore winds, 90 for fairfield will do about a 91 for santa rosa. 7 day forecast left inside your screen. it's a a little bit of that building a summer. 96 monday, tuesday, not impossible to see 100 pop here. there you see a reduction happening as we get to thursday into friday. again, a little help from the offshore low, stephanie, thanks very much, dave. >> actress and hayes is declared brain dead. she is now on life support as a potential organ donor. her mother said we have lost a bright light. the actress was badly burned when she crashed into a home in southern california last friday. she also suffered a severe brain injury. and a special moment
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goes viral at disneyland. when princess anna from frozen greets an 11 year-old girl in american sign language. so it happily of texas was visiting the park last month when her mom says the princess asked if she could communicate with zoe in sign language. reporter natasha, as you've as has the story. >> i know how to stop this winter. >> it's one thing to see her on the big screen. but when 11 year-old zoe tapley saw princess anne in person. >> it meant the world felt shocked the same as though a like, like it's just kind of froze in where we're just standing there. just like watching a medal lot of characters on their trips to disney. but this was the first time a cast member had engaged with zoe and an in-depth conversation using sign language. i just knew in that like moment that this was special. they talked about everything from zoey's favorite rides to house that we had been adopted from congo
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and i first came home. she didn't know any sign language. she was she's almost 5 soon to be 5 and not have any language. and so it was starting with. >> like a really easy words. they're now in 6th grade. yeah. and help. >> new signs so his mom capturing the emotional meeting on video and posting the clip on tiktok which went viral with more than 2 million views. a little disney magic going a long way. we want to encourage people to love others. well, to see people who better to slow in light. look at and just see how you can like love on one person today. >> bay area footbal the forty-niners take on the green bay packers in their first preseason game of the year starting quarterback trey lance look pretty good in his first game since being named the team's starter even connected on a 76 yard. touchdown pass to danny gray.
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lance finished the night completing 4 of 5 passes for 92 yards. the niners win. 28 to 21. the niners play their second preseason game one week from tonight. this time they'll be in minnesota taking on the vikings. and the raiders play their second preseason game tomorrow night taking on the vikings kron four's. got all the action coverage starting right here at 12:30pm, on kron 4. now, the bay area baseball, the giants at home taking on the pirates. san francisco jumping out to a three-run lead. the pirates would make things a little closer, but it just wasn't enough. the giants go on to win by a final of 5 to 3. the 2 teams play again tonight. and before tonight's game will be a ceremony celebrating the 10 year anniversary of the giants 2012 world series victory. meantime, the a's take on the astros in houston jumping out to an early lead. but in the 5th inning, a grand slam gave the astros to leave and they just never looked back.
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houston goes on to win by a final of 75. the 2 teams play again this afternoon. first pitch set for 4.10, and houston. as we head to break. if you're looking for something to do this weekend, there is los altos rotary's. >> 47th annual open air art show starts at 10 this morning at lincoln park in the south toast over 100 artists will be showcasing their work and all proceeds go towards projects like helping people with covid or providing local scholarships. this is john.
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>> 6 flags is raising ticket prices to reduce the number of teenagers at its parks across the country. that's according to the company's ceo told analysts the company has been offering too many discounts, apparently turning the quotes into, quote, h e daycare for teenagers. attendance is now down over 20%. 6 like customers took to social media to complain about some of those comments made by the ceo. some of them reportedly even canceling their season passes over this news. and the getty museum is it's orpheus group of sculptures to italy after it was found that these sculptures were illegally excavated and exported. the nearly life-size terra cotta pieces known as orpheus and the sirens were bought by j. paul getty in 1976, the museum is now working with italy's ministry of culture to send the sculptures back to rome
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after an ongoing investigation. they were found to be illegally trafficked. these extremely fragile objects are among the museum's, greatest and antiques, our things that they have been it within their repertoire there and they're expected to be sent back to italy starting next month. still ahead in the next hour on the kron 4 morning news. the family of alexis gabe calling on the da's office to charge the suspects. mother. >> hear directly from alexis. gabe's father in just 10 minutes. plus the petaluma police department holds a gun buyback event with live with how much money you can expect back for participating. and police made 2 arrests in the murder of delivery driver patrick stay with us. the kron 4 morning news continues.
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>> from the area's local news station. you're watching the kron. 4 morning news >> hey, good morning. thanks so much for joining us on the kron. 4 morning news. i'm stephanie lin. >> it is saturday. august 13th. we have a lot to get to for you this morning. start by getting a look at the weather with dave spahr. good morning, david. stephanie, good morning. and good morning, everybody. and not bad of a summer day for today, but we are building for another heat spike coming our way. it's been a while since we had a good juicy one that pushes us near 100 or so. >> come tuesday or wednesday for those in the valleys, not bad shot too. taking care of that morning. fog already with a clear shot that we can s e along the east bay shoreline
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temperature. check for you. we have a lot of 60's already taken. hold still. 55 cool degrees at fremont. 59 for livermore in 50's up to the north bay with 57 san francisco, for contrast sake were trailing a couple degrees this morning. we'll take it. 95, fer example, at half moon bay in some spots already of head a little bit up there around fairfield in santa rosa winds. they store gently out of the west a little bit that continues through today. insulation for the heating, which will get us by early next week. as far as cloud cover sector tells us we see down in southern california. some of that monsoon has made way there. but for us will stay away from that and up to tahoe to lots of sunshine for you. one have interference from afternoon thunder showers, 81 by high noon, 3 o'clock will do closely to 90 will do to the upper 90's. there probably popping about 90 more. so by tomorrow. we'll get more into that coming up in just a bit. stephanie, thanks very much. days breaking news from overnight. another deadly car crash in san jose. >> this one happening near
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berle core and west hedding street around 3.15 this morning. police say the car crashed into a tree. the driver died at the scene. this is san jose's, 40st deadly accident of the year and the 43rd victim. 2 people are behind bars this morning accused of killing an uber driver and oakland's little saigon neighborhood. 52 year-old patrick phone was shot and killed july 17th while sitting in his car kron four's. dan thorn has reaction from community leaders. >> the 2 suspects wanted in connection with the killing of an uber driver in oakland have been arrested and charged. police say 19 year-old major willis and an unnamed juvenile were found with help from the community. thanks both of the boat into doing that and little saigon community and business leader anne says crime has become a big problem in their neighborhood. the killing of patrick from stunned area residents. it's a
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very heart you know, when that happened that we have stepped in announcing the charges, alameda county district attorney nancy o'malley said mister fung was census lee and violently attacked while doing his job. our hearts and condolences go out to his family, friends and community oakland police chief leronne armstrong has vowed to improve safety in little saigon. the department has also recently assigned an officer to be a community liaison. says little saigon needs the support. i you know, the holidays can be continue and doing that to willis has been charged with murder and attempted carjacking. the juvenile was charged in juvenile court reporting in oakland, dan thorn kron. 4 news. >> police arrested a 17 year-old boy who they believe shot and killed someone at the 24 hour. fitness in brentwood earlier this week. investigators say the problem started with a fight thursday morning on the gyms basketball court that moved into the
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parking lot. that shooting left one person dead and 3 people injured. the 17 year-old is being held at the contra costa county juvenile detention center and faces murder charges happening today in the north bay. there's a gun buyback event happening up at petaluma. it's the latest effort to try and get guns off bay area streets. kron four's camila barco is live for us there this morning with more on what we should expect. good morning. camila. >> good morning, stephanie. police are now setting up here at the petaluma fairgrounds for 2 days by back a vent. they are going to be here all morning collecting anyone, any guns that you do not want or are ready to give up and this process, stephanie, it's simple. it's easy. and you don't even have to leave your car. here is how it all works out. you have to drive up here to the site at petaluma fairgrounds and then officers were ask you how many firearms you have where they are in your car. and if they're
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loaded in exchange for turning in a firearm, you'll get some money. it's $100. if you turn in any handguns, rifles and shotguns and you'll get $200 if you turn in an assault weapon, the guns you turn in. well, they're going to be destroyed and why officers say it is open to certain residents. they have to be living in the area codes of 9, 4, 9, 5, 2, 9, 4, 9, 5, 4, 9, 4, 9, 5, 3. and stephanie, the gun buyback event starts in about an hour. it starts at 9 o'clock this morning here at the petaluma fairgrounds. and like i said, officers will be here all morning collecting any guns that you may not want to have any more, any guns
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that you want to give up. they'll be here until 1 o'clock this afternoon. i'll send it back to you. thanks very much me. a lot. >> the family of missing oakley woman-alexis believes the mother of her suspected killer knows exactly where her body is located. the family held a protest on friday outside the contra costa district attorneys office calling for charges to be filed against gabe's ex-boyfriend's mother. elec says gabe was last seen january. 26 and investigators believe her former boyfriend marshall jones murdered her last that night. they think jones travel to his mother's home shortly after killing jones's mother, alicia clark was briefly detained in may on suspicion of aiding and abetting. but later released. >> marshall jones is but it doesn't mean the case is someone and that would his mother. lisa. >> in early june, police in
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seattle killed alexis's ex-boyfriend, marshall jones during an attempted arrest. they say jones rushed out of a home with a knife and that's when officers shot him. we have reached out to the contra costa county da's office for comment and we'll update you once we have a response. california is the first state in the u.s. to offer free meals to students in public schools. starting this year, students can get free breakfast and lunch regardless of income status in the past, they had to qualify for meals based on their parents, income taxes, zip code or level of poverty in the school's area. the universal meals program is expected to benefit roughly 6 million students. state leaders say it's important to every student have access to a meal, especially with rising inflation and food costs. >> coming up on the kron 4 morning news. tomorrow marks one year since the massive caldor fire swept through the lake tahoe region. we take a look back at what happened and the recovery effort still ongoing. plus, vice president kamala harris returns to her
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bay area roots this week making a stop in oakland. the big announcement she made addressing the future of commercial space travel. and after the break, it's crunch time for president biden. will he follow through on his promises for student debt relief? how long he has left to deliver?
