Quantcast
Channel: CBS San Francisco
Viewing all 84541 articles
Browse latest View live

Ryan Doherty On His Path To Volleyball, AVP Tour

$
0
0

By Sydney Cantor

Professional beach volleyball player Ryan Doherty actually stumbled upon the sport by accident. After a successful college baseball career at Notre Dame and a short-lived minor league stint with the Arizona Diamondbacks, Doherty was crashing on a friend’s couch and didn’t have much to do to occupy his time. That is, until Ryan and his buddy found a volleyball court and a cheap ball, and from that day forward Doherty was hooked on the sport.

An athlete his entire life, Doherty believes the best advice he ever received was that “life isn’t a dress rehearsal” and that there’s no practice round. With this mantra in mind, Doherty has quickly risen through the ranks and has played matches on four continents and 16 countries since turning professional in 2010.

Today, you can find Doherty setting and spiking on the United States’ premier beach volleyball tour, the AVP. This summer, the AVP tour will take place in several major cities from coast-to-coast. Be sure to catch the dynamic 7-footer at a beach near you.

2017 AVP Tour
6/22-6/25 – Seattle, WA
7/8-7/9 – San Francisco, CA
7/20-7/23 – Hermosa Beach, CA
8/17-8/20 – Manhattan Beach, CA
8/31-9/3 – Chicago, IL

To learn more about the AVP tour stops, check out AVP Tour Events.


4 Employee Laws Small Business Owners Should Keep In Mind

$
0
0

 
There are so many things to consider when you are a new business owner, and one of the more confusing elements include employment laws. Following the law and federal regulations are very important, as the laws that cover businesses can be extensive. Whether you are a large corporation or a small business, it is important to be aware of what these laws are. Since they are constantly changing and often modified, here are four key laws to keep in mind if you are running a small business.

 

 
The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)

The Family and Medical Leave Act can be misunderstood as it requires employers to cover employees a total of up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave during any 12-month period. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the reasons include, “the birth and care of a newborn child of the employee, placement with the employee of a son or daughter for adoption or foster care, care for an immediate family member [spouse, child, or parent] with a serious health condition and taking of medical leave when the employee is unable to work because of a serious health condition.” The act was amended back in 2009 to include family members that were injured in the course of military service.

 
Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)

The Age Discrimination in Employment Act exists to protect individuals that are 40 years of age or older by prohibiting age discrimination in the workplace. This is applied to those companies that have more than 20 employees. It covers state, local and federal government. There are rare occasions when a bona fide occupational qualification comes in to play, such as in establishing an age limit for airline pilots.

 
U.S. Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)

In accordance with the Fair Labor Standards Act, when a business has $500,000 or more in sales, a law is required for minimum wage to be paid by the business to the employee. Currently, the federal minimum wage for nonexempt employees is set for $7.25. Let’s not forget overtime, which is set at time and half for work that is over 40 hours in a week. This law also protects children, as child labor laws are included in this act.

 
Employee Classification

Having a proper title for employees is important when it comes to classification, so they can be paid for their title. Keep in mind that exempt employees are typically executive in level of authority and get paid a salary. These include those in management positions or above. The minimum wage law does not apply in this case. Remember not to use exempt classification to avoid paying any overtime. This also goes for independent contractors, those who create their own hours, work on their own time and are responsible for their own gains. IRS pays attention to these classification to keep an eye on businesses that are trying to avoid paying overtime.

 

 
This article was written by Elle Toussifor for CBS Small Business Pulse
 

East San Jose Grass Fire Approaches Full Containment

$
0
0

SAN JOSE (CBS SF) — Firefighters in the South Bay were making progress on a grass fire burning in East San Jose Thursday.

The fire near the 4300 block of Quimby Road started early Wednesday evening and has scorched 54 acres so far.

Santa Clara County firefighters responded and were able to keep the fire away from nearby homes.

Calfire is assisting Santa Clara County fire crews with ground support and a Calfire helicopter making water drops.

As of late Thursday morning, containment stands at 72 percent.

Facebook Wants To Nudge Users Into ‘Meaningful’ Online Groups

$
0
0

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — At Facebook, mere “sharing” is getting old. Finding deeper meaning in online communities is the next big thing.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg is no longer satisfied with helping people share baby pictures and live video — or fake news and hate symbols — via the social network he created. So the Facebook founder wants to bring more meaning to its nearly 2 billion users by nudging them into online groups that bring together people with common passions, problems and ambitions.

Much like the creation of Facebook itself — the largest social-engineering project in history — that shift could have broad and unanticipated consequences. Facebook will apply the same powerful computer algorithms that made its service irresistible to so many people to the task of nudging users toward groups they’ll find equally appealing.

That would also have the effect of encouraging people to spend more time on Facebook, which could boost the company’s profits. While the company doesn’t currently place ads in its groups, it “can’t speak to future plans,” Alex Deve, the product director for Facebook Groups, said in a statement.

Advertising is virtually Facebook’s only source of revenue; it brought in almost $27 billion dollars in 2016, 57 percent more than the previous year.

