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tv   CBS News Bay Area Evening Edition 6pm  CBS  May 20, 2023 6:00pm-6:58pm PDT

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and to air their grievances and their improvements. >> reporter: it was definitely an interesting day here in half moon bay as a gathering of farmworkers came together to attend a public summit where they were able to express their concerns about issues like housing, clean water, and healthcare. pedro mario, a farmworker living in half moon bay left her home in mexico 22 years ago, but she says it has not been easy. she tells me, we have never had a good living situation since we got here. motivated by their challenges, pedro decided to take a public summit that shed light on the daily critical issues farmworkers encounter. she tells me, her biggest problem
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is housing. we cannot rent an expensive place to live because we cannot it b r in is barely afrdableusing, t summit such as ssleanwater and althcare. another farmworker share similar concerns. she says, many farmworkers do not go to the doctor because they do not have health insurance. the high cost does not allow them to do so. everything is expensive. going to the doctor and buying medication. one of the summit's organizers mentioned having elected officials present to raise awareness for these issues. >> it is important for the community to learn what they are working on and how the community can help, as i mentioned, pass legislation, improve services, and get the projects built that improve the lives of farmworkers. they
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deserve it. >> reporter: she hopes these conversations can actually help them get better living conditions as soon as possible. this week, governor newsom signed the second of bi faworkers to vote in union elections. it was signed in september after protests. it allows farmworkers to unionize without having to vote in person. this follow-up bill removes the option to unionize to mail in ballots. and after months of student organization, undocumented students are close to being able to work on campus at any of the 10 university of california campuses . the university's border regions has appointed a group to come up with a plan on how to best do that by the end of november. in santa rosa, the drunk driving suspect to crash or tesla to somebody's home overnight is the wife of the county's top law official. she crashed into a fence and a tree before plowing to the walls of
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this home in montecito boulevard. one of the residence was injured by a shard of glass. the sheriff's wife was booked into county jail. as a husband, i am greatly concerned about my wife's well-being. is a citizen and scharf, i am also concerned about the well-being inside the home who ffered injuri santa ro investigating this case to avoid a conflict of interest. the san jose convention center transformed into a huge dental clinic today. best of all, it was free. the line ticket and went around the block. dentists came together to cure thousands of people. many do not have access to dental care or if they do it is too expensive. >> the implants are so expensive. and when you become a senior, insurance does not like what it is. when you are working, you take care of yourself. >> the event continues tomorrow at the san jose convention center.
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as we celebrate aapi month, we are highlighting a group of doctors filling a critical need. they are giving back to their communities by speaking their language. >> in the u.s., there is a growing shortage of doctors, especially in underserved communities. >> good afternoon. skyler, good to see you. >> reporter: and to help with the problem, people like dr. wang, who is a retired allergist of three years is coming back to work. she says she was asked by the encore positions program, which seeks retired doctors to work part-time in community clinics for a year. >> it is my calling. i feel like if i could help even one patient a day, that would be helpful. >> reporter: so twice a week at the la clinca neighborhood health center in oakland is where you can find dr. wang. >> at la clinca, working for
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the community is very rewarding. >> reporter: the u.s. expect to see a shortage of over 120,000 physicians by 2034. and one solution is to support physician-led care. >> the reason to come back is because physicians can work part-time, make a small salary, but really continue to do the work that they spent their life training and working to do in a much less stressful environment. >> reporter: patients like skyler and his family say dr. wang is also filling in other need. representation. >> i am very happy to see you come here and help us. yeah. >> you are telling me i'm the first vietnamese provider specialist that she sees and she does not need a translator or interpreter, so there is no communication gap was, you know
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that really made me happy. >> reporter: dr. wang says, she hopes her work in the clinic inspires other doctors to put their white coats on again. hundreds of school children are out on the tarmac learning about careers in aviation. kids got to climb into the cockpit and studied the engines and practice ground signals with professionals from alaska airlines. they showed dozens of different careers in aviation. alaska hopes to inspire a new generation of pilots. >> it is very important to us to educate and inspire these kids so we can create a more diverse work force. when i started 38 years ago, there were not many female pilots. >> that is the first time it has landed in the bay area.