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>> this sunday marks one year since the caldor fire started that burned more than 200,000 acres near lake tahoe. it cost california 1.2 billion dollars to put out this massive fire considered one of the most destructive in california last year in december, father and son david smith and travis shane were arrested for starting this blaze. investigators say bullet that they shot hit an object and hot fragments fell into dry grass, igniting the fire. >> because of the dry feel an and just very dense vegetation was able to take off pretty quickly. and then, of course, we were drawn down with if you remember at the time we had the dixie fire going at the same time. you know, having a lot of the resources kind of scattered throughout the state, it says makes it difficult as well. >> the caldor fire started on august 14th and burned for 67
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days in el dorado and amador counties. it destroyed more than 1000 structures and forced 53,000 people from their homes. firefighters continue to make progress on the deadly mckinney fire in siskyou county that's burned over just just it's burned. just over 60,000 acres and is now 90% contained. 4 people are dead. 10 others injured and 185 buildings destroyed. >> and the forecast ahead calls for morning temperatures particularly into next week. and this is going to come also with some drier air working its magic as well. we'll be keeping an eye on that for not too bad. your breakdown gets us to about 81 by high noon. 3 o'clock in about 89, althrugh a couple pockets of 90 here and there all. but look at forecast kron 4 morning news weekend continues.
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>> welcome back. taking a live look outside from sutro tower. gorgeous view of san francisco this morning seeing all those lovely clouds out there. we're hearing it's going to be quite hot as the day continues on riday. yeah. i guess one of the buildings are appearing through. i have another shot to have brakes on my fog. so i'm pretty good with my little blanket here right now. >> looks pretty good, though, from a lot bay area camera shots already cleared out
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pretty nicely temperature. check for you. 71 already, antioch 60's cover good chunk of the east bay. 59 for livermore up to the north bay. 56 santa rosa. 61. meanwhile, 4 san jose so overnight we had some showers holding together in socal. some of that monsoon. good to start drifting a little bit towards the west as we start to see heat spike come our way in some of this may break out to northern california, but for the most want impact u.s. midweek. we'll have some more help from an onshore low. and that will then cool the process back down. futurecast for looks good on our front. meanwhile, in the mountains, if you're headed up, there may be some scattered clouds. we don't see the development of showers. here's the here's marine layer coming back again tomorrow morning. does the same thing in the afternoon. daytime heating. pretty quiet thus far. now we get later in the week. it may start to drift a little bit further to the north. something look out for by the middle of the week, though our impacts going to be warming. temperatures sunny and nice and warming today. 70's for the bay 90's inland or 90 here. and there
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tomorrow. we'll see a lot more of that. and near 80 happening for the bay and get some 70's at the coast, too. and we do this early into the week, hot inland early in the week. 100 as possible in some selective spots. 80. we'll cover the bay. about 72 san francisco. 76 for oakland. 83 san jose winds will be there, but they won't be as intense as they've been the last couple of days as we start to lose some of that surface impact. temperatures will start climbing a little bit more. so it's not the only factor, but it does play into that. that nice cool onshore wind. it's free and forceful. it helps cool the some of the inland valleys, which they're not going to have that supported a lower 90's far east. 91 going on santa rosa, 88 for in a bottle and will be building on that in the 3 day forecast. 94 sunday by monday. we're talking 96 in a bit. we'll have that for zone forecast and the extent that, stephanie, thanks very much. dave. >> vice president kamala harris made a stop at oakland's chabot space and science center during her visit to the bay area friday as kron four's dan kerman
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explains. she's promising to streamline the regulatory process to encourage more innovation in the commercial space industry. >> during a visit to oakland, chabot space and science center, vice president kamala harris who also chairs the national space council. so the government must deepen and strengthen its partnership with the commercial space industry. and to do that, it must bring regulatory rules into the current century. we must write new rules that allow flexibility to incorporate the innovation that is occurring in real time. the vice president says it's become clear the u.s. is not moving fast enough to take advantage of technological advances. we know that we really are quite behind in terms of maximizing our collective understanding about how we will engage on the technology of today. >> and what we can quickly and easily predict will be the technology over the next decades. harris says the public private partnership in space is already benefiting people on earth.
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>> the with tracking hurricanes are identifying wildfires and she says there's more to come. a new generation of satellites will help us fight the climate crisis. bice tracking and in allowing us to see the patterns. >> a greenhouse gas emissions. and to see that in real time, the national space council will meet again next month. >> dan kerman kron, 4 news. >> oemocrats pass a major health climate and tax bill along party lines. now the inflation reduction act is headed to the president's desk. it's designed to lower some health care costs, but climate change and reduce the deficit. the roughly 370 billion dollar package is far less than what president biden initially called called for. but republicans are calling for what calling this one big spending spree. >> inflation reduction act is going to dramatically improve the lives of everyday americans. a lot of spending up front, lots of debt up
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front. >> and then maybe savings 8 years from now. how is that going to put out the fire of inflation? >> the bill passed with 0 republican support. student loan repayments are scheduled to start back up again at the end of the month. and there's no word yet from the white house on plans to forgive those debts or offer an extension on those payments. the white house previously said it could get forgive up to $10,000 in student debt per borrower. the naacp has said if the administration wants to help close that income gap between black and white americans, they must act quickly. they say that feeling to act could hurt democrats in the midterm elections. >> you know that the average black bar has about $50,000 in student debt. really think about this as an opportunity to write an opportunity to bring more people into our economic system. voters are really getting inches. >> the white house press secretary says president biden will have something to
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announce about this before august 31st. going to stay tuned for that. and here in california, governor newsom is proposing the state's last operating nuclear power plant continue running for up to 10 years. the governor saying this move is needed as climate change puts additional stress on the current energy system. you may recall just about 2 years ago, a record heat wave caused a surge in power use for air conditioning that overtaxed. california's power grid, several environmental groups protested the governor's proposal. nuclear power does not produce and carbon pollution like fossil fuels. it does. we've wasted a say that can be dangerously radioactive for centuries. a federal judge unsealed former president trump's mar-a-lago search warrant. the fbi sees nearly a dozen sets of top secret documents from trump's home. but the former president denies any wrongdoing. he says the documents have been declassified. our
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correspondent brian entin has the latest on the investigation. the details of the mar-a-lago search warrant has been secret until now. the judge unsealing the documents. and while there isn't much detail. >> there is a generic list of what the fbi took out. a former president trump's residents on monday. the list includes 20 boxes of files, classified ts sci documents which stands for top secret, sensitive compartmented information. the highest level of secret document, 4 sets of top secret documents. 3 sets of secret documents. 3 sets of confidential documents. photos, handwritten notes, information about the president of france and a grant of clemency for roger stone, palm beach county, federal magistrate judge bruce reinhart signed off on releasing the documents, which includes a list of 3 possible charges removal or destruction of records, obstruction of an investigation and violating the espionage act. former president trump has not been charged with a crime and denies any wrongdoing. i truth
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social. he posted in part number one, it was all declassified. number 2, they didn't need to seize anything. they could have had any time they wanted without playing politics and breaking into mar-a-lago. it was in secured storage with an additional lock on as per their request. sources tell news nation the classified documents were located in 2 areas. president trump's office and a storage room off an interior hallway near the pool. still ahead kron 4 morning news residents in bay point celebrate a new fire station. >> we take you inside that new >> we take you inside that new facility right after this. this is a craft 170 years in the making. (sniffing) for bold, smooth flavor in every batch of black silk. it's something we pride ourselves on at folgers... yeah, i said folgers.