THE SEARCH FOR MEANING

The shift comes as Facebook continues to grapple with the darker side of connecting the world, from terrorist recruitment to videos of murder and suicides to propaganda intended to disrupt elections around the world. For Zuckerberg, using his social network to “build community” and “bring the world closer together” — two phrases from Facebook’s newly updated mission statement — is a big part of the answer.

“When you think of the social structure of the world, we are probably one of the larger institutions that can help empower people to build communities,” Zuckerberg said in a recent interview at the company’s offices in Menlo Park, California. “There, I think we have a real opportunity to help make a difference.”

Zuckerberg outlined his latest vision at a “communities summit” held Thursday in Chicago. It’s the company’s first gathering for the people who run millions of groups on Facebook, a feature the company rolled out years ago to little fanfare. That’s all changing now.

For those who have never come across them, Facebook groups are ad hoc collections of people united by a single interest, who can use the service’s group features for sharing thoughts and photos, offering support and organizing events. Originally conceived as a way for small circles of friends and family to communicate more privately, groups have evolved over the years to encompass hobbies, medical conditions, military service, pets, parenthood and just about anything else you could think of.

To Zuckerberg, now 33, the effort to foster “meaningful” communities reflects his recent interest in ways Facebook can make the world a less divisive place, one that emerged following the fractious 2016 presidential election. He has previously talked about the need to bring people together in both a lengthy manifesto he published earlier this year and during a commencement address at Harvard University last month.

“MEANING,” FACEBOOK STYLE

That’s the theory. Practice is something else.

Data-driven to its core, Facebook has quantified “meaning” so it can be sure people are getting more of it. (As an oft-repeated saying in the tech industry has it, “if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.”) And what Facebook aims to maximize is the time people spend in its online groups.

In fact, Facebook explicitly defines a “meaningful” group as one that someone spends at least 30 minutes a week in. The company estimates that 130 million of its users are in such groups, and wants that number to exceed a billion people within the next five years.

The company has already been quietly tweaking its algorithms to include more recommendations about groups that users might want to join. Those changes already have boosted the number of people in “meaningful” groups by 50 percent over the past six months, Zuckerberg said.

Of course, anything that keeps people coming back to Facebook gives its algorithms more opportunities to learn about their interests and gather other personal data that helps sell advertising in other parts of its network, according to analysts.

“It’s really simple economics: If users are spending time on Facebook, they’re seeing more ads,” says eMarketer analyst Debra Williamson. “Increasing user engagement is a necessity for Facebook. It gives them more room to place advertising and to generate revenue.”

Zuckerberg, however, stresses the emotional and cultural aspects of groups. “So this big question we have been asking is, ‘So, if there 2 billion people on Facebook, why are there only (130 million) in meaningful communities?'” he said. “If we can get that to 1 billion, we will have reversed the whole declining trend for decades and start re-growing it to strengthen the social structure.”

Virtual communities “can fill a fundamental need we have for a sense of belonging, much like eating or sleeping,” said Anita Blanchard, a University of North Carolina at Charlotte professor of psychology who has been studying them for 20 years. Her research has shown that online communities can make people less intolerant of opposing viewpoints because “they get you out of your own clothes and make connections across the U.S., making you realize you can get along with people with different beliefs.”

For Sarah Giberman, an artist and parent who lives in Arlington, Texas, a meaningful group is one “that serves a need in your life, that fills some space that would otherwise feel vacant.”

“I spend a lot more time on Facebook because of the groups than I would otherwise,” she said. “Especially with the current sociopolitical climate, I’m not comfortable being very open in my regular newsfeed.”

© Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

J. Cole Announces Oakland Stop On ‘4 Your Eyez Only’ Tour

$
0
0
VIDEO: J. Cole – ‘4 Your Eyez Only’

 
By Abby Hassler

(RADIO.COM) – J. Cole announced the second leg of his 4 Your Eyez Only tour Thursday.

Anderson .Paak, Bas, Ari Lennox and J.I.D. have been tapped as support. Check out Cole’s full tour itinerary below.

7/6 – Phoenix, AZ @ Talking Stick Resort Arena
7/8 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand Garden Arena
7/9 – Anaheim, CA @ Honda Center
7/11 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Forum
7/15 – Oakland, CA @ Oracle Arena
7/17 – Seattle, WA @ Key Arena
7/18 – Vancouver, BC @ Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena
7/21 – St, Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
7/23 – Detroit, MI @ The Palace of Auburn Hills
7/24 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
7/28 – Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre
8/1 – Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
8/4 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden
8/5 – Uniondale, NY @ The New Coliseum
8/6 – Baltimore, MD @ Royal Farms Arena
8/8 – Washington, DC @ Verizon Center
8/9 – Charlotte, MC @ Spectrum Center
8/11 – Atlanta, GA @ Infinite Energy Arena
8/14 – Miami, FL @ American Airlines Arena
8/16 – Orlando, FL @ Amway Center
8/18 – Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
8/19 – Austin, TX @ Frank Erwin Center
8/20 – Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center

Tickets are on sale now via Live Nation.

©2017 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All rights reserved.

