tv Ten O Clock News FOX May 19, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
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steph fires a three. back to terry. won't go, and the warriors take game one. a thriller tonight in oakland as the golden state warriors hang on to defeat the houston rockets and win game one of the western conference finals. we're live at oracle arena with all the excitement. but we begin with an oil spill that has blackened beaches and create add sheen in the water. good evening i'm frank somerville. >> and i'm julie haener. we have new information on an
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oil spill. but tonight officials still can't say how much oil spilled. the ruptures pipeline was near refugio's day beach. tonight that oil stretches about 4 miles along the picturesque coastline. ken pritchett is following developments in our newsroom. >> teams of oil experts are now on the scene on on the way. a true impact on the economy is not yet known. in a news conference the company that operating the 24- inch pipeline says it quote deeply regrets this leak and that the cause is unknown. >> reporter: the white sand of refugio state beach and black tinted waves. the crude oil stretched along 4 miles of coastline by this evening tainting line and sea. >> the beach was just covered in thick black crude. the rocks were covered, the waves that were coming in were just black oil. >> reporter: there's limited signs so far of wildlife
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impacted by the oil. a helicopter flew low over a pair of whales trying to scare them away from the contaminated water. people near refugio state beach smelled a strong odor. the source trapped to a pipeline offshore owned by plains all american pipeline. the coast guard initially said approximately 20000-gallons of oil spilled. but the officials are now saying the amount of oil is not known and the amount of oil does not necessarily make it a small event. >> it's hard for us to categorize a spill as one is worse than another. >> reporter: any oil in the water causes damage to the environment. and the damage depends on part on what sensitive species are in the area. >> a small spill in a sensitive area can be as bad as a large
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spill in an area where there are fewer impacts. >> reporter: she says a small spill in certain areas can cause significant economic damage. this spill is on a popular beach for memorial day visitors. near by campgrounds are booked. a state beach now set for clean up. >> they were able to direct people into that area and ultimately get that pipeline shut down in a much faster way. they probably by doing that they saved miles of coastline. >> reporter: in that press conference late tonight, the coast guard says limited skimming operations took place today. the real assessment begins tomorrow at sunrise. now this spill is near a historic oil spill that took place along the santa barbara coast back in 1969 that killed thousands of birds and helped launch the modern environmental movement. >> ken, thank you. here in the bay area for the third time in five weeks a dead whale has washed ashore on
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a beach in san mateo county. marine biologists say a small female gray whale washed ashore today on kelly beach. they plan to examine it tomorrow if it doesn't get washed back out to sea. they also say they think this is the same whale seen floating a few days. a female hump back washed ashore on may 4th and a dead sperm whale was found back in april. the whales are now being buried to eliminate the smell that's bothering nearly residents. the warriors come from behind after falling behind by 16 points the warriors came back to gain the momentum and win game one of the western finals. mark ibanez is with us a what a
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nail biter. >> reporter: they are such overwhelming favorites to get pushed a little bit. you know how they come out and blow the rockets off the near. you get over confident and you worry about that. the warriors came out not exactly smoking. the rockets looked like they were going to blow them off the floor in the first quarter. then things slowed down. sometimes you wonder how much i -- how much influence do his words. during a time out very early in this game, listen to the words from their coach. >> they're taking the fight to us. they're cutting harder, they're getting us into us. we're not getting into them. >> you're not playing play off defense. shortly after that, they take off on a 25 point run to end the half. look at them share the ball and levingston hot off the bench. from 16 up to three up at the
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half. of course it's steph beating the buzzer with a long two at the end of the half the warriors started to take control. third quarter more contributions from some of the other names like harrison barnes, aggressively to the rim to slam it down he had 14 points but houston's james harden a man who thinks he's the mvp will make his statement. beautiful shot there to end the third. houston was down only five, harden had 28 points. and tied late. the warriors go on an 11-0 spurt. steph of course a little something to do with it. the deep three. yet houston stays alive. you will see trevor ariza for houston hit a clutch three from the corner they find himself open and suddenly the rockets are back within two of 14.6 seconds left. after wards curry was nearly overshadowed in the postgame press conference but not by