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halloween time is back in disneyland think of us as grandma's coffee? heck yeah, we are. and 35 million more with equally, excellent taste. ♪ livin' in the past it's a new generation ♪ allow us to reintroduce ourselves, folgers. >> a new fire station opened in bay point this weekend. city officials say they hope that this new facility improves emergency responses to the area. the contra costa fire department closed a former station. 86 on willow pass road wednesday after more than 70 years of service, that station became run down over the years, making it unsafe for firefighters to use. but on friday, the fire department said hello to this. a new beginning and a new 13 million dollar facility and people living nearby said that they're feeling grateful. >> i care for 85 year-old father. i can't tell you what this means to me. my father
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sleep so much better knowing that these men are here. >> tom fire factor cancer prevention into the station's design. is it okay? the contamination showers and specialized x tractors to pull contaminants out of firefighters, clothing. the facility also has modern exhaust extraction systems to take any harmful diesel particles out of the station. still ahead on the kron 4 morning news, more bay area students are set to return to school next week. but >> covid still a big concern. after the break, we speak with a local doctor about how you can help keep your kids healthy.
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back to the kron. 4 morning news start things off with a look at our forecast. we have dave spahr in the weather center and the day i hear it's going to really hot out the guy you got that right, stephanie? good morning. and good morning, everybody. i'm yeah. well, the need to see the sky. that's the most important thing here. san jose state providing a nice live shot here. going on here for you. >> and as we take a look at the satellite, the radar picture, most of the action is off of the screen, which is kind of good, will keep things quiet and kind of mild today. all the warming up a bit down. the socal is where most the shower activity for monsoon, which will be bubbling up to our mountains. probably buy midweek. those winds are onshore. single digits in this
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afternoon. they will pick up but not quite the intensity that we're kind of used to kind of telling us the weakening affects of the onshore winds into the afternoon. we typically get them anyway. but there are going to be as that doesn't provide as much cooling hint, 60's going on over the most. the real estate of the east bay exceptions, antioch, 71. 59 livermore. 57 still for fremont. we got the 50's also up to the north bay at the ballpark as the giants to battle against the pirates later today. 6, 0, 5 game time. temps mid 60's heading south from that point. but mostly sunny, until the fog rolls in a chilly breeze, though. good clip to a 20 to 25 miles per hour. with that, you'll feel the winds, at least at the ballpark, 81, but high noon at 3 o'clock. 89, our extended forecast does have it in a warming phase. we're going to get more into that in your 4 zone in just a bit. stephanie, thanks very much. james. >> a california woman says she feels humiliatedsafter nearly getting kicked off a flight because she says the airline thought she might have monkeypox. it turns out she
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had eczema. she spoke with kron four's gayle ong. >> and i just broke down immediately just from like chain jacqueline when it says she was temporarily pulled off a plane after spirit airline personnel suspected she had monkeypox times too. so ashamed. that was just trying to make myself a small as possible, is trying to hide my face with my hair. just. >> in my mind, everybody was staring at me. the san francisco native and her wife boarded a plane in los angeles almost immediately. she says a flight attendant asked to speak with her was like i need to ask you about. >> you know, in winds case it wasn't bunkie box. it was and this is what monkeypox looks like. >> this photo shows what winds, a rash look like that day. when says she had an outbreak the day of her flight, that's like the base paths that they were mostly saw. >> i've got some like trial. so this year and says spirit airline employees asked her to provide proof of her oakwood medical documents from her doctor. i didn't.
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>> just it's a cream. >> after showing your a skin cream, she was allowed to report the plane because the whole ordeal humiliating. you could have that after break out, you could get a heat rash and >> and up in the position that i was in. it's not hard to show people compassion so hard to give people the benefit of the doubt. and i think that we could all use that right here. >> reached out to spirit airlines for comment but have not yet heard back. gayle ong kron. 4 news. >> the school year is getting started next week for several districts here in the bay area. and then time monkeypox in covid-19 are still very much a part of our reality here to discuss key safety tips that parents can keep mind that we really should all be keeping in mind is doctor leana of young car with the california academy of family physicians. thank you so much, doctor for joining us this morning. thank you so much for having me. okay. so let's talala
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a bit about covid first cdc just released some new guidelines around saying that students who are exposed to covid-19 don't have to do regular testing. what should parents keep in mind as days get their young kids ready for school? yeah, i think that the basic guidelines are really still the same just because the cdc isn't enforcing them doesn't mean a lot. >> i would say that really the goal of the cdc is to try to make sure that these things don't interrupt our lives as much anymore. given the fact that the pandemic has been going on for so long. so guidelines are still if you've been exposed mask at least for 5 days, if you continue to be asymptomatic at this point, there's no reason to be tested however, if you do end up getting symptoms to make sure that you're isolating that you're staying home for at least 5 days, at least until your 24 hours free from fever. and then, you know, making sure that you're feeling better before you go back to so this does this guy does apply only to very young children are also too those students that are going to say like uc berkeley are like the
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the schools with the larger campuses and those kids who are a bit older. yeah. i mean, i think for those kids in college campuses, if you're indoors, if there's a lot of people around to really make sure that you're still masking as much as possible. of course, if you have all of your vaccines and you're boosted, i think that the risk of getting it is a lot lower. but i think that that's really, you know, just a standard guidelines that we've been doing this whole time. i think that's really good safety precautions for everybody. and let's talk a bit about monkeypox as well. so we know that the u.s. just marked 10,000 positive cases this week. so that number does seem to be rising a bit concerning. >> but among young children, there have been a few cases. it sounds like so what should parents of young children be aware of? right? so remember that right now, we still have been very, very few cases in terms of the pediatric population in terms of kids. >> the 5 things kind of remember around monkeypox in general is that it's not as contagious as covid-19 first.