 

Gas Line Break Prompts Shelter-In-Place In Richmond District

$
0
0

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — A gas line break has prompted a shelter-in-place order in San Francisco’s Lake Street neighborhood Thursday morning, fire officials said.

The fire department posted on Twitter at 11:42 a.m. about a gas line struck in the area of Lake Street and 23rd Avenue.

The shelter-in-place order is in effect for a block in all directions from that intersection, fire officials said.

Sketch Of Santa Rosa Sexual Assault Suspect Released

$
0
0

SANTA ROSA (CBS SF) — Police in Santa Rosa have released a sketch of a man suspected of sexually assaulting a woman during an attempted robbery earlier this month.

The female victim told police she was walking from her car to her home in the 100 block of South E Street around 11:30 p.m. on June 9 when a man pushed her against a wall, Sgt. Terry Anderson said.

The suspect was unable to grab the woman’s purse but he pinned her against a wall with one hand and touched her under her clothing with the other hand, Anderson said. The suspect fled when the woman kicked him in the groin.

The victim and an artist met Tuesday to prepare a sketch of the white male adult suspect in his 30s.

He was wearing a white or light colored sweatshirt with the hood pulled tight around his face and may have been wearing light colored shoes, Anderson said.

The suspect was also carrying a dark colored backpack.

The public may call (707) 543-4040 to provide tips about the suspect or leave their contact information. There is a reward up to $2,500 for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the suspect.

TM and © Copyright 2017 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2017 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Bay City News Service contributed to this report.

Uber Must Share Drivers’ Contact Info With San Francisco City Officials, Judge Rules

$
0
0

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — A San Francisco Superior Court judge ruled that he will require Uber to give city officials its local drivers’ contact information.

City Attorney Dennis Herrera said Judge Richard Ulmer announced Thursday that he will adopt a tentative ruling he issued Wednesday that will require the beleaguered ride-hailing company to give the information to the city’s Treasurer and Tax Collector’s Office.

Treasurer Jose Cisneros is seeking the data to determine whether Uber drivers working in San Francisco have obtained a business registration certificate from his office. All businesses operating in the city are required to register.

The information sought includes a driver’s name, business address and driver’s license number. Drivers, who are considered independent contractors by Uber, typically pay a $91 fee for the certificate.

Uber argued unsuccessfully that the information was a trade secret and protected by the drivers’ right to privacy.

Herrera said in a statement, “Uber has to follow the law like every other business in the city.”

“San Franciscans have a right to know who is behind the wheel when they use Uber, and drivers that benefit from city services need to pay their fair share of taxes,” Herrera said.

An Uber spokesperson was not immediately available for comment.

The San Francisco-based company is the world’s largest ride-hailing company.

It has been under fire recently amid allegations of sexual harassment, accusations of a brash management style, alleged use of software to deceive regulators and a lawsuit accusing it of stealing technology for its self-driving vehicle program.

Founding chief executive officer Travis Kalanick resigned on Wednesday at the urging of five investors and the company’s board, but will remain a board member.

TM and © Copyright 2017 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2017 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Bay City News Service contributed to this report.


San Bruno Police Lock Down School During Burglary Suspect Search

$
0
0

SAN BRUNO (CBS SF) – Authorities locked down a San Bruno elementary school early Thursday afternoon as police searched for two suspects in an attempted residential burglary.

According to police, officers were investigating the residential burglary in the Crestmoor neighborhood, close to the location of John Muir Elementary on Cambridge Lane.

Police said the suspects in the burglary fled the incident on foot.

Video shot by Chopper 5 showed a number of police vehicles parked at the school parking lot and in adjacent streets.

The video also showed two vehicles on a nearby street that appeared to have been involved in a collision. It was not known if either vehicle was being used in connection with the attempted burglary.

san bruno crash 1 San Bruno Police Lock Down School During Burglary Suspect Search

San Bruno crash near elementary school. burglary suspect search (CBS)

At least one of the vehicles appeared to have driven through a fence in front of a home either just before or after the collision.

Police said John Muir Elementary would be locked down until the investigation was concluded, but noted that the suspect who fled to that area has been captured. There is no immediate threat to the school or its occupants.

Police were still searching for a second suspect in Crestmoor Canyon. They said the school lock down was lifted as of 12:56 p.m. and the entire area was clear as of 1:40 p.m.

There was no word from police whether the second suspect had been apprehended.

Key Figure In Manson Murders Denied Parole

$
0
0

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Parole has been denied for convicted killer Patricia Krenwinkel — a follower of cult leader Charles Manson — after officials investigated whether battered women’s syndrome affected her state of mind at the time of the murders nearly five decades ago.

The parole board did not immediately release the reason for its recommendation Thursday at the California Institution for Women east of Los Angeles.

Krenwinkel, 69, was previously denied parole 13 times for the 1969 slayings of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and four other people in Southern California.

The next night, she helped kill grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, in what prosecutors say was an attempt by Manson to ignite a race war.

Commissioners postponed the latest parole hearing in December while officials investigated whether Krenwinkel suffered from battered women’s syndrome.