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james harden. the man he was discussing. >> we're both looking to help our teams win and do what we can to impact the game so there's going to be stretches where he plays well and obviously he did that for us, for his team in the third quarter to really keep him close and keep them in and he made some crazy plays that we defended well. and we'll live with those shots so hopefully we both have a big impact and that's, that's what we're supposed to do. >> she loves the spotlight. daddy has the warriors up 1-0 in the series. game two against the rockets of course in oakland. >> i didn't even hear what he was saying i was just watching her. that was priceless. >> he has another baby on the way this summer. >> yeah, and obviously she doesn't like the spotlight at all. >> our nba play off continues outside of oracle arena after
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talking to a lot of very exciting fans. >> reporter: fans told me they got what they came for. an exciting game to the end. but more importantly one in the win column for the warriors. >> it's all worth it. i bought my tickets at 2:00 a.m. because i wanted to be here. go warriors. >> great game. all the way through. they had us on our feet. >> best game ever. >> reporter: loud in their confidence, fans expect proud dominance by the warriors. >> you get a little taste of it then you want a little bit more. >> reporter: today fans celebrated the team's arrival back to the conference finals. >> i came back in the 70s when
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the tickets were $15 to set behind the bench. >> reporter: it's a season to remember. this is to the warriors season repeating itself. >> this is when they won the championship in 1975 when the warriors beat washington in the finals. >> reporter: good luck charm there? >> that's why i wear it. >> reporter: drinks for faithful fans. >> i didn't think i would see them get here for the rest of my life. >> it's been a long time coming but i'm glad i can experience it here. >> reporter: a year paveed with individual players such as curry and thompson and the team. >> this is fantastic stuff. this is all important milestones for our organization because the warriors were
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irrelevance. >> i told myself, if they made it this far, -- >> the final score of the warriors and the rockets 110- 106. fans tell me they're ready to bring on game two, three and four. >> three more wins and they're in the finals. amber lee outside of oracle. game two is set for this thursday it's also at oracle. games three and four move to the toyota center on saturday and next monday. those games will also begin at 6:00 our time. new at 10:00, preliminary results from a hotly contested senate race in the east bay shows steve blazer is leading with 25% of the precincts reporting. blazer has 63% of the vote. his opponent assemblywoman susan bonilla is at 45%. bonilla is a former teacher.
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glazer made headlines when he said he wanted to ban b.a.r.t. workers from striking. the two democrats are vying for the district seven state senate seat that was held by desomye until he was elected to congress. now to a massive auto recall that got even bigger today. in fact, it's now the largest recall in the history of the u.s. auto industry. ktvu's allie rasmus tells us 24 million vehicles from four different companies are being recalled because of defective and potentially deadly air bags. >> reporter: what we do know is the air bag recall affects 11 different auto manufacturers, bmw, chrysler, ford, general motors, honda, mitsubishi and toyota. >> up until now tokata has refused to acknowledge their air bags are defective.
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that changes today. today i declare that tokata has announced their air bags are defective. >> reporter: some of the passenger air bags can degrade over time. causing the bags to burst and spray metal shards into the passenger cabin. >> takata will also make sure that the inflaters are safe. >> reporter: the safety administration has recalled 18 million vehicles with takata air bags. but it is recommended drivers check the website on a daily basis this week because another 16 million vehicles will be added to the data base in the coming days. allie rasmus, ktvu channel 2 tuesday. on ktvu.com you will find a
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link to the safer car site. just look for the story on the front page. bears are breaking into homes at tahoe earlier than usual this year. the impact of the drought and a controversial idea to lure black bears away from homes. >> another cool day around here again today. we talked about tomorrow being a cool one as we move forward, temperatures will begin to warm. i'll let you know which days are going to be the warmest. >> with california facing severe droughts, some people are wondering why one east bay city are building a new water park. the controversy tonight over this construction.