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it requires a lot of a lot of close contact and it just to make sure that if you are in close quarters to have really good hygiene, so not share drinks, not do any of that kind of stuff. make sure you're not too close to other people, but also kids can be kids. and so that's i would be more concerned about monkeypox in maybe like a locker room setting like a major sports or something like that were, you know, there's a lot of other. close contact. and so i think that that's really what parents should be concerned about. ultimately, right now there's right now. vaccine eligibility is kind of low. there's a lot of you know, there's not a lot of access for like the smallpox vaccine for kids. so really call your local health department. if there's any curiosity around yeah, for the most part, i think that right now there's not not a lot of cdc guidance parks and kids but just to kind of make sure that your
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letting your kids know to be that tip, follow good, proper hygiene. and to make sure that they're taking care of themselves. yeah, so that's kind of. and you vaccines, right? you know, is this something that parents should be rushing to get their kids vaccinated for monkeypox? we know that there is push to get men who are intimate with other men get but what about for very young children? so right now there's not a lot of vaccine available. >> so it's really targeted to populations that might be slightly higher risk. having said that, monkeypox is not just for men have with it is something that can be contracted by anybody. and so to make sure that you're talking to kids about what monkeypox is, but without panicking them, right, like over the last couple of years, we've had a lot of conversations around disease in general. and so to make sure that you're talking about it in a matter of fact, way
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that people are understanding that again, it is not as contagious as covid and that it resolved in a couple of weeks and what vaccines what vaccines are you recommending that parents get for their young children before they start school? throughout the pandemic. i think a lot of kids have missed out on their well. child checks for one reason or another. and so we have a lot of kids in california specifically her haven't been vaccinated or who are not on their vaccine schedule. so to make sure that you're taking your kids to your family, doctor or whoever provides a pediatric care to make sure that getting them back on the track in terms of vaccinations as well. and last quick question here for you, are there any other general health concerns that people should be keeping an eye on as we head into those? >> colder of fall and winter months. >> yeah, i mean, really? just stay well, stay healthy and take care of yourself. eat right? all those kinds of things. yeah, i think that in terms of of flu shot, i think once the flu shot hasn't come
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out yet for this particular as soon as it does, you know, everybody will know when you'll be able to get that as well. >> all right, doctor lead at the younger with the california academy of family physicians. we really appreciate your insight this morning. i thank you so much. all right. we'll be right all right. we'll be right back. this is john. he hasn't worked this hard to only get this far with his cholesterol. taken with a statin, leqvio can lower bad cholesterol and keep it low with two doses a year. side effects were injection site reaction, joint pain, urinary tract infection, diarrhea, chest cold, pain in legs or arms, and shortness of breath. with leqvio, lowering cholesterol becomes just one more thing life throws your way. ask your doctor about leqvio. lower. longer. leqvio.
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take on the green bay packers in their first preseason game of the year. starting quarterback trey lance look pretty good in his first game since being named the team's starter even connected on a 76 yard. touchdown pass to danny gray. lance finished the night completing 4 of 5 passes for 92 yards. the niners win. 28 to 21. the niners play their second preseason game one week from tonight. this time they'll be in minnesota taking on the vikings. the raiders play their second preseason game tomorrow as quick mentioned, taking on that boat vikings kron four's got all the action for you. coverage starts at 12:30pm, right here on kron. 4. still ahead, bay area firefighters helping those in ukraine. we're joined by retired bay area fire chief helping to lead that effort. helping to lead that effort. stay tuned for that. meet leon the third...
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>> everybody. and here's a live shot of the east bay shoreline for you. a little bit of fog still left over. just a hint of that. if you will. if you're headed up to the mountains, by the way, next couple of days, we do see a warm-up phase into early week like we have here, maybe the induction of more. the monsoon clouds working don't quite see thundershower activity that early on. but it's not impossible. we get to midweek, though, to always that see that flare up going on. meanwhile, way out to see
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here. this blob you see is something the national hurricane center is looking at here. tropical prediction center. this may develop into something the moisture from that will bubble up toward general area, which you can see in the long range forecast here, as you see way out to sea. there. that's something bear some watching now that little arc we see way out to see that low will help provide the end of our heat spike early in the weekend. the end portion of the week. we'll see a little reduction in those temperatures for today, though, 72 cover san francisco will still see mostly 60's along the coast by papa 70 here in their burlingame. 75 lower 80's heading down south san carlos, a palo alto, 81, a little bit more warm up to the south bay with a lower 80's working here. morgan hill popping at 91 los gatos at 86 east bay shoreline to the south. upper 70's 80, not too far behind. however, looks like tri valley. 89 for livermore. pleasanton 87 89 walnut creek, along with danville, 91 for concord. 76
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for oakland. les, what 75 90 fairfield nap at 85 91 for santa rosa point raised, by the way, make it up to 71 today as we see the warming phase for everybody. 96 monday, 98 tuesday, some spots may pop in about 100 tuesday wednesday and then a reduction as we see more onshore winds in the high breaks down a little bit. stephanie, much day. >> the war in ukraine has beeh going on for well over 100 days and here in the bay area are firefighters are stepping up to help this week in morgan hill, they loaded up a 40 foot sea container full of equipment. and that's now on its way overseas to help firefighters in ukraine dealing with rescues and recoveries in bombed out cities. joining me now to discuss is harrell shappell omen, retired fire chief with the menlo park fire district. thank you so much for joining us this morning. so for having me. and you know what inspired this effort? let's talk a bit about that. first. >> well, there are several us
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that we're talking actually 2 of them were san francisco. firefighters have returned. it was a tom murray and and tony summerdale that were with us at 50 and we start having a conversation about how we could help out and that led to, you know, asking for a lot of volunteers asking agencies for equipment and then ultimately people donating and spending their time to help us go through all the equipment. and then as you saw, as you just showed, you sea containers worth of equipment from multiple agencies that we went through, put together and now have shipped out. >> it would lead you to realize that firefighters overseas in ukraine were in serious need of support. >> well, you know, looking like everyone watching, you know, this war, go my background is, you immigrant, my parents were dutch. they went through wars. i grew up. that's all that we really had conversations with about the survival of our family during world war 2. my dad was in a concentration camp for 9 months. at the end, the war out hows and yeah, he talked about that. i married a half
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ukrainian. so my my wife's mother, my mother in law she's ukrainian very proud, just passed away this last year at 95. but, you know, listen to the stories, ukraine, what happened or world war, 2, her struggles with both the russians and the germans. i mean, that's a big part of it. and then fast forward to, you know, my 40 year career in the fire service. i was involved with special operations, which is to say that i ended up doing a lot of structural collapse, were coast of the world trade center. the oklahoma city bombing of been hurricane katrina. so understand a little bit about what those challenges are in that environment. i've never been to war. but, you know, i think some of the equipment obviously translate and you can see the firefighters over there doing the best they can with very limited equipment and not a whole lot of support. so that's really where we all kind of got together and started that effort. and speaking of challenges at those firefighters are facing overseas. >> you yourself have seen some of the images. you've heard some of the stories own walk us through what you've observed.
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>> well, you know, like any structural you know, they're looking for living victims but the difference i think, is outside of maybe some of the threats during the world trade center event that didn't pan out as they're getting bombed. and so, you know, you have a good chance of getting getting killed, doing the work that they're doing. not only from the risk of the work itself, but from people balmy the russians bombing them. and so they're targets themselves and then, you know, sometimes you're not going to find people alive and that's body recovery with a request that we got from the ukrainian for service, emergency services were for was for 10,000 body bags. so they can imagine. i mean, anybody hears that it's it's almost unbelievable. but i mean, they were looking at one time for 10,000 body bags are looking for layaway helmets. you know, if you look at some of the images, they're operating in a structure collapse, were we in the united states would have hundreds of people working with maybe an engine company in a truck and a crane. that's all they have. and so they have very limited gear to do all that. so that's where we stepped in and said, hey,
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look, we can send news cease-fire agencies that typically donate to south america or whatever. let's ask them, would you be willing to do that and send it to ukraine? and many did and many still are going to donate. so that's the good thing we're looking for. more equipment. >> and you're really illustrating the gravity of that situation there. and we know that there's all the stories that always catch your attention in the news. but this war and these casualties in ukraine there still happening and people are still very much being affected by the terrible things that are happening overseas >> how can people help how people can so the bay area, so monetary donations are we've got volunteers that help this year. most of them retired fire. >> some entry level people that want to, you know, get the fire department. so it's a good thing that they can do. church groups volunteer and so forces or different ways. and we basically have a mechanism through which called fire nuggets to donate for this
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cause. and maybe you guys can post later but you know, those those donations go specifically to shipping. it may be feeding some of the volunteers on the work days that we have. so all the money that we've had so far has gone into basically shipping and then we've had north state has come in and paid for the shipping of this first sea container and the real critical frank thing for us because of the corruption over theirs to make sure the tools get where they have to and what is different about what we've done is we're doing heavy for equipment. so we're not doing medical. we're not doing when it comes to food or other things. most of what we do is extrication equipment, cutting equipment, breaching equipment, air packs, the protective equipment, the firefighters where a time out over here, but they can still be used over there. so is there a website or a way that people can get in touch if they want to get more the fire nuggets, i do make sure you guys get that up and linked to know will get that on our website. kron 4 dot com. very good. >> you know, you planning any shipments in the near future.
