Wednesday 31 March 2021

Crackdown on illegal sideshows, street racing in San Jose

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) - A new battle plan is taking shape to crackdown on illegal sideshows in San Jose.

It's not just sideshows -- Illegal street racing is also on the rise.  

San Jose leaders say illegal sideshows are getting bigger all the time and more dangerous. 

Seven people have died in connection with sideshows and street racing since 2015.  

Last month, there were reports of gunfire at a sideshow in a residential neighborhood off Leigh Avenue.   

They left behind more than a hundred shell casings and snarled traffic for hours.  

Enough is enough, says city councilmember Maya Esparza.

Up until now, enforcement efforts have targeted participants, their vehicles, and spectators. Esparza is leading the effort to pass a new city ordinance that would go after the promoters of the sideshows.

Since sideshows often pull police away from regular patrol duties, it's been suggested a full-time enforcement team should be funded.  

Aside from a new, tougher ordinance, barriers and other deterrents will be erected in areas where the sideshow and racing are occurring to say nothing of the burned rubber visible across the city.   

Despite numerous arrests and impounded vehicles, the situation is out of control says Esparza, who points out that many of the sideshow participants and organizers are from out of town.



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Guidelines laid out for concerts, live events in San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - As reopenings continue, San Francisco nightlife officials are laying out the rules and best practices for concerts and other live events.

A sign things are slowly getting back to normal if people are careful. This virtual meeting highlights the different types of options for performers and business owners to create a safe environment.

One week into the orange tier, San Francisco nightlife representatives are gearing up for a busy season with live performances allowed at restaurants, bars, and venues.

Outdoor live shows allow up to 50 attendees with social distancing of course.

“The organizer of one of these festivals must submit a health and safety plan to the Department of Public Health five business days before the event but the plan does not need to be approved before the event occurs,” Ben Van Houten, business development manager, said. 

The San Francisco Office of Economic and Workforce Development laid out all the rules, specifically the outdoor capacity for performers.

“Any number of performers are permitted provided that the performer’s space allows six feet of distance between masked performers and twelve feet of distance between an unmasked vocalist musician and other performers,” Van Houten said. 

And guidelines for the audience:

“Audience members must maintain a minimum of twelve feet away from performers. However, with outdoor dining audience members must be six feet away from performers where the performers are masked and using instrument covers,” Van Houten said. 

As for large outdoor events, like the city's annual music festival Outside Lands, which has been pushed back to Halloween weekend, public health officials and festival organizers say they are working together to create a reopening plan consistent with state and local guidelines.

CLICK HERE for the full webinar.

The organizers plan to hold another one when the city moves into a new tier with new rules.



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New app aims to help with vaccine appointments in San Jose

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) - A new mobile app is aimed at increasing vaccine equity in the South Bay and beyond. 

A San Jose planning commissioner has partnered with the app's developer to help communities hard hit by COVID.

East San Jose is one of those communities with the highest rates of infection. 

The idea is to alert people immediately to available vaccine appointments. For hard-hit areas, it's been challenging to get access and through this app, those areas are getting some help in managing the confusion. 

As eligibility for COVID-19 vaccines continues to expand, San Jose planning commissioner Rolando Bonilla does not want hard-hit communities to be left behind.

“East San Jose, like many communities throughout the state, is a community where folks from the very beginning of this pandemic haven't had the privilege to be able to work from home,” Bonilla said. 

Specifically, the zip code 95122 has the second-highest COVID-19 infection rate in Santa Clara County.

Bonilla is hoping through "Bay Area Vaccine Notifications," which can be found on the Telegram app, will help residents areas disproportionately affected by the virus get an appointment.

“In a working-class community where people are literally just trying to make ends meet and survive, this tool will give people the space to be able to wait in line without literally waiting in line on the computer and on the phone,” Bonilla said. 

The Silicon Valley software engineer behind the app says the person who signs up can be notified via cellphone.

The app scours over 100 vaccine locations throughout the Bay Area and the notification includes a direct link to sign up at the provider's website.

Bonilla says a mobile app is helpful because the #1 communication tool for people in East San Jose are smartphones.

Bonilla tells KRON4 News, local governments should do more partnerships like this to help their communities.