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new at 10:00, construction of a new water park is moving forward despite the state's dire state conditions. tonight some people are asking why. critics say the timing is bad but the city of dublin says they have no reason to put off construction of that water park. jana katsuyama has more from dublin and has more on the debate. >> reporter: many say that to the best -- many say that dublin needs a private pool. but many said that spending millions of the dollars on an aquatic center is bad use of city money. excavators and construction builders are already carving out the future of the aquatic center. an 11 lane outdoor pool and water park features with six slides and play structures.
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>> we're all waiting. because we don't have any water pools, i mean water parks near to this area. >> i know the drought is bad and stuff but i think it's something for the kids. i think it's really good. >> reporter: down the street where lawns are brown some residents can't believe the city broke ground on april on such a project. >> all of these things seem disconnected with the concern for the drought. >> reporter: some say it sends the wrong message while residents are being asked to conserve. he says it's bad use for the money. >> i think it's bad timing. i think the city could serve the people better by building community friendly parks that people want. >> reporter: city officials say the project was put on hold in 2008 with the economic downturn now they say it's time to move forward. >> we believe the construction cost will increase over time. and there's a great need for a pool in our community so we wanted to make sure that the
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asset was built. >> reporter: the aquatic center would require 480,000-gallon of recirculating water. the san ramon district says while they also approved the project in 2008 they cannot guarantee they'll be able to fill the pools when the city completes the plan. >> they're held to the same standard. the city is a customer just like any business, just like any resident and the rules apply to everybody. >> reporter: the aquatic center is scheduled to open in early 2017 and of course no one can predict whether the drought emergency or water restrictions will continue until then. tonight the city council made no move to change their plans to the aquatic center. >> jana katsuyama live tonight. smoke from a fire in tracy is creating air quality concerns. piles of mulch have been burning. but the winds are carrying
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smoke miles away. air quality officials issueded an alert for people in san joaquin, stanislaus. those with breathing problems are being asked to take extra precautions. the original deadline was july 17th but pot clubs now have until december 18th to meet the city's requirements. they include installing surveillance cameras, background checks on staff and being located a certain distance from schools, s, parks and religious centers. a guilty plea from a prostitute following the heroin overdose death on his yacht. she was sentenced to six years but may get out two years from now because of time served. >> reporter: the 26-year-old
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woman dubbed black widow appeared in a courtroom relaxed before making her plea. >> section 192b at the felony involuntary manslaughter. >> reporter: alex tikelman pleading guilty to drug and prostitution charges in the november 2013 heroin overdose death of google executive forest hayes. on his karat -- yacht in his santa cruz harbor. the charge was changed in voluntary to involuntary manslaughter after reviewing surveillance video from hayes yacht. prosecutors disputed early reports of that video. >> someone described her as calmly and cooley sitting down, sipping on a glass of wine watching him die. that was never on that video. >> reporter: tickleman appeared concern after injecting the 50- year-old with heroin and he overdosed. she panicked and could see
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crying and yelling in the video. >> i think it takes two to tango. i think there's a certain amount of responsibility on his part. he had the power, he had the control. >> reporter: but tickleman did not call 911 that's why she's facing jail time. they called the sentencing fair given the case. >> she is heroin free for the first time in a long long time. and she actually has the potential for a very exciting and rewarding life ahead of her. >> reporter: while the d.a.'s office is pleased with the guilty plea, they disagree with the sentencing saying they wanted her to serve time in state prison not county jail. again with time served she could be out in two years before her 30th birthday. in santa cruz, i'm azenith smith, ktvu news. lots of clouds out there. again today temperatures on the cool side even a little bit of drizzle. there we are live outside in the oakland estuary now. fog and low clouds making their way back inland until tomorrow morning we wake up mostly
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cloudy like we did today. and you can see the rotation here. you see everything going this way. that low is gradually moving over. you see it shifted. but it still lingers with that this pattern of cool, breezy, and cloudy conditions are going to last. really for the next 48 hours and then it changes around. you can kind of see the dull area here. this is representing the cloud. you can see coastal fog. it's a little higher cloud. low clouds to the livermore valley. everybody has it tomorrow morning. it's coming inland as it has the last couple of nights. 39-mile an hour gusts. so it's blowing tomorrow morning you wake up it's cloudy. tomorrow you get going, lunchtime it's starting to clear in most bay area cities. by 1:00 or 2:00 most cities will be clear. current temperatures are just in the 50s. overnight lows in the upper 40s. here's the fog footprint for tomorrow morning. it's everywhere. basically from sacramento to the coast. slowly burns off at lunchtime there it is. now the difference here is you see the oranges, the 80s start
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to show up as we head into your afternoon hours. we didn't see those today. still though the heat stays east of the bay area. that changes though as we get into the long range forecast. these yellows and oranges are going to start migrates back west. when we get back after the break, we'll talk about the warm up that eventually has to happen. california's black bears breaking into home earlier than usual. the behavior that may be linked today the drought and one controversial idea to stop them that's illegal. but up first a new police policy to deal with quality of life crimes. the crack down that's being called haight street heat. >> it's dealing with the issues that matter most to the community.