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>> we are. i mean, the last one took us and we started in april. so, you know, it took quite a while to do it. but, you know, sea containers fairly large, which i think it's a little bit different than summit. he wanted to go air initially just so expensive. we couldn't do it. and as as the war has drug on and we know it's going to take a longer period of time, you know, we're going to try to another container within the next 3 to 4 months. so, you know, that'f we're looking again for for agencies that we want to donate whatever they have will go through it. and then, you know, make sure that it's it's good enough to be shipped. and then we'll also, you know, improve it if we have to will do that. all right. >> harrell shop a home and a retired fire chief with the menlo park fire district b very much. appreciate your time and for your service to our community. thank you. all right. we'll be right back.
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>> 6 flags is raising ticket prices to reduce the number of teenagers at its parks across the country. that's according to the company ceo who told analysts the company had been offering too many discounts, turning the parks and to quote, a cheap daycare center for teenagers. of course, those comments not making people. many people happy attendance is down 20% this year. 6 let customers even taking to social media to complain about this. some of them reportedly canceling their season passes over this news. the getty museum is returning its orpheus group of sculptures to italy after was found out that these sculptures were illegally
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excavated in export id. the nearly life-size terra cotta pieces. you can see them right now. they're known as orpheus in the sirens were bought by j. paul getty in 1976, the museum is now working with italy's ministry of culture to send those sculptures back to rome after that ongoing investigation that found that these were illegally trafficked the extremely fragile objects are among the museum's greatest antiques. and they're expected to be sent back to italy starting next month. still ahead on the next hour on the kron 4 morning news. the family of alexis, gabe are calling on the da's office to charge the suspects. mother hear directly from the victim's father in just 10 minutes. >> plus, the petaluma police department holds a gun buyback event. we're live with how much money you can expect for participating. and police made 2 arrests in the murder of a delivery driver. patrick fung. stay with us. the kron 4 morning news continues.
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>> from the area's local news station. you're watching the kron. 4 morning news at no. >> hey, good morning. thanks so much for joining us on the kron. 4 morning news. i'm stephanie land. >> it's saturday august the 13 we're covering a lot for you
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this morning. start by getting a look at the weather with dave sphar. good morning, david. good morning, stephanie. good morning, everybody. and off to a pretty much a mostly sunny start a little bit of leftover fog in around some of the immediate bay. the shot coming in up. >> of course, the east bay shoreline there, which we can plainly see, we've been able to do so very nicely since 7 this morning. temperatures are still pretty much into the 60's over most of the district. 58 for san francisco. 71 for any aug and look at that. freeman still hanging on at 59 65, by the way, for san jose. quick contrast for you. we're pretty close to yesterday, trailing just a little bit for half moon bay and for oakland. and as far as the cloud sector view of things, we're losing the impact of the cooling effect. slight cooling effect that we had from last week. so then there for a heat. spike is coming our way. the monsoon probably staying out of our area. but it will be a woman face for early in the week. temperature check for you today. 85 by one by 4.89. some areas may pop in about 90. don't do it today. you'll do it probably tomorrow. going to
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have more details in your forecast coming up in just a bit. stephanie, thanks very much. date. >> breaking news from overnight. another deadly car crash in san jose. this one happening near berle court and west hedding street around 3.15, this morning. police say the car crashed into a tree. driver died at the scene. this is san jose's, 40st deadly accident of the year and the 43rd victim. 2 people are behind bars this morning accused of killing an uber driver in oakland's little saigon neighborhood. 52 year-old patrick fung was shot and killed july 17th while sitting in his car kron four's. dan thorn has reaction from community leaders. >> the 2 suspects wanted in connection with the killing of an uber driver in oakland have been arrested and charged. police say 19 year-old major willis and an unnamed juvenile were found with help from the community. valley thanks both of the boat into doing that
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and catcher in mean little saigon community and business leader anne says crime has become a big problem in their neighborhood. the killing of patrick fung stunned area residents. it's a very heart you know, when that happened that we have stepped in announcing the charges, alameda county district attorney nancy o'malley said mister fung was census lee and violently attacked while doing his job. our hearts and condolences go out to his family, friends and community oakland police chief leronne armstrong has vowed to improve safety in little saigon. the department has also recently assigned an officer to be a community liaison. says little saigon needs the support. i you know, holidays can be continue and doing that to willis has been charged with murder and attempted carjacking. the juvenile was charged in juvenile court reporting in oakland, dan thorn kron. 4 news. >> police arrested a 17
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year-old teen they believe shot and killed someone at the 24 hour. fitness in brentwood earlier this week. investigators say the problem started with a fight thursday morning on the gyms basketball court that moved into the parking lot. that shooting left one person dead and 3 people injured. the 17 year-old is being held at the contra costa county juvenile detention center and faces murder charges. happening today, the north bay, there is a gun buyback event in petaluma this the latest effort to try and get guns off bay area streets. kron four's camila barco is live in petaluma this morning with more on what people can expect. good morning. camila. >> good morning, stephanie. yes, we're here at the petaluma fairgrounds this morning where people can come in and give up any guns that they do not want any more. i want to point out to the turnout right now, the but gun buyback event is just about to start. and this is already the line that has formed here at the parking lot at the fairgrounds. it's a little more than 15 cars right now that are just standing to turn
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in their guns and this process. stephanie, very simple and easy. as you can see, people are in their cars and they won't have to leave their cars to turn in their firearms. are they have to do is drive up here to the fairgrounds. officers will ask people how many firearms they have where they are in their car. and if they're loaded in exchange for turning in a firearm, they'll get some money. it's $100. if you turn in any handguns, rifles and shotguns, you'll get $200 if you turn in an assault weapon and the guns that you turn in, they're going to be destroyed according to the petaluma police department. officers say that turning in these guns. reduces the risk of gun violence, gun fact and suicide in the community. there's no questions asked about where the guns are coming from or who owns a firearms. organizers say that they must be working and there's a limit of 3 per person. however, the one thing that they won't accept this morning is any ammunition. the event is open
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to certain residents here in petaluma. they have to be living in area codes. 949-529-4954, and 9, 4, 9, 5, 3, against. if you're taking a look at the turnout this morning here at the petaluma fairgrounds for the gun buyback events, a little more about 20 cars are so right now in line to turn in their guns. i've spoken to a few gun owners who tell me that they have no use for these guns that they're turning in today. we're going to hear more from them later tonight. but if you are wanting to turning your guns, if you live in the petaluma area, this gun buyback event ends at 1 o'clock this afternoon here at the petaluma fairgrounds. i'll send it back to you. looks like it's going to be a busy day for organizers out there. thank you. camila. >> the family of missing oakley woman-alexis believes the mother of her suspected killer knows where the body is located. the family held a protest on friday outside the contra costa district attorneys office calling for charges to be filed against gabe's ex-boyfriend's mother.
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alexis. gabe was last seen january. 26 and that investigators believe her former boyfriend marshall jones murdered her that night. they think jones travel to his mother's home shortly after killing game. jones's mother alicia clark was briefly detained in may on suspicion of aiding and abetting. but later released. >> marshall jones is but it doesn't mean the case is someone and that would his mother. lisa >> in early june, police in seattle killed alexis's %pex-boyfriend, marshall jones during an attempted arrest. they say jones rushed out of a home with a knife and that's when officers shot him. we have reached out to the contra costa county da's office for comment and we'll update you once we have a response. california is the first date in the u.s. to offer free meals to students in public
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schools starting the school year, students can get free breakfast and lunch regardless of income status in the past, they had to qualify for meals based on their parents, income taxes, zip code or the level of poverty in the school's area. the universal meals program is expected to benefit roughly 6 million students. state leaders say it's important that every student have access to a meal, especially with rising inflation and food costs. coming up on the kron 4 morning news. tomorrow marks one year since the massive caldor fire swept through lake tahoe. >> we take a look back at what happened and the recovery effort still ongoing today. and later, the house passes a massive health care and climate change. bill. we speak live with bay area congresswoman barbara lee about how this could impact people in the bay area.