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well, san francisco has figured out yet another way to get more money out of visitors. >> and it will me no more free parking on sundays. as devin fehely reports, some are not happy about having to pay. >> it is often says that there are no free rides in life. soon, it will be equally true that there is no free parking in san francisco on sundays , anymore. >> i do not think you should pay on sundays. >> reporter: philip page tobin to visit fisherman's wharf. he says, the change in the city's parking policy might just be enough to put the brakes on future trips. >> it costs a lot more. everything is going up. it is just not fair. >> reporter: faced with a projector 130 million budget shortfall in 2025, the city announced it was extending paid parking until 10:00 p.m. monday through saturday, and adding them during the day on sunday. >> i think it is fine. we need
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to generate all the revenue we need to generate. the city is a little bit under budget right now so that is a great way to increase revenues. >> reporter: he is not thrilled to pay more, but he says he understands the cash-straps that he has to find a way to make more money and hopes to get spent on budget priorities like public safety. >> we would like to reduce crime in general or property crime or auto crime. any one of those would be useful. >> reporter: it is not clear how much extra revenue the expanded parking would generate. it will gradually expand to the west of the city by the end of next year. according to sf mta, the city has offered free sunday parking since 1947, a time that phillips calls the good old days. >> it kind of sucks. i liked it back in the old days were it was cheaper and you did not have to pay a whole lot. >> those days are gone. you will start having to pay in july at fisherman's wharf.
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>> for our full breakdown of the planned phases across san francisco, you can head to our website, kpix.com. coming up, usually pg&e lineman climb telephone poles only when there is a problem. but, today, it was about competition. you will never see him in the nba, but i will introduce you to the local dad getting millions of use for his basketball videos. and the marine layer has been pretty persistent the last few days. most of the city never saw son today, but if you were inland, you did. this could change in the next few days. we will put some specifics on the wind and how much.
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some of pg&e's best lineman got a chance to show their skills at a training facility in livermore today. more than 100 electrical workers competed in numerous events that included paul climbing, rescuing injured workers, and using electrical equipment. the winners will have a chance to compete at the 2023 international lineman's rodeo in kansas. a traffic alert for north bay drivers. caltrans close 11 miles of highway 37 earlier this morning so they could rebuild the railroad crossing at sears point. the closure goes from highway 121 at sears point to walnut avenue in vallejo. caltrans says it will be opened again tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. and on the subject of road closures, tomorrow
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there will be a lot of traffic and a lot of street closures to be aware of as thousands of people in costumes or out of costumes will begin the annual race, which starts downtown link 7 1/2 miles to the city. it will end up at ocean beach. well, it is going to be a little bit chilly. are we below average temperatures? >> we were. >> i noticed. >> you are out at the little league team in nevada today. >> it was really windy. i was surprised. >> it was like a 25 mile-an-hour gust there today. the cool air, we were like five or six degrees below average in most places. then there were spots that never saw the sun and that was the city and the median east bay. san francisco, it has been that way all day. we are at the point in time for this day and any day where the marine layer stopped receding and it starts building back in.