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plus. it's the only soft beef-flavored chew that kills both fleas and ticks. vets recommend it. and dogs, well they're begging for it. nexgard is for dogs only. and hasn't been evaluated for use in pregnant, breeding or lactating dogs. reported side effects include vomiting, dry flaky skin diarrhea, lethargy and lack of appetite. use with caution in dogs with a history of seizures. recommended by vets. loved by dogs. from the makers of frontline plus. a police crack down is under way in one of san
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francisco's neighborhoods. >> reporter: the department aimed a new captain to park station that patrols the haight and he made some changes hoping to bring a little love back into this area. >> reporter: here in the haight the sad realities overshadow the neighborhood known throughout the world. a stroll down the street still evokes a certain 1960 nostalgia but the haight is a whole new theme with quality of life concern. meet the new captain hoping to address those concerns. captain john stanford was recently assigned to the department's park station. he's trying to balance the free spirit of the area with increasing complaints from residents and merchants. >> they shouldn't constantly be interfered with by people blocking the sidewalk. they shouldn't be interfered with people stepping in front
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of them offering them drugs. >> reporter: he's ordered his officers to crack down on those type of violations. like turning a sidewalk into a boxing scene. >> we told them don't fight please. >> reporter: that's what happened outside of haigth street tobacco. the owner welcomes the extra patrol. >> yes, absolutely. we love that. >> what we target is elicit activity. whether it's a tourist, a resident, a merchant or a homeless person if they are committing crime that's what i'm concerned about as the district captain. >> reporter: now the captain also assigned two more officers to walk the beat here with more officers patrolling the area on bike. now julie i mentioned that outreach i want to show you now a brochure created by the park station for those who own dogs. again the captain says this
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isn't about busting people. julie it's about making this area safer. >> all right, heather holmes reporting live tonight in san francisco. heather, thank you. now after nearly a decade of budget cuts the san francisco fire department is getting hundreds in budget funding. mayor ed lee says the department's budget is being increased by $35 million and that money will allow for the training of 82 new firefighters, 33 additional emts and paramedics plus new fire ebb gins and ambulances. the money will also be used to fix aging fire stations and upgraded technology. an act of love amidst a growing need. bay area families honored for hosting foster children. one couple who has cared for more than 30 kids. >> it's not only illegal to feed bares it's some what unethical. >> up next the controversial new idea being floated to keep bears from looking for food
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the drought is having an impact on california wildlife now there's concern that california black bears are breaking into homes because of the lack of water. so now people want to keep bears away from homes by feeding them where they live. they say that would help the bears survive. >> reporter: the signs may already be there and drastic action may be needed. >> reporter: late into the night, illuminated by a flashlight. a large california black bear wanders into the backyard of a lake tahoe home. it is not uncommon and the next day. >> it splintered the door. which is solid wood.