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>> this sunday marks one year since the caldor fire started, it burned more than 200,000 acres near lake tahoe. it cost california 1.2 billion dollars to put out this fire considered one of the most destructive in california last year in december, father and son david smith and travis shane were arrested for starting this blaze. investigators say a bullet they shot hit an object and hot fragments fell into dry grass, igniting this fire.
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>> because of the dry feel an and just very dense vegetation was able to take off pretty quickly. and then, of course, we were drawn down with if you remember at the time we had the dixie fire going at the same time. you know, having a lot of the resources kind of scattered throughout the state is is makes it difficult as well. >> the caldor fire started august 14th and burned for 67 days in eldorado and amador counties. it destroyed more than 1000 structures and forced 53,000 people from their homes. firefighters continue to make progress on the deadly mckinney fire in siskiyou county. it's burned just over 60,000 acres and is now 90% contained. 4 people are dead. 10 others injured and 186 buildings or rather 185 buildings destroyed. >> and not what the doctor ordered, but heat spike coming our way as we get into early next week today. not too bad here. we'll get those temperatures in the upper 80's. lots of sunshine ahead for you. a look at that
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>> welcome back. taking a live look now outside at walnut creek this morning. traffic moving quite nicely out there in the east bay, which i hear is going to be seeing some pretty hot temperatures over the next few days day. you're going to hear that ac definitely for this afternoon and early into next week. soho birthing is fine. and that front. >> good morning, everybody. good morning, stephanie. blue skies taking hold of the east
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bay shoreline shot. as you can see the fog just a little bit of a whisper on top of all of that's been kind of a clearing out phase for us 60's cover all east bay real estate. you see there. 76, meanwhile, for antioch. >> meanwhile, venturing down along the east bay shoreline. we have the lower 60, 60 for free month. 65 meanwhile for san jose peninsula. got 59 going on for half moon bay, but 64 san carlos and 58 san francisco. what we have going on overnight. actually, the monsoon showers hanging around for socal, but that's about the for this extent. we can see from it. no, it's going to bleed a little bit up to the mountains later on as we see this heat spike come our way. the conventional wisdom is that's going to be staying away from us and then we'll get some relief towards the end of next week as an offshore low starts to build heading over future cast for the tight shot here. there you can see couple little stray clouds up in the mountains overnight. here comes the development of our traditional fog and coastal clouds and all of that operating way for the afternoon. meanwhile, tomorrow, yes, still same kind of deal. not much change is up there in the mountains
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forecast as we look ahead now today, sunny and nice warming might papa 90 here or there more populous. so as we get into tomorrow and then early into next week, we're bumping up to perhaps reaching the done a couple locations that would be tuesday wednesday zone. before things flip towards the latter portion of next week. highs today, 72 san francisco turning mostly sunny. nice. 76 oakland, sunny and mild and 83. meanwhile for san jose now inland, we see those 90's working lower 90's that that for today, maybe middle 90's in some locations, way out east 91% rosa. so you can see in the north bay, starting at some warmth to a lot of 80's. 72, san francisco, 83 san jose, next couple of days, though, there's see. we're talking about we get to monday at 96 and again, looking tuesday, wednesday to pop, maybe 100 and a couple locations in a bit. we'll have your extended forecast and also for some. stephanie, thanks very much. looking forward to a day. >> in national news, democrats have passed a major health climate and tax bill along
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party lines. it's called the inflation reduction act. we've covered throughout the week for you here on kron 4. and this is now waiting for the president's signature. joining us now to talk more about the effects of this bill is congresswoman bay area congresswoman barbara lee, who represents oakland. good morning to you, congresswoman. good morning. nice to be with you. thank you so much for joining just to get things started here. we know this bill is called the inflation reduction act, but we're hearing that many of your republican colleagues are arguing that this is not actually going to help fight inflation. so what is your response to that? >> you know, they they're going to say no to everything that's going to help. not only our constituents that their constituents it's a fact that 41% inflation is is really the driver in terms of a possible feels that's the driver of inflation, 41%. and so what this bill does is one reduces
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carbon emissions by 40% by 2030 it creates good paying jobs in the clean energy sectors. it really provides millions of good-paying jobs and it reduces the cost of energy. and that is again, a huge cost for families our country. and so, you know, they say no to everything. they did not want put resources to save lives and during the height of the covid pandemic and that so we just have to keep fighting. and we have to keep doing the job for the american people. this does some in terms of quality of life, reduces the cost of for medicare recipients, of course, to i-35 now a cap. we've got to do more, though, because everyone, regardless of whether they have insurance or not, should be able to out pay no more than $35 for lifesaving drugs are seniors. a tremendous are going to benefit from the still tremendously. also into my
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understanding as well. this bill is also going to provide a significant amount of funding to the irs is how is that going to impact people? >> well, you know, operations that have gotten away with a scam and the system and many respects of these billionaire corporations, which from we're going to insist that they pay their fair share of taxes in this bill. >> have gotten away because we don't have the irs agents to really i did and to go after the tax c
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the agents and the inspectors go the big companies that have been scam and that the system and congresswoman. >> i know a lot of people here are going to have this question. what kind of a direct impact is the i r a the inflation reduction act that have on people right here in the bay area on on your constituents. >> we know climate change is real my and so we have provisions really to create good paying jobs in the clean energy sectors. secondly, when you look at my district, i have senior citizens who are struggling. this is going to reduce the cost of their prescription drugs to where they will not have to pay thousands of dollars for their drugs. we have a limit of $2000 a year. they will be able now to see the costs overall in the long run specific drurs being re, the price be reduced because now we'll have the ability
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negotiations with big pharma to reduce the of prescription drugs. and it's going to be a big deal for my district because we have so many people are struggling each and every day because they just don't have the ability fight inflation in a way talk about possible. it is excessive in my district in fighting inflation. affects the cost of living, which means that they'll have the reduction in many of their outlays for their family expenditures by reducing the cost of electricity, reducing the cost of energy, reducing the cost of everything that they need to live the quality of life that they so these >> you we're hearing a lot about reductions and cost going down, which all sounds very promising and good of curious to know, though, how soon people in the bay area can feel the can see the impact of that can see those cars start going down.
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>> well, let's hope immediately. i mean, i know overtime with regard, for example, to the to the prescription drug aspects of this, the limit, we'll be seeing probably much quicker them the negotiations that are going to take place. i believe it's maybe 10, 12 drugs a year over time. so that's going to be a longer term effort. but i believe with the now transition to a clean energy and with the the fact that 41% of is driven by fossil feels the energy sector provisions of this will kick in very, very quickly. and they'll begin to see some lower costs in terms of cost of living as it relates to energy efficiency. and i and the reduced the reduction of their costs for health care. when you look at health care act, for example, many of my constituents would have lost their subsidies for health care. but we put an extension of these subsidies until after
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i believe this 2024, but it would have been horrific if they next year. just saw that health care was this and they no longer have access to the health subsidies which we provide. so we extended that. and this guy permanently. but we did it for at least 3 years, ok? and, >> you know, i'd like for us to also touch on the other big story that can't. it's coming out this weekend in the world of politics, if you will. you know, the fbi rated mara-lago, former residents there in yesterday, a federal judge unsealed the search warrant and we also learned that the fbi seized nearly a dozen documents marked top secret from the former residents in mar-a-lago. so your reaction to this news? >> well, my reaction to this news is our attorney general have probable cause to do what he did. there. and this is a
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national security issue. that must be a investigated and that the public has a right to know what types of activities this. former president engaged in. and so they've been trying over and over and over to obtain these boxes of classified and top secret documents. come on. this is this is serious. we don't know what i'm curious and want to know. i think the public needs to know what in the world was he going to do with these top secrets was going to share them with foreign governments. who knows. but i think the investigations extremely important and i believe once again, we need to reiterate that no one is above the law. can't just take government documents that are top secret here, place of residence and hold them for whatever reason. and and so i think attorney general is on to something and it's oh, and the justice department is not going to allow anyone to get away
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possible crimes. and that is what you do. you get you know, a subpoena new make a determination if there is probable cause that you act on that. and i think given the national security. issues that we're hearing that could be involved, that was the right decision and last quick question here for does it surprise you that the former president would have these type of documents in his possession at his home? >> no, because he has during his really push the envelope. and i it some really terrible. i only the same mistakes that a possible crimes by leaking information by, you know, sharing information with foreign governments that he did not need to should not shared. and so he's very loose with top secret kind clarence's and authorities and i don't believe he abided by them. and during his presidency, he was very lax and how he and here to our
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national security requirements. so i'm not surprised. okay. we'll be following that story very closely as well. >> thank you so much, congresswoman barbara lee for your perspective this morning. we appreciate it.
