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lilian kim, abc7 news. >> thank you, lilian. bart will be providing free weekday bus service to san francisco from four bart stations you can see on this map. tickets are on a first come, first serve basis and they will drop off passengers near the trans bay terminal where the riders can catch a bus back across the bay. and there will be free parking at any bart station or park and ride lot for carpools to meet. san francisco mta officials say they will expand casual carpooling for san francisco east bay travelers. and additional transit fair inspectors will be available to help muni customers. cal train will not add extra trains if bart workers go on strike. they will run temporary rush hour shuttle buses from the colma and daily stations and that's where riders can connect to buses heading into san francisco. san francisco mayor ed lee was walking in the pride parade when we asked him about the potential strike. >> i think they really need to be at the table, both management and labor. it is going to be so hurtful for all of u
lilian kim, abc7 news. >> thank you, lilian. bart will be providing free weekday bus service to san francisco from four bart stations you can see on this map. tickets are on a first come, first serve basis and they will drop off passengers near the trans bay terminal where the riders can catch a bus back across the bay. and there will be free parking at any bart station or park and ride lot for carpools to meet. san francisco mta officials say they will expand casual carpooling for san...
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lilian? >> if there is a strike commuters will no doubt face major delays except the ones who don lucky ones who don't have to go to the office. there are 400,000 people who use bart on a typical work day. most have plans if the trains won't be operating tomorrow. leah snyder is doing exactly what transportation officials want people to do. >> i am going to stay and work at home. i have the luxury to do that. as long as i have an internet connection and my cell phone i am pretty safe. >> but tens of thousands of people won't have that luxury. that's why other transit services are doing what they can to help. san francisco-based areas are doubling the number of available seats from 20,000 to 50,000. hours will be expanded from 5:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. >> patience is key tomorrow i think. there will be a lot of people that are confused. >> to make matters worse, ac transit may go on strike this week in which case he will have to walk to work from his west oakland home to rock ridge. >> i have don
lilian? >> if there is a strike commuters will no doubt face major delays except the ones who don lucky ones who don't have to go to the office. there are 400,000 people who use bart on a typical work day. most have plans if the trains won't be operating tomorrow. leah snyder is doing exactly what transportation officials want people to do. >> i am going to stay and work at home. i have the luxury to do that. as long as i have an internet connection and my cell phone i am pretty...
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lilian kim is in the newsroom tonight with that part of the story for us. lilian? >> reporter: fred hayes was about a mile away from sfo when he began recording. it's the only video that surfaced so far of the plane on impact. >> look at that one. look how his nose is up in the air. oh my god, oh, it's an accident. >> oh, you're filming it too. >> fred hayes couldn't believe what was unfolding right before his eyes. >> oh my god. >> oh my god, you're filming it. >> oh my god. oh my god. it's kind of surreal. my wife gina, you know, she took it pretty hard. we did. we all did. it was, you know, a tragedy. >> reporter: hayes says he started videotaping when he noticed what appeared to be a united airlines jet aimlessly taxiing around. but soon after, asiana flight 214 caught his eye. >> i seen his nose up in the air. and then, you know, and then i just totally locked on him. and i thought he was going to take off and go up. and he just kept going down. >> reporter: aviation experts y investigators will no doubt watch this video over and over again. on consultant mike
lilian kim is in the newsroom tonight with that part of the story for us. lilian? >> reporter: fred hayes was about a mile away from sfo when he began recording. it's the only video that surfaced so far of the plane on impact. >> look at that one. look how his nose is up in the air. oh my god, oh, it's an accident. >> oh, you're filming it too. >> fred hayes couldn't believe what was unfolding right before his eyes. >> oh my god. >> oh my god, you're filming...
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lilian kim is in the newsroom tonight with that part of the story for us. lilian? >> reporter: fred hayes was about a mile away from sfo when he began recording. it's the only video that surfaced so far of the plane on impact. >> look at that one. look how his nose is up in the air. oh my god, oh, it's an accident. >> oh, you're filming it too. >> fred hayes couldn't believe what was unfolding right before his eyes. >> oh my god. >> oh my god, you're filming it. >> oh my god. oh my god. it's kind of surreal. my wife gina, you know, she took it pretty hard. we did. we all did. it was, you know, a tragedy. >> reporter: hayes says he started videotaping when he noticed what appeared to be a united airlines jet aimlessly taxiing around. but soon after, asiana flight 214 caught his eye. >> i seen his nose up in the air. and then, you know, and then i just totally locked on him. and i thought he was going to take off and go up. and he just kept going down. >> reporter: aviation experts say investigators will no doubt watch this video over and over again. aviation consult
lilian kim is in the newsroom tonight with that part of the story for us. lilian? >> reporter: fred hayes was about a mile away from sfo when he began recording. it's the only video that surfaced so far of the plane on impact. >> look at that one. look how his nose is up in the air. oh my god, oh, it's an accident. >> oh, you're filming it too. >> fred hayes couldn't believe what was unfolding right before his eyes. >> oh my god. >> oh my god, you're filming...