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that is as much fun as we will see in the city today. it is 55 degrees there. it is starting to work its way over the east bay hills. here is the money shot today. this is the one from the top of mount diablo. you can see the fog spilling. there is 24 as it is coming down. and there is walnut creek. i have a cover-up out in the distance there. it is 61 degrees over here. these clouds do not exist if you get far enough in the end. here, sunshine is 10 degrees warmer. 71 right now in pleasanton. let's kind of time-out and forecast how these marine layers are going to behave. this is really what defines so much now of our lives weather-wise for this time of year. you see how the fog is spilling in the bay hills? you can see the influence this is having right now. onshore, cloudy there. low 70s in general. still in the 50s for
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places like san leandro. so let's take it forward. we will switch and put it into the future cast and watch this bill back in tonight. gets to the north bay valleys easily. that is by 2:00 a.m. so we wake up everybody. tomorrow, it is cloudy again. but those clouds then melt back pretty quickly. most of us, it probably never really clears the city . look at that forecast. it is the kind of forecast every year. do not count on much son. it is going to be breezy. it is going to be gray. bundle up. not many will be doing that for bay breakers. these are the daytime highs tomorrow if we are lucky in downtown we get to 65. all the while, we are still doing low 80s over here. the temperatures will start rebounding. monday and tuesday willee a little biof
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the marine layer. we will start diminishing that a little bit and bringing temperatures up. i could not point to anything out here in the pacific responsible. we would not really see it. let's look in seven-day forecast farm. san francisco and oakland, not a lot of change. on monday, this is a warm day for everybody. oakland goes to 72. then by the end of the week, oakland is all the way down to 62. north bay valleys will make it up to 81 by monday. then it is pretty much right around 70 by the end of the week. san jose, same story. 81 monday, 70 by the end of the week. mid-80s, perhaps, by monday and danuel cooldown. there is the warming part and the calling part of the seven-day forecast. all right. that is it for now, guys. >> [ music ] >> all right. he may not be
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what you picture when you think of an elite athlete, but he who hagotten peop arod the a st here in e batco'neil, neighborh bucket. >> reporter: this 36-year-old husband and father of has got l media. >> i could step back if you need me do. >> okay. let's see what you have got. >> reporter: has roughly 600 followers between his instagram, tiktok, and other accounts. >> at nearly 5'11", he weighs in at just below 280 pounds and that has earned him some interesting nicknames. >> i do not remember the exact account the posted it, but they said, let's give this guy a
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nickname. there must've been 10,000 comments in nicknames. tracy mickgravnt gidala. >> reporter: he never expected his love for basketball would catch the vowarrr, ay een. >>you knowhe lefte a athletic. there were some laughing emojis. i do not know how much credit there is for that. but, hey, that was a great day to get a little recognition. >> reporter: he chokes he is ready anytime head coach calls on him to play productive seconds for the warriors. >> a little load management is definitely necessary for me at this point. >> reporter: wild this day may never come, he can see the impact and social media account is having on his followers. to do something you love and
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believe in your self. >> i get these messages saying, hey, you have motivated for me to go out and lose weight. i love that. >> the man has got a jump. >>moa pion. a big pushto the top of
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ththtraight win here. but webb cannot help in the runs department. welcome to the show, patrick bailey. the giants first round pick in 2020 made his first restaurant this afternoon. tougher logan webs in a jam. and that heater helps. double play ball. six-4-3, yesterday. take another look. jd davis with a
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nice stop. nice play by schmidt. webb and bailey hug it out after six shutout innings. still scoreless in the eighth. john birdie to the play. birdie slaps at the other way and brings home the go-ahead run here at hampton. ads thand inng. it is ar yet the giants are in a hole. you always remember your first. singled to the right. but the giants cannot bring him home. the story of the day. tyler grounds one home with a couple of runners on. tags the bag. inning over. just three hits today for the giants. marlins win it 1-0. minute maid park, is taking on gusty baker and the astros. jp sears on the hill for oakland today and he did not disappoint. fourth
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inning, gets out of it with one of his seven strikeouts. gave up just runs over six innings. tied at 2 -2 in the a. it is high. it is far. it is into the upper deck. gave houston the lead and they never looked back. 3-2. moving today at a rain -soaked oak hill country club, jordan spieth gave new meaning to the expression played like crap. his opening tee shot, check it out. you know it is coming. i give you the foreshadowing. lands in a port-a-potty. talk about having to flush it and move on. these rooting for. the canadian, corey conners. seven straight pars and then this greater on a eighth. posted a second
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straight 66. connors had a one-shot lead on 16, but out of the sand, he is like, where is it? the ball was plugged in the face of the bunker. that led to a double bogey and dropped him out of the league. connors is now tied for second. to the leaderboard, it looks as such. victor and connors are one e th scottie hebega leadd now thback. all right. keptca, again. brooks was in the same position last year at the masters but then fell apart in the final-round. >> i love what you said at your loss at the masters. i did not really sleep and i figured out the mistakes i made and i will not make them again. what were those mistakes and how can you apply that to tomorrow?