“As we move forward it's going to take out of the box thinking and it's going to take government--county government, city government embracing folks from the private sector to really help us problem-solve,” Bonilla said. 

This channel within the Telegram app has been growing with more than 11,000  members. 

The next steps will involve making it multi-lingual to help a wider audience become aware of open appointments.



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Pfizer: COVID vaccine safe for kids as young as 12

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - A potential new breakthrough in the battle against the pandemic -- Pfizer says their vaccine is safe and 100 percent effective for kids as young as 12.

An infectious disease expert says if all goes well, that means tweens and more teens could be lining up to get their shots before school starts in the fall.

Pfizer says none of the 12 to 15-year-olds who got the shots in their clinical study contracted the virus and the kid's side effects to the two doses were similar to those felt by young adults.

UC Berkeley infectious disease expert Dr. John Swartzberg says while this is a small study and it hasn't yet been vetted by other scientists.

If the data holds up it could mean adolescents from 12 to 15 could join the rest of 16 plus crowd already okayed to get the shots before school starts in the fall.

Getting more of the population inoculated against the virus helps us in the battle against the pandemic because everyone that's susceptible to the virus is a potential variant factory.

“We’re not only protecting those children, we’re protecting society as a whole from transmission of the virus to people who are more susceptible to it and the consequences of it, we’re also protecting society from variant factories, that is the development of new variance that could really throw a monkey wrench into our plans of getting back to normal,” Dr. Swartzberg said.

One Santa Clara parent is thrilled by the news.

“I’m a teacher so I’m already been vaccinated and my coworkers and I are so relieved to have that it’s just such a sense of comfort and so sending my kids off to school knowing that they’ve been vaccinated would just be a great feeling,” the parent said.

Another San Francisco mom of a soon-to-be 12-year-old who plans to get vaccinated herself says she is going to need more data before her son does.

“I’m not doubting the efficacy of this vaccine I’m doubting the long-term effects that we don’t know and there’s no way of knowing until the long term gets here,” the San Francisco mom said.

The drugmaker says they plan to get their study in front of the FDA as soon as possible.

It's not clear how quickly the FDA will move on approving Pfizer’s request for emergency authorization -- It's taken three to four weeks to greenlight vaccines for adults.



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Code enforcement returns: What you can expect at Lake Merritt this weekend

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) - This weekend, enforcement of rules and regulations are returning to a popular lake in an East Bay city.

Video shows what a typical weekend looks like at Lake Merritt in Oakland -- A combination of lake lovers, food trucks, and street vendors.

"Lake Merritt, being the most popular park in Oakland, is just seeing crowds as it has never seen before. Think of an outdoor music festival happening every weekend,” Joe Devries, the director of Interdepartmental Operations, said. 

The scene has become an untenable situation. Now, the city of Oakland’s Director of Interdepartmental Operations Joe Devries explains what is going to be different this weekend.

"What we're not going to allow are people to be vending alcohol or cannabis or some of the really unregulated food and, that's a food safety issue. We are allowing some of the food trucks that have their license and we know they have been approved by the health department but, if anyone just sets up a table, starts selling cooked food, pouring the grease in the lawn, things like that we are not going to allow,” Devries said. 

In fact, starting Friday folks at the lake will see the return of parking enforcement, municipal code enforcement, and traffic control.

The huge crowds started showing up at the lake back in 2019 in protest to the now infamous BBQ Becky incident involving a white woman calling Oakland police on a Black family setting up a bbq grill in an unpermitted location.

Two years later, the situation has become unbearable for some Oakland residents who called into this recent city council meeting.

"I remained concerned that if the focus is only on enforcement, that the enforcement will be disproportionate to Black people,” Lakeshore District resident Risa Jaffe said. 

"I am a Black woman and my apartment overlooks the lake. I love our diverse community. I love seeing people who look like me experiencing joy in places like Lake Merritt and, until recently I was excited about buying a home here. Living here is now an unsafe nightmare,” Lakeshore District resident Amari Hammonds said.



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Gov. Newsom to get COVID vaccine on Thursday

LOS ANGELES COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- Governor Gavin Newsom is getting vaccinated soon.