The hearing resumed Thursday at the California Institution for Women east of Los Angeles. A possible decision by the parole panel to release Krenwinkel could be blocked by Gov. Jerry Brown.

Tate’s sister, Debra Tate, expects the commissioners to recommend release.

State law could favor Krenwinkel, the longest serving female inmate in California. It creates a greater presumption that she could be freed because she is considered legally elderly now and was legally youthful and thus less culpable at the time of the slayings, when she was 21.

If commissioners decide she suffered from what is formally known as intimate partner battering, “she would have three statutes in her favor,” Debra Tate said before the hearing. “That gives her the perfect trifecta, so I expect the worst and I will be pleasantly pleased if they deny her her parole date.”

Krenwinkel’s attorney Keith Wattley did not respond to requests for comment.

State law requires commissioners to give “great weight” to whether physical, emotional or mental abuse affected offenders to the point that “it appears the criminal behavior was a result of that victimization.”

“It appears from all of Ms. Krenwinkel’s testimony that she seems to fit in many if not all of the elements,” deputy parole commissioner Nga Lam said at the December hearing.

Krenwinkel was a 19-year-old secretary living with her older sister when she met the then-33-year-old Manson at a party. She testified that she left everything behind three days later to follow him because she believed they had a budding romantic relationship.

She testified in December that her feelings faded when she realized Manson was routinely sleeping with other women, including underage girls, became physically and emotionally abusive, and trafficked Krenwinkel to other men for sex.

She said she left him twice only to be brought back, that she was usually under the influence of drugs and rarely left alone.

“I thought I loved him. I thought — it started with love, and then turned to fear,” she said.

She recounted how she chased down and repeatedly stabbed Abigail Folger, 26, heiress to a coffee fortune, at Tate’s home on Aug. 9, 1969, and helped Manson and other followers kill grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, the following night.

Manson and his right-hand man, Charles “Tex” Watson, told her to “do something witchy,” she said, so she stabbed Leno La Bianca in the stomach with a fork, then took a rag and wrote “Helter Skelter,” ”Rise” and “Death to Pigs” on the walls with his blood.

Prosecutors say the slayings were intended to spark an apocalyptic race war that Manson called “Helter Skelter,” after a Beatles song.

Intimate partner battery was also briefly discussed during the last parole hearing for Manson follower Leslie Van Houten, 67, in 2016. The commissioners recommended that she be paroled, but Brown blocked her release.

Krenwinkel became the state’s longest-serving female inmate when fellow Manson follower Susan Atkins, the third woman convicted in the series of slayings, died of cancer in prison in 2009.

Anthony DiMaria, the nephew of victim Thomas Jay Sebring who died during the first massacre, criticized commissioners’ consideration of intimate partner battering, part of what he said “has become the twisted metamorphosis of a killer into victim.”

“Sadly, there are millions of intimate partner battery victims in this country,” he said in remarks prepared for Thursday’s hearing. “But fortunately, it’s safe to say, that almost none of them suddenly become a maniacal predator that stalks, pounces, butchers and mutilates her victims.”

William Portanova, a defense attorney and former prosecutor who is not affiliated with the case, said commissioners would seem justified in denying

Krenwinkel’s parole even if they find that she was a victim of domestic violence.

“It was such a calculated act of insanity perpetrated by people that were so weak that they followed a madman into murder, and I think the parole board is justified in worrying that such weak-mindedness may be permanent and therefore the danger of reoffending, if released, is too high to take the chance,” he said.

A’s Cut Former All-Star Stephen Vogt

$
0
0

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Already told he would be cut, catcher Stephen Vogt asked the Oakland Athletics to announce his departure Thursday rather than be a distraction before a game against Houston the previous night.

That was typical for team-first Vogt, designated for assignment as the struggling A’s transition toward youth and give Bruce Maxwell a shot behind the plate.

Rookie infielder Matt Chapman went on the 10-day disabled list with an infection in his left knee that kept him out of three straight games. General manager David Forst said Chapman was hospitalized Wednesday night to receive an intravenous antibiotic for his knee cellulitis, reports were good Thursday and he should be released Friday. Forst expects Chapman to come off the DL as soon as he is eligible.

Yet another busy day of moving parts for the low-budget A’s, who fired pitching coach Curt Young last week.

“It was just one of those things I felt coming for a little while, but obviously it’s never easy. It’s something I understand, don’t like, but I understand how the game works,” Vogt said. “And yeah, it was definitely news that hit me very hard, hit all of a sudden, very, very hard. This is a place that we love. This is a place that we grew up together, watched our family grow, a place where we had a lot of success.”

Vogt hit .217 with four home runs and 20 RBIs in 54 games this season with 36 starts at catcher and seven as the designated hitter.

A’s closer Sean Doolittle posted a photo of Vogt on Twitter before Oakland’s series finale against the Astros, and wrote, “love you @SVogt1229. thank you for everything.”

A two-time AL All-Star, Vogt entered as a pinch hitter during Wednesday night’s 5-1 defeat and, with the bench short, played left field for the first time since July 2, 2014, at Detroit. He had several balls immediately hit his way — and manager Bob Melvin said afterward Vogt just wanted to play.