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>> i cannot tell you my secrets. >> reporter: just one? >> i will not have that thought process. it will be completely different. >> kentucky derby winner trying to keep his chances alive. and, down the stretch, mage was in the running. >> ed is blazing sevens! putting on a show! who is it going to be! it is going to be national treasure! >> national treasure wins by a head giving the trainer the win. all right. now, to the circle. stanford hosting its own regional facing florida. third inning, alikhan is zero. deep ball to left field. if it is fair, it is gone. and it is fair.runs give stanford the 3-1 liter. stanford , winners. 8-0 over the gators. one away from advancing to the super regions.
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good there for the stanford softball team. the giants could have usedof those eight runs they're getting some good pitching, but their offense needs to get going a little bit >> that has happened to them a few times. the fantasy members out there don't like that. >> coming up in our next half hour, one restaurant owner literally had to move out of google's way. how he is now trying to start over while downtown is left in limbo. rest owner will literally have to move out of google's way. how he is trying to start over while downtown is left in limbo. and the threat of rising ocean waters. the plan to defend the
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from cbs news bay area, this is the evening edition. >> now it is 6:30. in washington, the debate over raising the nation's that inches closer. right now, our nation is at a standstill. >> some republican lawmakers are not convinced they can reach a deal before the country goes into default. the latest developments. >> reporter: how concerned are you about the debt talks? >> not at all. >> reporter: president biden, cutting his asian trip short after debt ceiling talks between republs th
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white house friday night ended with no deal. >> we took a pause because of the frustration. this white house will not acknowledge they are enpo republican congressional leaders walked out of the negotiation room and warned there would be no deal without spending cuts. former president trump urged republicans to hold out for everything they one. this amounts to an across-the-board 13% cut on government spending. >> i still believe we will be able to avoid a default and get something decent on. >> reporter: you, you'll reach that deadline? >> reporter: republican say a deal must be reached this weekend to get it in time to avoid default. some are urging the president to consider using the 14th amendment to go around republicans. >> using this authority would allow the president and the united states to continue to at lim is lls
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raised, the goonntt, telly dici securityyments. he pausnd stocks downward before markets closed on friday. >> president biden is expected to meet with zelenskyy tomorrow before he heads back to the u.s. zelenskyy, for his part, has been pushing for more advanced weapons and tighter sanctions on russia. president biden is expected to unveil a $275 million military aid package to ukraine. >> 16 fourth-generation fighter aircraft are part of the mix. the first step is to do the training. but russia and ukraine are not the only topics in japan. another topic was how to confront china's growing military and economic might. they also met with the leaders of austria, india, and japan to invest in clean energy projects in that region.