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Jul 22, 2013
07/13
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abc7 news reporter lilian kim is here with more. lilian? >> ama, this lawsuit is brought by the family of a southern california woman who died after her 2006 camry suddenly sped up out of control. family members say 66-year-old nariko was afraid to drive fast. so when her toyota camry unexpectedly accelerated to speeds up to 100 miles an hour she did everything she could to slow down. after swerving to avoid other cars she died after she struck a telephone pole and a tree. her case is the first wrongful death lawsuit to go to trial. no matter which way it goes, the outcome is going to be huge. >> if it goes to a verdict, then it will become a landmark in terms of how other cases are processed by the court and by the plaintiffs and by toyota. >> toyota initially blamed cases of sudden acceleration on sticky pedals pedals and floor mats that trapped them. they say toyota cut corners by neglecting to install the mechanism to override the accelerator which was included in cars made after 2011. in a statement, toyota said we are confident that t
abc7 news reporter lilian kim is here with more. lilian? >> ama, this lawsuit is brought by the family of a southern california woman who died after her 2006 camry suddenly sped up out of control. family members say 66-year-old nariko was afraid to drive fast. so when her toyota camry unexpectedly accelerated to speeds up to 100 miles an hour she did everything she could to slow down. after swerving to avoid other cars she died after she struck a telephone pole and a tree. her case is the...
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. >>> maim funding for "religion & ethics" is provided by the lilian endowment, and dedicated to the founders in religion, community development and education. additional funding also provided by mutual of america. designing customized individual and group retirement products. that's why we're your retirement company. and the corporation for public broadcasting. >>> welcome. i'm bob abernethy. it's good to have you with us. muslims around the world this week began their month-long observance of ramadan, when they fast from sunrise to sunset. in egypt, the holiday falls amid continued unrest after the military's removal from power of former president mohamed morsi. morsi's political party, the muslim brotherhood said it will not cooperate with the interim government and vowed to continue protesting. tensions were particularly high after the military fired on brotherhood protesters, killing more than 50 people. one of the country's top muslim clerics called for an end to bloodshed and warned both sides against dragging the country into civil war. i am now joined by kate seelye, senior
. >>> maim funding for "religion & ethics" is provided by the lilian endowment, and dedicated to the founders in religion, community development and education. additional funding also provided by mutual of america. designing customized individual and group retirement products. that's why we're your retirement company. and the corporation for public broadcasting. >>> welcome. i'm bob abernethy. it's good to have you with us. muslims around the world this week...
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Jul 22, 2013
07/13
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abc7 news reporter lilian kim is here with more. lilian? >> ama, this lawsuit is brought by the family of a southern california woman who died after her 2006 camry suddenly sped up out of control. family members say 66-year-old nariko was afraid to drive fast. so when her toyota camry unexpectedly accelerated to speeds up to 100 miles an hour she did everything she could to slow down. after swerving to avoid other cars she died after she struck a telephone pole and a tree. her case is the first wrongful death lawsuit to go to trial. no matter which way it goes, the outcome is going to be huge. >> if it goes to a verdict, then it will become a landmark in terms of how other cases are processed by the court and by the plaintiffs and by toyota. >> toyota initially blamed cases of sudden acceleration on sticky pedals pedals and floor mats that trapped them. they say toyota cut corners by neglecting to install the mechanism to override the accelerator which was included in cars made after 2011. in a statement, toyota said we are confident that t
abc7 news reporter lilian kim is here with more. lilian? >> ama, this lawsuit is brought by the family of a southern california woman who died after her 2006 camry suddenly sped up out of control. family members say 66-year-old nariko was afraid to drive fast. so when her toyota camry unexpectedly accelerated to speeds up to 100 miles an hour she did everything she could to slow down. after swerving to avoid other cars she died after she struck a telephone pole and a tree. her case is the...
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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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reporter lilian kim is live tonight with the new developments. >> the change took effect today. it applies to all foreign airlines flying into sfo. asiana flight was cleared for a visual approach july 6th but they are advising all foreign carriers to use a gps instrument treoch. >> the data is driven from gps signals, computerized information. they computer screens and very safe. >> they said they made the change after a recent increase aborted landings flying visual into the airport. they have been flying visual approaches because the glide slope indicator was taken out for runway innovation. the decision comes only three weeks after the asiana class and go around taiwan planes. one had an aboard landing after flying too low. >> a caution what has been going on lately. faa is responding so everyone is on the same page to fly instrument landings for as long as they can. >> reporter: pilots typically follow the vision of air traffic controllers. lilian kim, abc7 news. >>> tonight a man faces criminal charges after police say he caused a head-on accident that killed a woman and le
reporter lilian kim is live tonight with the new developments. >> the change took effect today. it applies to all foreign airlines flying into sfo. asiana flight was cleared for a visual approach july 6th but they are advising all foreign carriers to use a gps instrument treoch. >> the data is driven from gps signals, computerized information. they computer screens and very safe. >> they said they made the change after a recent increase aborted landings flying visual into the...