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one bank for now. for later. for life. morning. welcome back to the kron. 4 morning news. let's start off this this half hour with a look at our forecast. dave spar in the weather center with the latest i hear it's going to be lot hotter today yeah, well, and actually early into next week as what we're really cautioning about, because that's when we have another heat spike coming our way. it's been little while since we had one of those things. but >> were you a little flavor of that? there's your onshore winds at work. this is live. we're looking at for this hour. we expect a little bit of an uptick as we typically do in the afternoon hours. nothing as intense as we saw from last week's of the cooling effects will be reduced as we go forward. temperature check for you. most ratings in the sixties. 76 antioch, 60, by the way for freeman. we're looking at lower to middle 60's up north there. 65 san jose. 59 for san francisco at the ballpark today as the giants to battle against the pirates game time 6, 0, 5, mid 60's and slipping from that point. mostly sunny. except some of that fog rolling on in a chilly breeze, though, 20 to 25 miles per
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hour. winds out of the west. the breakdown for you today about 85 at one, 4 o'clock at 89. some token 90's to be had a lot more of them as we get into sunday and maybe 100 by tuesday. wednesday. have more on your forecast in a bit. stephanie, thanks very much. dave. a california woman says she feels humiliated after nearly getting kicked off a flight because she says the airline thought she might have monkeypox. >> it turns out she had eczema. she spoke with gayle ong. >> and i just broke down immediately just from like chain jacqueline when it says she was temporarily pulled off a plane after spirit airline personnel suspected she had monkeypox and suso a shame that was just trying to make myself a small as possible is trying to hide my face with my hair. just. >> in my mind, everybody was staring at me. the san francisco native and her wife boarded a plane in los angeles almost immediately. she says a flight attendant asked to speak with her is like i need to ask you about.
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>> your national. in winds case it wasn't bunkie box. it was and this is what monkeypox looks like. >> this photo shows what winds, a rash look like that day. when says she had an outbreak the day of her flight. that's like the face catch of most. they saw. >> i've got some like trial. so this year and says spirit airline employees asked her to provide proof of her oakwood medical documents from her doctor. i didn't. >> it's it's it's a cream. >> after showing your a skin cream. she was allowed to report the plane because the whole ordeal humiliating. you could have that after break out, you could get a heat rash and and up in the position that i was in. it's not hard to show people compassion so hard to give people the benefit of the doubt. and i think that we could all use that right here. >> reached out to spirit airlines for comment but have not yet heard back. gayle ong kron. 4 news. >> here in california,
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governor newsom is proposing the state's last operating nuclear power plant continue running for up to 10 years. he says the move is needed as climate change puts additional stress on the current energy system just 2 years ago, you may recall a record heat wave caused a surge in power, use for air conditioning that overtaxed. california's power grid, several environmental groups are protesting the governor's proposal. well, nuclear power does not produce carbon pollution like fossil fuels. it does leave ways that can be dangerously radioactive for centuries. the fate of a bill that would legalize safe injection sites in parts of the state, including oakland and san francisco is now in the hands of the governor. state capitol correspondent eytan wallace spoke with supporters and opponents who have very different demands of the governor. >> time is running out for the governor to make a decision on this bill. a bill supporters say will help people battling addiction. but one opponents argue will only make matters worse.
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>> we're looking at the reality on the ground in several california cities. the visual views needles along sidewalks and in the streets serving as a reminder of rampant drug use impacting some of the state's most populated areas. but backers behind the proposal senate bill. 57 say the bill would help those who are battling addiction by creating safe injection sitis where drugs can be used under get the drug use off the streets. we need to get people into treatment and we need to save people's lives. democratic assemblymember matt haney of san francisco co authored the bill, a bill that already passed both chambers of the legislature and now is sitting on the governor's desk as part of the proposal. the injection site will be part of a 5 year pilot program in the city of oakland, the city and county of los angeles and the city and county of san francisco. it's about saving lives, which is most important. it's also about getting this open air drug use off of the streets, getting people help getting people connected to our neighborhoods, our cities.
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>> under siege. he says the concept has worked in other parts of the country, but others including democratic assembly member jim cooper, who will soon take over as the criminal county sheriffs say the sites will only hurt the people who need help just really going down the wrong road. >> well, it may sound good. it doesn't work. injection sites do have a magnet effect. why? because annex know the dealers are going to be there so they can purchase their product. and they operate and really feeling that it's a love that it's a free zone and that makes causes. i'm erin tragedy. at a thursday press conference, the governor was asked whether he will sign the bill that's on your desk. i just found out yesterday so i haven't a chance to get. the governor has 10 days to either sign the bill into law. >> or veto it reporting here at the california state capitol. a tall wallace kron. 4 news. >> vice president kamala harris made a stop in oakland,
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chabot space and science center during her visit to the bay area friday as kron four's dan kerman explains. the vp is promising to streamline the regulatory process to encourage more innovation in the commercial space industry. >> during a visit to oakland, chabot space and science center. vice president kamala harris who also chairs the national space council. so the government must deepen and strengthen its partnership with the commercial space industry. and to do that, it must bring regulatory rules into the current century. we must write new rules that allow flexibility to incorporate the innovation that is occurring in real time. the vice president says it's become clear the u.s. is advantage of technological advances. we know that we really are quite behind in terms of maximizing our collective understanding about how we will engage on the technology of today. >> and what we can quickly and easily predict will be the
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technology over the next decades. harris says the public private partnership in space is already benefiting people on earth. >> the with tracking hurricanes are identifying wildfires and she says there's more to come. a new generation of satellites will help us fight the climate crisis. bice tracking and in allowing us to see the patterns. >> a greenhouse gas emissions. and to see that in real time, the national space council will meet again next month. >> dan kerman kron, 4 news. >> student loan payments are scheduled to start back up again at the end of the month. and there's no word yet from the white house on plans to forgive those debts or offer an extension on those payments. the white house previously said it could forgive up to $10,000 in student debt per borrower. the naacp says if the administration really wants to help close the income gap between black and white americans, they must act quickly. naacp goes on to say that failing to act could hurt democrats in the midterm elections. >> you know that the average
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black bar has about $53,000 in student debt. really think about this as an opportunity to write an opportunity to bring more people into our economic system. voters are really getting anxious. >> the white house press secretary says president biden will have to announce we'll have something to announce before august the 31st. >> and a kind of mild day going on today compared to the weather that we're going to have early into next week at the lower 90's working their it's august in the east bay. >> and up to the north, a mostly 80's at work. look at forecast for zone and extended coming up in a bit. keep it here.
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>> a new fire station opened in bay point this week. and city officials say they hope the new facility improves or emergency response to the area. the contra costa fire department closed former station 86 on willow pass road wednesday after more than 70 years of service, that station became run down over the years, making it unsafe for firefighters to use. but on friday, the fire department fire department said hello to this. a new beginning in a 13 million dollar facility. a brand new one and people living nearby told us that they're feeling pretty grateful.
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>> i care for 85 year-old father. i can't tell you what this means to me. my father sleep so much better knowing that these men are here. >> con fire did factor in cancer prevention into the station's new design. there's decontamination showers and specialized extract ers to pull contaminants out of firefighters, clothing. the facility also has modern exhaust extraction systems to take harmful diesel particulates out of the station. >> and we'll be right back.