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betting on google to play a major role in the future of downtown, but construction on its mega campuses on pause while the tech giant assesses how to move forward in the new hybrid work environment. in the meantime, here is one business that was uploaded by google's plans. they are now trying to start over. >> reporter: well, google says it is still committed to san jose and the mass of downtown west project, but the company now emphasizes it could take as long as three decades to build out. in the meantime, blocks and blocks of land around the s.a.p. center have been fenced off, buildings demolished, and the land now sits empty because the project has had a slow down. some businesses have had to close on one literally had to move out of the way. >> right when you get up to here, that is when you will start to enter into the poor house. >> reporter: he has not reopened his popular poorhouse
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bistro restaurant more than a year after he relocated it to san jose's little italy neighborhood because it stood in the way of google's development that converted the accepted go's tobuy his ndd for the house bed. >> it habeen detely ting, there time and money that has to go into it again. we realize, it poorhouse over there where we are starting something new. >> reporter: only the sign out front remains at the restaurant's old location. it is vacant like the dozens of other properties google bought in the city's core that now face an uncertain timeline. the mayor says, he is not worried. >> we are seeing a commercial slowdown in this market. companies are taking a pause in hiring and even layoffs at some companies. it does not make a
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whole lot of sense to build commercial right now. we have been through this many times. >> reporter: googles transit-oriented downtown west project was approved for up to 7 million feet of office straight , plus retail, parks, and plazas. a company spokesperson says, google is assessing how to best move forward while, quote, working to make sure real estate investments match the future needs of our hybrid workforce. for google, it is a 10-30 year project, but they have not yet determined when the next phase will begin. >> i do not think google will be coming to downtown to begin the downtown west project, if at all, unless they are going to make a lot of money by doing it. >> reporter: university professor kelly snyder says, that is the risk when working with four-profit companies. but google is moving into other existing tech campuses in north san jose and those campuses could employ thousands of
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workers. >> we sold that land. google is the rightful owner. they have no obligation to build anything on it until or unless they want to. that might be in four years or 22 years. >> reporter: the uprooting is called bittersweet. >> we had to move and they're not going to be working on it right now. however, at the time the property is sold and the house is getting ready to move, the location right here might have been gone. >> reporter: as a businessman, he understands the importance of planning for the long-term and like google, he is taking the risk you will all pencil out sometime in the future. >> the city has estimated the economic impact of the project that $19 billion. another big boost in the south bay as we take a look at that stadium. the super bowl looks like it is coming back to the bay area in 2026, which will be 10 years after the last
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time we hosted the super bowl. levi's stadium is supposed to be a lock for hosting super bowl lx. nfl owners are supposed to be awarding rights to the 49ers at their meeting. it will be a busy year for sports and the area with levi also set to host the fifa world cup. well, the san francisco ballet company is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year. >> there are longtime teachers preparing for a final curtain call as the next generation of dancers prepared to take the stage. >> reporter: this is where you can find 18-year-old jacey gailliard six days away, eight a day, perfecting moves at the san francisco ballet school. the pennsylvania native says, she dreamed of attending this school since she was 12 years old after completing a summer program here. her mom finally agreed to let her make the move
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alone a few years later. >> it has really been a pa i dance. people drealize how ny rter: thisnclus ta acicclas night. this year, she joined as an apprentice and made the cut. >> ultimately, the dream for me is to inspire young girls, especially african-american ballet dancers who really are not represented as well as other ethnicities with in the ballet world. >> reporter: jacey is among dozens of l.a. students whose work accommodate the festival on may 30th. this will be the final performance for school director patrick armand, who started with the company in 2010. >> as a performer, i always wanted to have people be moved and then transported by the way
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we move people on stage. it is emotional because it is younger people. they are not adults unbele danalread report: patrics en dedicated to grea inusivofhis speciaprogram for peoplengthpar disease. >> belly can be therapeutic or just life-changing. >> reporter: during his tenure, within 70% of the students have gone on to become professional dancers with the sf ballet. >> i just really love the work in getting to the stage. and you can really feel, like the preparation, and the blood and sweat and tears that these dancers put themselves through to be able to show you something so beautiful. >> reporter: the festival will feature three evenings and performances, kicking off wednesday with the world premiere. still ahead here at 6:00, a popular destination on the coast. book of the sand on stinson beach be swallowed up by the end of the century? the answer is yes. the plan to
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protect the town now from the very real threat
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sealevel rise is a threat to the entire bay area, but it is especially real for stinson beach, where a new report found that feet of sealevel rise could cause more storm flooding on highway 1 by the year 2050. and if nothing is done beyond the storm damage, those homes are right there on the beach. as many as 600 homes can be planning a defense w to wnnd the pelihe.