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>> reporter: another bear busted into this tahoe cabin. >> he obviously just started pounding and sometimes they will turn backyard and they'll with their powerful back legs. >> reporter: anne briar received a call from a neighbor. a shattered door, splintered dallas. >> -- splintered glass. >> and it was evident. >> there's a lot of food but they always go for the ice cream first. >> reporter: a bear had been here. a pint of hagendaz gone. and before leaving, a bag of chips by a tree. volunteers respond to call of bear break-ins and on this day two homes in one night. >> this was a smaller smaller
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bear than the other house. >> reporter: this shouldn't be happening just yet. >> they're coming into our neighborhood a little too early and a little too much. >> reporter: bryant is worried about more of the same and blames california's historic drought now in its fourth year. >> this is the truckee river and it should be raging right now with rafters headed downstream. the waters stretching bank to bank is an indicator of this severe drought in which mountain streams will be drying up very soon. with a lack of water so goes the natural food supply and some fear hungry bears will enter populated areas more often and become problem bears. >> it's a concern for sure. and we're monitoring it. but we're not seeing any significant because of bears changing their behavior on a popular level. >> reporter: jason holly is a biologist with the california department of fish and wildlife. he says recent rains in the
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tahoe basin should mean there's plenty of spring forest for bears but that might not last with this winter's almost nonexistent snow pack. >> we're very concerned about late summer without a snow pack. >> reporter: what he fears is when a massive angora fire led to break-ins, almost 10 a night. >> we can't just sit back and hope for the best and wait for the worse. >> reporter: but one action she suggests is controversial. yet it has been done before. these are rarely seen photographs of what's called supplemental or diversionary feeding. we can't show you the faces of these volunteers, because feeding bears is against the
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law. >> it's not only illegal to feed bears it's some what unethical. >> reporter: holly says bears are well adapted to the drought and says the solution is for homeowners to secure their far badge so bears are not lured in. he says those who feed bears intentionally run the risk of making them more apt to come around people or cause property damage. >> and if that happens there's a higher probability that the bear may have to be taken. >> reporter: but bryan insists that the feeding experiment while illegal worked. >> the results were amazing. the bear in those neighborhoods where this was done there were no more break-ins. as soon as the bears caught on that there's food up there let's go up there. >> reporter: her hope is that california will allow a pilot feeding program under the guidance of fish and wildlife. which she concedes is unlikely to happen. >> it's something we have to look at every option to avoid
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having an absolute out and out war. >> reporter: a war that bryant says she's seen before. during a drought here when more homes were damaged and more bears were shot. the question, is that coming in the summer ahead and what if anything is the right solution. at lake tahoe, ken pritchett, fox 2 news. the bear league says it plans to bring out diversionary feeding with the fish and wildlife commission. the population of wild bears has grown significantly. there's currently 3,500 bears in california compared to 33,000 five years ago. a horse fell down an enbankment near martinez this afternoon and had to be euthanized. a woman was riding the horse when somehow it lost its footing and ended up falling 50 feet. the rider wasn't injured. rescue crews were able to get
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the horse untangled. california egg prices could rise as demand for eggs grows in midwestern states impacted by the horse flu. iowa is the nation's top egg producer and has lost 40% of its hens. midwest egg prices have been rising about 8% a day for the past week. that could put pressure on california prices as out of state demand grows. products made with eggs including baked goods and ice cream could also be impacted. another city voting to boost its minimum wage. the increase in its work for the largest city yet. >> i layed out the below average temperatures we're seeing across the area. but are the warmer days coming up? how much longer this cool weather is going to stick around. >> i think we're crazy. sometimes. but that's what makes life interesting. >> a bay area couple's labor of love. they are being honored for fostering more than 30 children. the growing need for homes.
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the state department today to set up a release of hillary clinton e-mails. the democrat was campaigning in iowa and said the release could not come soon enough. the state department had targeted next january to release the e-mails but the judge wants a rolling release with a batch of e-mails released every two months. a former employee of a san jose high tech company is among a half dozen chinese nationals charged today with economic espionage. wei peng worked for avago technologies.