“This was really hard, and entirely because of who Stephen is,” Forst said. “No one exemplifies the spirit of those playoff teams more than Stephen and it’s hard to think of anyone who’s been a better member of our community.”

A rookie and playoff first-timer in October 2013, Vogt delivered a game-ending hit against Detroit in the best-of-five division series. He had left the Tampa Bay organization for the Bay Area on April 5 that season, traded back home to his native California, only a couple of hours from where he grew up and still lived in Visalia.

“For a guy that had to fight so hard to get to the big leagues, and the next thing you know he’s hitting a walk-off in a playoff series, and then into a leadership role, two-time All-Star for a guy who was a career minor leaguer for a while,” manager Bob Melvin said. “Once he got here he took advantage of the opportunity to be at the big leagues as well as anybody I’ve ever seen. He definitely made an impact here, not only with us in the clubhouse, but the media, the fans, everybody.”

Vogt was a minor league journeyman who made it to the major leagues at last at age 28. He needed 33 at-bats to finally get his first major league hit, a home run against St. Louis’ Joe Kelly on June 28, ’13. Rewind to that spring, and Vogt spent six days in Durham, North Carolina, wondering about his baseball future. He didn’t make the Rays’ opening-day roster and figured to start the season there at Triple-A. Then, Oakland acquired him.

Oakland remains responsible for the rest of Vogt’s $2,965,000 salary, and a team that signs him would pay the prorated share of the $535,000 minimum. Forst declined to specify the interest or trade talks he has had regarding the 32-year-old.

“I couldn’t get out of my own way and struggled with the throwing and the hitting issue,” said Vogt, who wasn’t prepared to say whether he would have the chance to accept a minor league assignment if he fails to clear waivers.

“I’m a baseball player. I’m really good. The person that’s showed at times the last couple months is not who I am, it’s not who I’ve been,” he said.

Also Thursday, the A’s recalled Maxwell and first baseman/outfielder Matt Olson from Triple-A Nashville.

© Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

4-Alarm Vegetation Fire Damages Homes Near I-80 In Vallejo

$
0
0

VALLEJO (CBS SF) — A four-alarm vegetation fire sparked by a car fire on Interstate Highway 80 near the Carquinez Bridge in Vallejo threatened homes and blocked traffic Thursday afternoon.

Multiple homes were damaged in the blaze, located in the Glen Cove neighborhood, the Vallejo Fire Department said.

Four homes on Barington Drive at Bayhurst Drive were minimally affected by the fire. The roof of at least one home sustained visible fire damage. The backyards of numerous homes were also damaged in the blaze.

Vallejo fire officials said a car fire on eastbound I-80, just east of the bridge toll plaza, was reported at 12:45 p.m. and the fire spread to the hillside.

All lanes of eastbound I-80, east of the Carquinez Bridge (also known as Al Zampa Bridge) toll plaza, were blocked as of 1:33 p.m. Traffic was being let through slowly as of 2:30 p.m., but the right lanes remained blocked.

Fire officials said three vegetation fires burned simultaneously in the area.

As of 4:30 p.m., the four-alarm fire burned 39.5 acres and was fully contained, according to city officials.

Homes and cars on Crestview Court, near the Swanzy Reservoir, were covered with pinkish-red flame retardant dropped from above by firefighting crews.

 

The Red Cross is assisting those impacted by the fire and have set up a meeting point in the parking lot of Joseph H. Wardlaw Elementary School at 1698 Oakwood Ave.

The blaze also prompted the City of Vallejo to activate its Emergency Operations Center.

Vallejo firefighters urged people evacuating the affected area not to leave by vehicle, as firefighters’ hose lines were blocking the roadways.

Fire officials said their resources were depleted and that more fire agencies were coming in to assist them. Cal Fire, Fairfield, Cordelia, Vacaville, Benicia, Crockett, and American Canyon, all responded.

In addition to firefighters, residents were seen using their own hoses to protect their properties.

The fire comes while an excessive heat warning is active in North Central California, including Vallejo, until 11 p.m. Friday.

Residents are trying to understand why it took so long for firefighters to get to the scene, the answer may lie in the fact that a couple years ago the city of Vallejo went bankrupt and closed the fire house closest to Thursday’s blaze.

TM and © Copyright 2017 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2017 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Bay City News Service contributed to this report.

Relocated Black Bear Family Beats The Heat At Oakland Zoo

$
0
0

OAKLAND (CBS SF) — It was only a month ago that a female black bear was slated to be euthanized by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife after she injured a home owner with a swat from her paw after breaking into a Kern County house.

But now the mother bear and her cubs are staying cool in style at the Oakland Zoo instead roasting in some Northern California wilderness.

The Zoo released video Thursday that showed the four quarantined bears getting a refreshing break from the oppressive heat by playing with ice at their enclosure.

black bears ice 1 Relocated Black Bear Family Beats The Heat At Oakland Zoo

Quarantined black bears playing in ice (Oakland Zoo)

While the mother bear seemed more interested in chomping on a bone of some sort, the three cubs proceed to roll around in the pile of cubed ice provided by zoo caretakers, occasionally eating a mouthful of ice.