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>> portkes about 60 cond to go from home to their happy place. >> it is a happy day. >> reporter: she has lived in the community for the majority of her life. >> there is a strong sense of closeness in our community where we care for each other. >> reporter: she would like to age in place here. but for that to happen, the committee must are figuring out how to adapt to an inevitable future. >> i mean, i have seen this land and water interact in one way my entire life. but it is interesting to see how it can be stretched to adapt to sealevel rise. >> reporter: future sealevel rise is expected to ship the water's edge further inland, which poses threats to communities around the world, like stinson beach. >> how long can our community here? ho home
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be here? >> reporter: annual report published by the development agency explains that if no action is taken, the higher water levels would increase erosion and upland migration of marsh habitats, and furthermore coastal flooding and the resulting damage would be worse during storms. sara jones is the director of the cda. >> so stinson beach is tucked into a little no, particularly and uniquely vulnerable because you have the ocean on one side and the lagoon on the other side and beyond that you also have the creek. >> reporter: they put together the report which included this animation to show how different levels of sealevel rise could impact of community and surrounding natural habitats if no action is taken. >> what we are planning for is several decades from now. like 2040, 2050. but we are going to keep seeing the effects creeping up, you know, literally and figuratively, over time. this is not a
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hypothetical. this is something that is really before us and collectively we have some choices to make about how we want to address it. >> reporter: the cda is map t for sealevel rise. >> we are thinking about the solutions that are going to be the ones we need for several decades in the future. >> reporter: jones says there is not a one-size-fits-all strategy. >> you know, rather than putting up walls and trying to do what is called armoring, we want to look at ways to evolve and adapt the natural environment to better deal with sealevel rise. >> reporter: meade is buckled in for the long haul. she is ready to deal with the reality of sealevel rise as long as it does not go neglected. >> what seems appropriate today might not be appropriate in 20 years. we might need new techniques and engineering, and
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i leave that to the experts. >> of course, sealevel rise is a threat bay level right. it could cost an estimated $10 billion to protect all the shorelines in the area if all r long-overdue book is returned to a bare area library. when it nearly a century. and there are always fog delays, but it is not every day a volcano shuts down air-traffic. we will show you where this is happening today. >> we will just focus on the fog here at home. everybody wakes up to gray skies to our oh. in the early part of the week, we have got a warm-up, and probably less of this stuff in the start of the week postmenopausal women with hr+ her2- metastatic breast cancer are living longer with kisqali. so, long live family time.
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a couple of simultaneous food festivals weekend. the bu bruce festival had a lot of visitors enjoying all kinds of beer, wine, and liquor, along with food trucks and they best burger competition. a dozen craft breweries came out from
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across california to show off their products. meanwhile, downtown pleasant hill is taken over by the art, wine, and music festival. they say it has got something for the whole family with a beer garden, artisan crafts fair, children's zone, and stage productions. >> we are hoping a lot of people come out and enjoy the community and have fun. when you talk about downtown pleasant hill, we are taking up the entire area. it is all barricaded off. it is all walking friendly. bring your dogs and have some fun. >> the festival continues tomorrow from 10:00 to 8:00. volcanic ash temporarily shut down mexico city airports this week. the explosions today were more intense with the ash reducing visibility into of mexico ci airports were
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shut down for nearly six . what a classic looking plume from a volcano, and that is an act of one. >> i am so glad you read that script because i would not be able to say it. >> it comes up like every three to five years. and in newsrooms throughout the world, it always comes up. how do you say this? you have a little kid named po po and po po caught a paddle. that is the only way you can get through this. we are going to do this again in three years i promise you. let me show you a very pretty view of the marine layer coming in. this is the camera that sits on the mountains on the west side of the santa clara valley. and we are looking north. if you have really good eyes, you can actually see 280. but the best part about this camera is, you can see the clouds creeping over. so the ocean is out that way. peninsula. foster city. san mateo. you guys are all that way. it has already covered a lot of places over there. we will switch our w.giv tomorrow morning probably until like 9:00 or 10:00, maybe, you
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will have gray skies just like today. i will show you how the marine layer is coming back in. here is the wide view of this. there are the clouds coming in. we are losing a little bit of the reflectivity on it. and it is trying to fill in the north bay valleys, too. it is really coming into the gap for you guys. and the futurecast shows us how it takes over. there is one thing to keep in mind on that, at least in the city with the event happening. there will be so many people running to the city tomorrow. it will be cold and gray pretty much the whole time. temperatures maybe go to 60 as we topped out. this is the number for everybody else for the rest of the bay. it is going to be 83 in livermore tomorrow. you will have more sunshine than anything else. by really 9:00 in the morning you should see it. everyone else has that same story. those clouds will hang on over the city and the
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immediate golden gate. it will be a few degrees warmer than today was. then monday will be a few degrees warmer than that. that is our warming trend. tomorrow and monday. you kind of see it from oakland. you will go all the way up to 72 and then the numbers will come back down by the time we get towards thursday and friday. when we look at the north bay and the south bay, it shows up a little more here. monday, we go to 81. by the end of the week, 60s. san jose, 81 on monday and then right back down around 70. you see at exaggerated the most in those warmest east land amenities. think like concord, livermore. there is 80 on monday. and it gets as goalless upper 60s by friday. i know that looks dramatic. there is a weak little weather system that will come in from the pacific. it will bring weather down but it will cut off lows. we will give that a little bit more time.