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the justice department says peng and the other five stole secret information from avago. all but one of those charged are currently in china. a man is accused of following a 13-year-old girl home and tried to attack her. coli the -- coliki was arrested on may 9th. the girl fought off that attacker and was unharmed. coliki is also accused of sexually assault a 28-year-old woman in a public restroom. a jury in oakland is scheduled to begin deliberating the murder case against 58-year- old randy alana. he's accused of killing his on again off again girlfriend sandra koch who was a federal investigator. koch's body was found in a remote area of vacaville two years ago. los angeles is set to join
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san francisco and seattle in adopting a minimum wage of $15. the minimum wage in l.a. is currently $9 an hour. if the ordinance is given final approval, workers would see their first pay bump by next summer and annual increases after that. in san francisco, the minimum wage recently jumped to $12.25 an hour and will increase to $15 an hour by the year 2018. we have updated results now from tonight's state senate race in district seven that goes from livermore to the delta. and orinda mayor steve glazer has 54% of the vote. the two democrats are vying for the state senate seat that was held by mark devie. finding out what someone tweeted is now as easy as
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checking google. google started offering twitter content. if you're interested in the latest tweet for any particular person or topic they'll show up in the search result. google plans to expand the feature to other languages. on wall street stocks closed low. dow was up 13 points. and the s & p closed a bit lower. mark ibanze -- ibanez has the warriors highlights. >> and chief meteorologist bill martin shows us the trend in his complete bay area forecast. >> a south bay couple has been recognized for something they say comes naturally to them. meet a husband and wife taking care of newborn babies from the south bay and the honor they received today.
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my name is peter tran. i'm a gas service representative. i've been with pg&e nine years. as an employee of pg&e you always put your best foot forward to provide reliable and safe service and be able to help the community. we always have the safety of our customers and the community in mind. my family is in oakland, my wife's family is in oakland so this is home to us. being able to work in the community that i grew up in, customers feel like friends, neighbors and it makes it a little bit more special. together, we're building a better california.
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a family is being honored for providing foster care to thousands of babies from newborns to toddlers. ktvu's maureen naylor is in san jose with the growing need to foster children and one couple's remarkable story, maureen. >> reporter: today then county honored three south bay care givers. today we sat down with some of them including a couple who had an inexpected twice twist in their 50s. >> are you still hungry? >> yes. >> reporter: meal time at the ward household in san jose can be unpredictable because you never know who is coming to dinner. with their two bilogical children grown, one might wonder why they have a house full of toys and a high chair.
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that's because the ward family has taken in eight foster children. all babies or toddlers. >> i think we're crazy sometimes. but that's what makes life interesting. >> it's very special to give them that love that they're not able to get from a bilogical parent at that point. and hopefully they'll go back to that parent. >> it says foster parent of the year. >> reporter: today santa clara county honored the wards as foster parent of the year along with two other families. >> they are the most deserving and unsung heros of our community. >> reporter: tracy bowers is with the santa clara county department of family and human services. >> over the past couple of years it's been a steady increase for the need of homes for children. >> reporter: she says the county went from roughly 1,000 foster children in 2013 to 1,300 today. she says adoptions are also up. >> and then this was her adoption party that we had for
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her. >> reporter: the wards say the best part of being foster parents was getting to adopt their very first foster child angel who is now 8 years old. and in the third grade. >> it feels good to be part of this family. and to know that somebody loves me. the wards admit there are some challenges to being foster parents including some parental issues dealing with the bilogical parents and health issues of children who have been exposed to drug addiction from birth. and these are the highs