The Oakland Zoo welcomed a female black bear and her three cubs last week, a month after the animals were captured by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Ordinarily, CDFW public safety policy dictates that a black bear known to have attacked or injured a human is considered a public safety bear and must be euthanized. It was determined that the cubs – which weighed approximately 12-15 pounds each — were not yet weaned from the mother bear.

CDFW decided to hold and monitor all four bears until the cubs were weaned, hoping the cubs could be rehabilitated and eventually returned to their natural habitat. As a known public safety threat, CDFW still planned to euthanized the mother bear per policy.

However as monitoring continued, CDFW staff determined that the bears were habituated to humans and not suitable candidates for release and began to search for an appropriate captive facility for the cubs.

When the Oakland Zoo requested to take the three cubs and the mother bear for their 56-acre California Trail exhibit that is part of a new expansion, CDFW decided not to euthanize.

The focus of the exhibit highlight California’s natural habitat as part of an initiative to emphasize native species and educate the public about human-wildlife issues. The exhibit is set to open next year.

Parents Of Sick Children Fight Senate Healthcare Bill

$
0
0

SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX 5) — Doctors, patients, and the parents of sick children gathered at Zuckerberg General Hospital in San Francisco and Packard Children’s Hospital in Palo Alto to fight back against the U.S. Senate’s healthcare bill.

If this Senate bill passes, critics say, millions of the disabled, elderly, and children here could end up without coverage.

Parent Jennie Briend’s 5-year-old son has half of a heart, cerebral palsy and epilepsy.

Briend’s son Tyler racked up a $2 million healthcare bill by the time he was one-month-old. She says without Medi-Cal, California’s version of Medicaid, they would lose everything, including Tyler.

“If that was removed for us it would be a matter of life and death for us…” Briend said.

13.5 million Californians are enrolled in Medi-Cal and 5.4 million of those enrollees are children.

Before the Affordable Care Act passed, 9.9 million Californians were eligible for Medicaid. That’s an increase of more than 3 million people in three years.

San Francisco GOP Chairman Jason Clark says California cannot afford its current Medicaid bill.

“Under Obamacare, Medicare costs spiral upwards and upwards which leads to the cost problem we have right now,” Clark said.

“Who’s going to pay for it? Are we going to levy a tax on the poor and middle class? I think the answer is no,” Clark said.

Medicaid cost the U.S. $574.2 billion last year, California made up $81.9 billion of that.

But proponents argue cutting Medicaid now, means a bigger bill later.

Dr. Lisa Chamberlain, a pediatrics doctor at Packard Children’s Hospital argues, “If you don’t have that preventive care, you end up in the emergency room and that is a huge bill.”

California lawmakers already have a contingency plan in the works.

They’re considering a single payer system. Republicans say that would be a disaster for the state budget.

Locals Remember San Jose Woman Who Died From Heat

$
0
0

SAN JOSE (KPIX 5) – South Bay neighbors who lived near one of the two senior citizens who died from heat-related complications earlier this week remembered 87-year-old Setsu Jordan’s smile.

Santa Clara County officials said Jordan was outside doing yard work Monday at her home in South San Jose when she collapsed.

The high temperature in San Jose was 94 degrees that day.

Neighbor David Major said Jordan would be outside no matter what the weather.

“She’d be outside cleaning her sidewalk or the curb or pulling some weeds or doing something,” explained Major.

The 87-year-old was well known in the neighborhood as someone who was always working in the yard, ready with a smile.

“She’d wave at anybody that came by. She was very friendly. And it’s real sad to know that she’s gone,” said Major.

Thursday, on the street where Jordan lived, the power was out.

PG&E contractors were seen climbing power poles in 102 degree heat with no shade or breeze.

Contractors were drinking lots of fluids and have been told to watch each other for signs of heat stroke.

“Extra sweaty, excessive breathing, sitting down, fatigued, sunburnt is another good thing too,” said construction worker Jordan Williams. “Someone’s acting kinda funny, in a way that they normally wouldn’t act, maybe it’s because of dehydration.

The other victim who died Monday was 72-year-old Dennis Young, a homeless man who died in his vehicle.

Hundreds, if not thousands, of people are living in their vehicles all over the Bay Area.

A homeless San Jose resident who lives in his recreational vehicle, “Danny” said it’s just as hot inside his RV is sitting in direct sunlight as it was outside.

He said he had not heard about the homeless man’s death until now.

“Yeah, it hits home,” said Danny. “I mean, we try to help each other out out here. But that’s tough.”

When asked how he make sure this doesn’t happen to him, he replied, “Hopefully the dogs will wake me up, I don’t know.”


Marin County Assemblyman Works To Avoid Affordable-Housing Requirement

$
0
0

SACRAMENTO (KPIX 5) — A Marin politician is angling to get his constituents another pass on a state requirement to build affordable housing.

In much of California, there is a delicate balance between making room for everyone and keeping the charm that draws people here in the first place.

But Marin Assemblyman Marc Levine got the assembly to approve a last-minute deal known as a budget trailer bill.