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right now, we are just looking at a little cooldown there. all right, guys. back to you. coming up next, a book turned into a library nearly a mystery, straight ahead.
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every now and then you hear a story about a library book being returned years after its due date. >> this is a little crazy though. juliette goodrich has a story about a book almost a century overdue. >> reporter: i am afraid to touch it but i can show it to
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yo let's see. opps, it is falling apart. so it does not have a spine anymore. >> reporter: this library book is in bad shape but can you blame it? it has seen a lot of the last 141 years. >> one of my staff members came up and said, oh, somebody had returned that book. they thought it was really cool. it was a really old book. we did not realize quite how old it was. then it was falling apart. >> reporter: falling apart and past you to the st. helena library by 96 years. >> all of us were wondering where the book could have been for so long. you know? checked out in 1927. actually, none of us have seen a library book that was checked out in 1892 or anything else. and to have it be from this library from that
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far back is really incredible. >> reporter: in fact, the book is older than the library as we know it today. published in 1892, it was one of the first books available back when the library was a subscription service. think of it like the netflix of its day. $.25 per month to check out books. had someone wanted to browse its pages, they would have done that here. this was the reading room in 1886. and this is what the library looked like in 1927, after it became public. >> almost 100 years since we assume it was in the building. so we would just love to know where it has been. >> reporter: the books title you ask? "the history of the united states" by benson lawsing. a mistry man returned
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at last week with no explanation. father but not else. he did no his name. it was not somebody that she recognized. other step have no idea who this gentleman is. so we would love to find out more about the story. >> they hope to add their own chapter to this read this long missing book. but the man who returned it, if he is watching by chance, there is some good news on the past due bill. estimated at more than $1700 -- >> it would have been a lot, but i do not think we would have charged that much at any point. >> and with the condition it is in, i doubt they will be checking it out again. i was checked out of the library so long ago that calvin coolidge was president at the time. calvin coolidge who became president after warren harding died in san francisco. then i was coolidge and summary check out a book. >> and the library does not charge late fees anymore. so they are not going to charge a
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guy with this fee. they want to know more about who turned it in and where it was. >> that is the mistry. ♪ entresto is the #1 heart failure brand prescribed by cardiologists. it was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto.
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♪ made in hollywood ♪ ♪ >> the comedy series "high desert" starring patricia arquette and matt dilson is "made in hollywood." do el thiss written with incredible love. ♪ made in hollywood ♪ >> also on today's show, josh duhamel is back for another round of brotherly love and bad behavior in the comedy "buddy games: spring awakening." >> i think people's true colors come out and that's part of the evolution is even in the worst of times these guys still show found each other. >> plus, the comedy "dotty & scans pullures leslie uggams,
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star in the drama "the starling girl," and the contact thriller "mercy" features jon voight. this week on "made in

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