Capitol Correspondent Ashley Zavala reports the governor will receive the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine in Los Angeles County Thursday morning.

This after the state expanded eligibility to anyone 50 years of age and above.

No other details were immediately available.



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Senators push to keep Oakland Coliseum COVID-19 vaccine site open

OAKLAND, Calif. (BCN/ KRON) - California's two U.S. senators said Wednesday they have requested that the Federal Emergency Management Agency work with local and state governments to keep mass COVID-19 vaccination sites open in Oakland and Los Angeles past their planned April 11 end date.

In a letter to acting FEMA Administrator Bob Fenton, Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla asked for the sites at the Oakland Coliseum and California State University Los Angeles to stay open, saying they have both have been administering more than 7,500 doses per day, bolstering regional capacity.

Feinstein and Padilla called for FEMA "to provide the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services (CalOES) and the counties of Alameda and Los Angeles with financial and logistical support so they can take over operations, and that the federal government continues to send the sites direct shipments of vaccine doses."

With California planning to make all residents 16 and older eligible for the vaccine next month, "we believe this is precisely the time when mass vaccination sites, like the ones in Oakland and Los Angeles, are needed. It would be counterproductive to close them before the vast majority of the population is vaccinated," the senators wrote.

Copyright © 2020 by Bay City News, Inc. 



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The latest: 'Recall Gavin Newsom' effort

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KRON) -- We're following up with the proponents of the recall against Governor Gavin Newsom after a poll showed voters would keep him in office if the election happened today.

"The polls really don't matter the only poll that matters is what's going to be taking place on Election Day," Randy Economy, senior advisor, Recall Gavin Newsom, said.

Organizers of the effort to recall Governor Newsom say they still feel confident -- even after a new poll released by the Public Policy Institute of California showed the effort would fail if taken to voters on Wednesday.

The survey showed just over half of the 1,700 likely voters polled approve of the governor's job performance.

"It was actually a very good poll for us because it shows his tanking has not rebounded," Anne Dunsmore said.

The poll comes as Newsom's anti-recall campaign continues to rake in money.

Ahead of its first official fundraising deadline Wednesday night, data from the Secretary of State's Office shows the campaign has so far reported raising more than $1.25 million within its first two weeks.

That includes a quarter of a million dollar contribution recently from the professional engineers in California Political Action Committee.

In an email to potential donors Wednesday, Newsom wrote, "this is the first big test of our campaign, and everyone will be looking to see if we can match the big checks sent by the republican national committee and some of trump’s biggest donors."

Meanwhile, the petition signature verification process continues among elections officials. The last report from the Secretary of State showing 1.2 million of the 1.5 million needed signatures have been certified.

The final report is expected within the next month.

"I think we swamped them. my guess is we qualify for a special election with about 1.7 million signatures is my estimate," Dunsmore said.

If the recall qualifies for the ballot, that opens up a 30 day period where those who signed the petition can request to remove their signatures, but proponents say they're confident the governor won't be able to influence enough to defeat the effort.



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Finding COVID-19 vaccine appointments in the Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) -- Getting the COVID-19 vaccine is often quick, once you have an appointment -- but getting that appointment can be difficult. There are several ways to look.

First, check your county's website.

Sometimes they make their own appointments, like in Contra Costa County. If not, visit the state's My Turn page.

On the My Turn page, you can find appointments if available and if not you can sign up to be notified, though many have complained notifications are unreliable.

If that's the case, Twitter users can follow Bay Area Vaccine Bot. It's a bot that checks my turn every five minutes for available appointments, and tweets when it finds them. Users just need to turn on alerts to be notified.

You can also visit pharmacy sites, like CVS, Walgreens, Rite-Aid and Safeway to look for appointments.

If no luck there, you can try the websites of major medical providers, like Sutter, Dignity, UCSF and Kaiser.

Still no luck, visit vaccinefinder.org. This website operated by Boston Children's Hospital and supported by the CDC will show you locations that have available vaccines and link you to those sites.

The key takeaway is you must be aggressive about it and check sites multiple times a day because you never know when appointments will open up. Also in some cases, you are asked how many miles you want to vaccination from your home. Remember the greater the distance the greater chance you will find an appointment. 