The deal extends Marin’s special status as a metropolitan area with suburban housing requirements.

“This policy would typically have gone through the housing committees in the legislature and possibly the local government committees, said Anya Lawler, a policy advocate with the Western Center on Law and Poverty. “It would be vetted and debated. The trailer bill process allows you to skip all that.”

The county — as well as the cities of San Rafael and Novato — don’t have to build projects as densely as other similar areas the state.

“It’s not okay. If you don’t do density, you don’t ever get affordability, because affordable housing developers have to build densely,” said Lawler.

There’s an obvious question here: why rush this through as a trailer bill?

“Sure. So I would say that this happened because of years of work since 2013 after I was elected in 2012,” said Levine. “It’s always a good time to make good policy so let’s seize the present.”

Sacramento insiders told KPIX 5 that Levine was able to orchestrate the county pass on affordable housing by supporting Governor Brown’s big gas tax increase.

Levine was a holdout, but eventually voted in favor of the increase.

When asked whether this part of the trailer bill was in exchange for his vote on the gas tax, Levine avoided specifics.

“This is an issue I’ve been working on since 2013 and I’ll continue working on it,” he said.

While AB 121 still has to pass the state senate, so far only Republicans are opposing it. The bill should sail right through to the Governors desk.

Regardless of what Levine told KPIX 5, many low-income residents would argue the need for affordable housing in Marin is greater than ever

Ratishia Kassa waited nearly a decade for a two-bedroom unit in Golden Gate Village in Marin City.

It’s the only public housing in the county for families.

The waiting list is in the thousands and includes many of her friends.

“I can name like ten people who are homeless right now and its scary,” said Kassa. “They can’t find a place.”

When KPIX 5 explained Levine move to waive Marin’s mandate to build more affordable housing, finding words was almost as hard as finding an affordable apartment:

“No. Uh, ummm, It’s just…crazy! Not good,” said Kassa.

Her neighbor Nathan Skinner didn’t have trouble expressing himself.

“I’d say, ‘You’re crazy,'” said Skinner.

The housing authority says its waiting list for public housing and section 8 totals about 4,000 people. There are thousands more waiting in lotteries for the affordable units in private complexes.

But while the demand for affordable housing is clearly there, the demand to maintain Marin’s character as it is has plenty saying ‘not in my backyard.’

“Let’s face it. Poverty is not welcome in Marin,” said Kassa. “There it is. It’s not welcome and never has been, so it’s getting harder, not easier on these streets.”

Foster City Police Seek Suspects In Costco Armed Robbery

$
0
0

FOSTER CITY (CBS SF) — Police in Foster City are asking for the public’s help in locating four suspects in a smash-and-grab armed robbery at a Costco store in their city Thursday.

Police said the four suspects entered the Costco at 1001 Metro Center Blvd. at about 11:15 a.m. today and went directly to a glass display case, broke the glass with hammers and took items from inside the case in less than 30 seconds.

The suspects then ran into the parking lot and fled the area in a vehicle, according to police.

Investigators determined that one of the suspects entered the Costco through its entrance and the other three entered through the adjoining exit.

Three of the suspects were wearing masks and the fourth had his sweatshirt hood covering his head and part of his face, police said.

Witnesses reported that one of the suspects was armed with a handgun, according to police.

Police said witness described the suspects as black males in their 20’s who were between 5-foot-10 and 6 feet tall with medium builds.

Police released these clothing descriptions of the suspects:

  • Suspect 1 was wearing a gray hoodie, dark-colored athletic pants and a single glove and was carrying a hammer.
  • Suspect 2 was wearing a dark blue hoodie with a design on the front, red pants, white shoes and a black backpack.
  • Suspect 3 was wearing a black hoodie, red pants, red shoes and a single glove and was carrying a hammer.
  • Suspect 4 was wearing a gray hoodie, black pants and white shoes.

Foster City police said detectives are continuing to investigate the armed robbery and are aware of recent similar crimes.

They said anyone who has information about the robbery should call them at (650) 286-3300.

Reddick’s Big Day Lifts Astros Over A’s

$
0
0

OAKLAND (AP) — Josh Reddick will take a three-hit game any time. This one meant just a little bit more to the Houston Astros outfielder, though.

“You always want to do well against your former team,” said Reddick, who played in Oakland for parts of five seasons. “I enjoy beating them regardless. Whether I got 0 for 4 or I go 4 for 4. So, it is fun.”

Reddick homered and scored four runs, Jake Marisnick and Marwin Gonzalez each went deep and the Astros beat the Athletics 12-9 on Thursday.

The major league-leading Astros completed a four-game sweep with their 10th straight victory in Oakland and their 15th win in 16 games against the A’s overall. They’ve won 12 of their last 14 road games. Their 27-8 record away from home is the best in the majors.

Reddick also doubled, tripled and drew a walk, and Marisnick and Gonzalez each drove in three runs.

Reddick didn’t get a shot at a single to complete the cycle after tripling in the eighth inning.

“I think anybody would want to have a shot at it just to see,” Reddick said. “Once you get to that one, you want to see the boys bat around for you and get up there to get the opportunity to do it.