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from today. highs tomorrow are going to be about the same. so we're staying in this pattern through the weekend. when things change around there's fog and low clouds out there. now you can't see it. there's the bay bridge. a live shot. here's the rotation we've been talking about. that's the problem. until this leaves we will continue with this kind of cloudy, cool breezy pattern. it's good on the fire danger right. it's definitely helping out higher humidities and temperature levels. definitely not the weather you might expect for many kids getting out of school. almost summer at this point. and we're getting away with temperatures in the 60s. the winds are there. it's still blowing. gusts of almost 30 in fairfield. a lot of wind at sfo gusting almost 20 miles per hour. this reminds me of last night. exactly what we were looking at. tomorrow just like last night. tomorrow just like this morning, lots of drizzle along
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the coast. this low pressure takes up shop, thursday and into friday. and what you have here this the next three days. that changes a little bit as you head into the bay area saturday. san francisco tomorrow they end up at 60 degrees for daytime highs it's cloudy all day. oakland cloudy almost all day. sun comes out a little bit to late afternoon. 63degrees for daytime highs. as you get to san jose, you see more sunshine. more like noontime you will see the sun poke through. 66 in santa rosa, 63 in hayward. and air quality 66 in mountain view and 69 in gilroy. these are cool numbers. five day forecast and patchy drizzle. a chance of showers and a heavy drizzle event. as things kick up they're going to have a little extra push. that could bring an extra shower or two that could be a great thing for all of us around here. it's really this pattern and i'm telling you it's warmer,
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december, january, february, march than it is here in late may. >> it's just been sprawled out like this. usually it comes and goes. >> thanks bill. president obama announced a plan to revive the declining bee population it includes dedicating lands that is friendly to bees. money will also go toward landscaping federal buildings and facilities with bee friendly plants. the president says he plants to allocate $800 million for bee restoration. mark is back. three down one more to go. >> we don't know if the warriors are the best team in basketball but they're the most entertaining. they kind of dare you to lose faith in them. not pinned down warriors had the fans worried for a while. they've lost only three times in the last year on the home floor and they weren't about to
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let it happen again. you still get the feel that their best basketball is still ahead of them. they needed a 25-6 push to get the lead back. defense and great team work you see did it. shawn livingston off the bench for a big 16 points. fans come alive just before the half. curry on the clutch, find him and just like that. long two at the buzzer intermission they lead by three. james harden will come on strong doing his thing to get it to go down. houston trailed by only five. the warriors go on an 11-0 run late to put the game away. steph right in the middle of it from way out. he had 34 points, six more threes and it looked like the game would seal after this.
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and a rick berriesque task. and warrior free throws nail it down in the final seconds and they talk afterward about the contribution the other guys made tonight. >> focus on you know the next game. that's really, you know what this is about. i mean they are a good team. they're going to come back. you know and throw their punch at us the next game as well. we need to be ready. >> when you try to keep it big against our small line up it's rough. because we're going to figueroa myself and they struggled with the big line up with dwight. and that's what changed the game for us. and nba draft lottery a big deal for the warriors not anymore. the ping-pong balls land right for the minnesota t wolves. they have the number one draft choice, lakers number two. we have some baseball to talk
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giants-dodgers relegate to backseat status. giants as a matter of fact have won four in a row but the dodgers at at&t 3-1/2 back. buster ball game with an rbi single. 1-0 tim hudson excellent. 6-1/3 scoreless and watch pence on a long drive by adrian gonzalez. nice catch right there. santiago casilla. sooner or later they're going to put some victories together. not yet. remember when they used to pick on the astros, no longer chris carter former a's farm hand. funky swing right there. about 150 feet off sunny gray, two run shot. and 3-2 astros. and right two run shot, fernando abad gave it up. a's lose again. six score in houston. that's a sporting life for a tuesday night.
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se pancakes smell great. what are you doing with those? luke and i are doing a recycling drive. if we collect enough bottles they build a school in africa. luke: wouldn't that be so cool to go to a school made out of bottles? that would certainly be a special school. did you hear what i said parents -- "special school"? okay. nobody make a big deal about it but i just broke up with dylan. no! oh, my gosh. are you okay, honey? yeah, i'm fine. i just -- i need to date someone who has a clue instead of an idiot who bangs his head every time he rides his bike out of his garage. every time. i'm sorry, honey. i'm sorry for both of you. i'll have to text him later. mm. i got to jump in the shower. i'm gonna be late. where are you going? i'm going to meet my friend valerie. i haven't seen her in 15 years. we used to work together.
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