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>> good morning. welcome back to kron. 4 morning news, everybody live shot coming in sf. oh, boy, that fog is very nicely contain blue skies. welcome to san francisco, everybody. here's a look at you're tahoe forecast over the next couple of days. we kind of plow a little bit through the 80's over in tuesday, clouds puff to kind of hint. but the monsoon is trying to sneak in here. it will be somewhat more contained as we get towards the latter portion of the week. by the way, a fortified all of that is some moisture bubbling up from a system. they're kind of looking at. this may become tropical later on its west coast of mexico. it's moving away from land, but some of its moisture may bubble up in our general direction. watching the long range forecast there you can see it towards the very end off of
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our coast. that might be some of that moisture left over. but again, the monsoon looks fairly contained. i think maybe in northern california might get some showers and that in or state a little bit up there. midweek, then a little low off of our coast. help clear things out a bit. look at everything. just push away. the monsoon back. the 4 torner states and we get some cooling relief for some forecast. 72 san francisco to the coast will keep it in the 60's. all those summers may pop 70 today. 75 for burlingame to the south. lower 80's redwood city, 80 to 81 palo alto in the south bay, lower 80's. 91 morgan hill, though, east bay shoreline, upper 70's about 89 for livermore. 89 also walnut creek and 91 going on for concord. meanwhile, 73 for berkeley. 75 allay a little bit of an onshore wind left over 90 fairfield, 88 sonoma, 91 santa rosa. left-hand side of your screen is where the hot stuff is building right there. the midweek by tuesday at 98, we may top off at 100 and then finally pulling those
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temperatures back, finishing up the week compliments of our offshore low. thanks very much, dave. >> well, now to update on an incredible story. this is the story of cal courier, the palo alto teen who set sail in june from the east coast on a quest to complete a solo voyage across the atlantic ocean. and we're so happy to share this morning. he's completed that mission. he joins me live now to talk all about it. cal, congratulations to you. thanks. all right. so you're 16 years old. that's a pretty big achievement for a high school student. how you feeling about all this >> it's all kind of surreal. it happened really fast from start to but it definitely a long trip, but i'm just so happy to be back >> you started your. it was the first day of school at palo alto high this have you gotten any reaction from your teachers, your your friends at school? yes, some people have heard about it and have come talking about it, which has been pretty fun. most people
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don't know that. it's me. so i that's that's great. you're very like humble. just about such an incredible accomplishment, you know, so that tell us about what the voyage was like a set it up for us. so how much planning and preparation training went into this? so >> about? >> in january, i decided i wanted to do it. then i had to learn how to sail. so i started doing that a couple months later and we needed to get a boat we needed to. we found a great vote on the classifieds and we met a great guy who sold us the boat, which made with expedited the whole process. and then we had you know, provision that we had to make sure everything a good we may need to to make sure i was so the whole thing took about 7 months from start to finish. and now the boats over in portugal. >> wow. okay. so it's docked there now. and then once you got there, you flew back with your parents and the sunni. okay. gotten so you faced a number of challenges along the
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i recall reading from a description that was sent to me that, you know, it took you 28 days to finish. you lost some weight and you're only able to shower once you're there. you also ran into a few other obstacles. can you walk us through those? i lost about 15 that eating was kind of hard. i'm not naturally seasick, which is a blessing for trying to sail across the ocean. >> i would see sick enough that it was hard to showering was not really necessary because i was alone and it was kind of hardened. i didn't have much water. in fact, 30 gallons of water and my water tank got multi. so i i'm dying. so i had to drink from my reserve >> was there any sense of apprehension or fear at any point because it is such a challenge to take something on like this by yourself. >> so for me, i wasn't scared i prepared so much and spend so much time thinking about with people who have done a
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lot of selling themselves so i wasn't afraid for my life because i've done the math. and i kind of realized that there is no chance of dying. this chance of not making it my mask falls off. i can just cut the mask off and flooding around in a boat that got a year of water. and, you know, 2 years of food and i'd be fine. and i could just call a vote and come pick me up from. >> so you've learned how to like you learned how to improvise and be resourceful. through through this process as well. what was the conversation like with your parents to about when you are thinking about letting them know, hey, this is something i want to do. >> so immediately my dad was really and my mom was also supportive, but she was much more apprehensive not to do because it is a big undertaking. so there are a lot conversations about how this would be done and for example, i brought a something called a garment. it's just a satellite phones, but it could stay in contact with them all the time. you know, that's why
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so how often were you checking in with your family white you're out on the open i was. >> texting a bailey and not call daily as well. so it probably be texting with people. maybe, you know, 5 times a day and calling on today. >> and i also want people to get a sense of what it was like for used a managing just many different things out on the water i i believe was told by my producer that you had to sleep in 80 minute increments. and at one point, you kind of overslept us through. so important to sleep in in those 80 you know, gaps or 80 minute increments. you want to sleep in about a 10 minute increments when you're near the shore so that nothing goes the farther you got off shore, the less there is to hit so you can start sleeping like two-hour increments >> but on day 3, i probably slept a total of 9 hours. trip. so i was just exhausted. i passed out for 8 hours and i bow just self stewed itself up north and i probably lost about 20 hours. what was your
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reaction when you realize shoot? i've i've lost some time here. how do i get back on so embarrassment because because because i felt like i was kind of i'm trying to prove that i could do kind of to myself. and there are some people on shore who didn't think i should be out there just because they're, you know, conservative that would have done something like this themselves. so i was trying to prove to myself that i could do it on that happened. i felt bad about it. but you know, after a day off site. >> this is fine. got you course, correct. it fast. and you ended up in portugal like you like you planned 27 days later. what was your reaction when you saw your parents >> well, it was actually surprised because they came out to meet me in a little boat sure that know that what what is that's so so that was it was was really nice to see.
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>> you know, my brother and my parents did 100 and field says step back on solid wildly. that makes sense. yeah. and you know, do you have any advice for those looking to get started with sailing or who might want to engage in a in a long a solo voyage like you did? >> yeah, i'd say just main thing is about planning a make sure you have everything planned out. break everything down into small segments with spread shooting and whatnot. so that you can really tackle obstacle in one a. >> alright. palo alto's cal courier, the youngest person to sail the atlantic west to east. they congratulations to you and thank you so much for joining us. and for sharing such an incredible and inspiring story. yeah, thank you so much for having. all right. we'll be right back.
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at usaa we've been called too exclusive because we only serve those who've honorably served. all ranks. all branches. and their eligible family members. yep, that is exclusive. and we're fine with that. okay. the getty museum is returning its orpheus group of sculptures to italy. that's a sculpture you see on your screen right there. it was determined that these were illegally excavated and exported. the nearly life-size terra cotta pieces known as orpheus and the sirens were, but by j. paul getty in 1976, the museum is now working with italy's ministry of culture to send the sculptures back to room after that ongoing
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investigation that found that those were illegally obtained. so the elite, the extremely fragile objects are among the museum's and they're expected to be sent back to italy starting next month. so they're going to be going back to where they rightfully belong. it sounds like he bought that in 76. he said that was the year he died as and 76. i think it was, you know, you're the you're the bigger. he's to richmond for him j. paul getty j paul getty >> what's the guy that lives in the hotel in las the and that helped me out the fire and howard hughes, thank you. see, i love that. you know, that's a for direct your director. yeah, there's incredible. also nascar racing and great cook. here's a look at your seven-day will stick and went we got warming temperatures for the early part of the week to about tuesday getting around 100 or so. this is our really first bona fide good, solid heat spike. we've had about 7 or 8 weeks or something for a while anyway. hope the acs work in the east bay. it's going to be
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cranking even get working at night to east bay. shore lines can also venture to some lower 80's. that also means the southern end of the peninsula. >> palo alto and so forth. you're looking at numbers approaching about 90 or so. latter portion of the week. we pull it back a bit. and that's a good thing. only thing to look out for. also as the monsoon, we hope it doesn't venture in her early part of the week stuff. thanks very much day. that's it for us here on the kron. 4 weekend news. i'm stephanie wind states far and we'll see you back here tomorrow. have a great day. everybody flex alert! flex alert! a power outage is looming. that's just alert, he's always getting worked up about something. flex alerts notify us of preventable power outages. that way we always know when to help stop one. okay, flex, just drop some knowledge on me again. oh okay, i will. i'll turn our thermostat to 78. i'll unplug the blender.
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