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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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reporter lilian kim is live tonight with the new developments. >> the change took effect today. it applies to all foreign airlines flying into sfo. asiana flight was cleared for a visual approach july 6th but they are advising all foreign carriers to use a gps instrument treoch. >> the data is driven from gps signals, computerized information. they computer screens and very safe. >> they said they made the change after a recent increase aborted landings flying visual into the airport. they have been flying visual approaches because the glide slope indicator was taken out for runway innovation. the decision comes only three weeks after the asiana class and go around taiwan planes. one had an aboard landing after flying too low. >> a caution what has been going on lately. faa is responding so everyone is on the same page to fly instrument landings for as long as they can. >> reporter: pilots typically follow the vision of air traffic controllers. lilian kim, abc7 news. >>> tonight a man faces criminal charges after police say he caused a head-on accident that killed a woman and le
reporter lilian kim is live tonight with the new developments. >> the change took effect today. it applies to all foreign airlines flying into sfo. asiana flight was cleared for a visual approach july 6th but they are advising all foreign carriers to use a gps instrument treoch. >> the data is driven from gps signals, computerized information. they computer screens and very safe. >> they said they made the change after a recent increase aborted landings flying visual into the...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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lilian kim has the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: major activity going on right now on the runway. workers have cut up the fuselage and a crane is lifting each piece and putting them into a container. they will eventually be transported and stored inside a hangar out of the elements. earlier today the n.t.s.b. revealed new information about the investigation in the last bay area briefing. >> n.t.s.b. chair says the team of investigators will head back to d.c. she says they have a mountain of information including investigators didn't find any mechanical problems and the pilots failed to notice their approach was dangerously low and slow until way too late. >> there is no mention of speed until about nine seconds before impacted when they are hundred feet. >> also released today new photos of the wreckage that show parts of the plane but also boulders before it crashed. losing the tail it did a remarkable job of holding together, particularly in the front section. firefighter described what it looked like. >> it looked like if you fluffed the pillows you could turn the plane
lilian kim has the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: major activity going on right now on the runway. workers have cut up the fuselage and a crane is lifting each piece and putting them into a container. they will eventually be transported and stored inside a hangar out of the elements. earlier today the n.t.s.b. revealed new information about the investigation in the last bay area briefing. >> n.t.s.b. chair says the team of investigators will head back to d.c. she says...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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lilian kim has the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: major activity going on right now on the runway. workers have cut up the fuselage and a crane is lifting each piece and putting them into a container. they will eventually be transported and stored inside a hangar out of the elements. earlier today the n.t.s.b. revealed new information about the investigation in the last bay area briefing. >> n.t.s.b. chair says the team of investigators will head back to d.c. she says they have a mountain of information including investigators didn't find any mechanical problems and the pilots failed to notice their approach was dangerously low and slow until way too late. >> there is no mention of speed until about nine seconds before impacted when they are hundred feet. >> also released today new photos of the wreckage that show parts of the plane but also boulders before it crashed. losing the tail it did a remarkable job of holding together, particularly in the front section. firefighter described what it looked like. >> it looked like if you fluffed the pillows you could turn the plane
lilian kim has the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: major activity going on right now on the runway. workers have cut up the fuselage and a crane is lifting each piece and putting them into a container. they will eventually be transported and stored inside a hangar out of the elements. earlier today the n.t.s.b. revealed new information about the investigation in the last bay area briefing. >> n.t.s.b. chair says the team of investigators will head back to d.c. she says...
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lilian kim has the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: major activity going on right now on theway. workers have cut up the fuselage and a crane is lifting each piece and putting them into a container. they will eventually be transported and stored inside a hangar out of the elements. earlier today the n.t.s.b. revealed new information about the investigation in the last bay area briefing. >> n.t.s.b. chair says the team of investigators will head back to d.c. she says they have a mountain of information including investigators didn't find any mechanical problems and the pilots failed to notice their approach was dangerously low and slow until way too late. >> there is no mention of speed until about nine seconds before impacted when they are hundred feet. >> also released today new photos of the wreckage that show parts of the plane but butt crashed. it tail it did a remarkable job of holding together, particularly in the front section. firefighter described what it looked like. >> it looked like if you fluffed the pillows you could turn the plane around and go out for the next
lilian kim has the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: major activity going on right now on theway. workers have cut up the fuselage and a crane is lifting each piece and putting them into a container. they will eventually be transported and stored inside a hangar out of the elements. earlier today the n.t.s.b. revealed new information about the investigation in the last bay area briefing. >> n.t.s.b. chair says the team of investigators will head back to d.c. she says they...