“I got asked a few times if I was going to stop if it was in the gap. I was, like, ‘Nah, I can’t do that.’ If it’s in the gap, I’m going two. I don’t have it in me to be that guy to get the personal goal.”

David Paulino (2-0) struck out six and gave up three runs, seven hits and two walks. The 23-year-old rookie right-hander struck out five of his first six batters in his sixth career start.

Astros center fielder George Springer left with a left hand contusion after being struck by a fastball from Jesse Hahn (3-5) leading off the game. The ball also grazed Springer’s left shoulder. Springer is tied for second in the AL with 21 home runs. X-rays taken during the game were negative, manager A.J. Hinch said. Springer’s status is day-to-day.

Springer said after the game he has no intention of going on the disabled list.

“No,” Hinch said. “I’m hoping he’ll be able to play tomorrow.”

Hahn gave up 10 runs (nine earned) in two innings. He acknowledged that hitting Springer threw him off.

“Yeah I think maybe that affected (me),” Hahn said. “For me, my game is coming inside on righties, throwing my sinker in on righties and I kind of babied it in there after that. I started spiking a lot, yanking stuff and it just wasn’t good.”

Oakland trailed 10-0 after two innings and 12-3 going into the eighth, when Adam Rosales’ two-run double highlighted a six-run inning.

Nori Aoki was 3 for 5 with a double for Houston.

A’s catcher Bruce Maxwell, called up from Triple-A Nashville earlier in the day, was 3 for 4 with a double.

ROSTER MOVES

A’s: C Stephen Vogt was designated for assignment. Maxwell and 1B/OF Matt Olson were called up from Triple-A Nashville.

TRAINER’S ROOM

A’s: INF Matt Chapman was placed on the 10-day disabled list with a bacterial skin infection on his left knee (retroactive to June 19).

UP NEXT

A’s: RHP Jharel Cotton (4-7, 5.40) will face the Chicago White Sox for the first time. Cotton has allowed 12 home runs over 39 2/3 innings over his last seven starts.

© Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

BART Board Passes Sanctuary Policy, Fare Hike; Repeals Seat Hog Ordinance

$
0
0

OAKLAND (CBS SF) — BART’s board of directors at a meeting in Oakland Thursday passed a sanctuary resolution declaring the agency’s commitment to being a secure and inclusive transit system for all passengers regardless of demographic or immigration status.

During public comment, numerous speakers urged the board to support the Safe Transit resolution.

“The Bay Area’s success relies on the contributions of hard-working immigrants and refugees,” said Linda Olvera with the California Sanctuary Campaign. “Many of these same people are now hiding and running scared.”

Jane Martin with Service Employees International Union – United Service Workers West said people shouldn’t have to be afraid when trying to go to work or school or to pick up their children.

“California has taken the lead to being part of the resistance,”

Martin said. “We’re really excited that you’re going to be a part of that resistance as well.”

Just two speakers criticized the resolution, arguing that there may not be a demonstrated need for such a policy and asking how often people are detained in immigration-related cases on BART.

Director Debora Allen asked BART police Chief Carlos Rojas when the last time a BART rider was asked for immigration papers, and Rojas said he was not aware of any incidents of that nature.

Rojas said an individual was arrested on an immigration warrant, but said that arrest occurred more than five years ago.

Just before noon, the board voted 8-1 with Allen casting the sole dissenting vote.

“We will now be spending our resources keeping BART riders safe, not deporting them,” said director Nick Josefowitz, who sponsored the bill along with director Lateefah Simon.

“Under Safe Transit, BART will focus its resources on our top priorities — transporting our riders with affordability, accessibility, and accountability — not harmful, wasteful anti-immigrant policies,” Simon said.

“I am proud that BART is the first transit system in the nation to pass a Safe Transit policy, and I hope other regions follow.”

In an unrelated matter, the board passed an inflation-based fare increase of 2.7 percent as well as a 50-cent surcharge on fares paid for with paper tickets. They also reduced the discount for youth riders ages 5 to 12 from 62.5 percent to 50 percent, and established a new 50 percent discount for youth ages 13 to 18.

Those changes go into effect in January 2018.

“It’s 2017, it’s time to end the paper tickets,” Allen said. “I’m happy to support that. This is a step in the right direction.”

In a narrow 5-4 vote, the board also repealed the controversial “seat hog” ordinance, which would have prohibited riders from taking up more than one seat during commute hours with warnings for first-time offenders and a series of escalating fines of up to $500 for repeat violations.

Police had concerns the ordinance would cause delays, target the homeless and lead to unnecessary use of force incidents. It was never enforced.

© Copyright 2017 by CBS San Francisco and Bay City News Service. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

Wild Bucks’ Tennessee Slap Fight Caught On Camera

$
0
0

KNOXVILLE Tenn. (KPIX) — A wildlife camera in Tennessee caught two white-tailed bucks slapping each other silly.

It’s not clear which animal won, as they took their slugfest out of view.

As for why they went hoof-to-hoof, experts say the bucks’ antlers are still growing this time of year so duking it out is a safer way to settle differences.

Viewing all 84541 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images