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Multiple people dead after shooting in Southern California: Police

Former San Francisco school board VP files lawsuit following backlash for racist tweets

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - Embattled San Francisco School Board member Alison Collins is now suing the district and her fellow board members for $27 million.

Collins was stripped of her "Vice President" title after the school board passed a "no confidence" vote last week.

Collins has been under fire since a series of 2016 tweets resurfaced that have been called derogatory and racist against Asian Americans.

However, Collins claims they were taken out of context and that the "no confidence" vote violates her first amendment.

She's asking for $12 million from the district and $3 million from each board member who voted against her.



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Vaccine appointments: How to sign up in Contra Costa County

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) - Now that Contra Costa Health Services has opened eligibility up for the COVID-19 vaccine to anyone 16 years of age or older for those living or working in that county, there's been a rush to set an appointment.

In order to set a COVID-19 vaccination appointment in Contra Costa County, your best bet is to either use a computer or mobile device to access the public health department's website -- cchealth.org.

  • Under the novel coronavirus banner, click COVID vaccine.
  • Inside the COVID-19 vaccine appointments banner on the next page, click "Contra Costa Health Services."
  • This will take you to a form where you will answer 20 questions -- This will only take a few minutes.
  • Once completed, the site says to be on the lookout in the coming days for an email from health services with instructions on how to schedule an appointment.
  • Once you receive the email, follow the embedded link which will take you to "MyChart” -- That's the system the county is using to schedule appointments.
  • You can sign up through the web browser by creating a user name and password OR download the "MyChart" app and complete your registration and booking there.
  • Make sure to click "add organization” and choose Contra Costa Health Services.

Be patient once you sign up -- Appointment timeslots may not pop-up right away.

You may need to hit refresh a few times because a lot of people are trying to do the same thing you are.

Eventually you will get through.

Choose your preferred location, date, and time and "MyChart" will provide instructions for the day of your appointment.

The county has provided a phone number to call for setting an appointment for those without access to the internet. That's 844-729-8410.

The phone system was so overwhelmed Wednesday, the outgoing message stated the system had reached its call capacity, telling callers to try again Thursday.

So, it seems the web is the best way to go.



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Drive-thru vaccination site opens at Concord Six Flags Hurricane Harbor

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, Calif. (BCN/ KRON) - Contra Costa County officials Wednesday celebrated the opening of the county's first mass vaccination site, which will eventually have the capacity to administer some 15,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses per week.

The drive-thru vaccination site at Six Flags Hurricane Harbor in Concord opened Tuesday after the county's vaccination supply swelled enough to open vaccination eligibility to all residents and people who work in the county who are age 16 and older.

County officials had planned for several weeks to open a mass vaccination site, but hadn't had enough available doses to use outside of smaller vaccination clinics, retail pharmacies and multi-county health care entities.

"We promised our community we would open a large-scale vaccination site once we had enough vaccine," county Deputy Health Officer and COVID-19 Operations Chief Dr. Ori Tzvieli said Wednesday morning at the water park. "That day has come."

Contra Costa County is operating the vaccination site in collaboration with Kaiser Permanente and the National Guard.

"The goal of this site is to continue to add to the broader solution for vaccine access and increasing capacity in Contra Costa County," said Chris Boyd, Kaiser's senior vice president and area manager for the Diablo Valley. "The health and safety of our members and the communities we serve is our top priority."

Tzvieli said the county has been inundated with requests for vaccine appointments since opening them to all adult residents on Tuesday.

The county received some 30,000 requests within the first 24 hours of opening eligibility to the roughly 375,000 county residents between the ages of 16 and 49 that have yet to be vaccinated.

"We had appointments that were at risk of not being filled and we wanted to fill them," Tzvieli said.

"We knew we would get a deluge of interest, but we also knew that we had more confidence in our vaccine supply coming through that we'll be able to have more and more appointments."

Roughly 663,000 vaccine doses have been administered countywide, according to Contra Costa Health Services. Nearly a quarter of a million residents have been fully vaccinated, either with two doses of the vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna or one dose of the vaccine developed by Johnson & Johnson.

County officials initially set a goal of administering 1 million doses by July 4, but recently moved that deadline up to May 31 following ahead-of-schedule vaccination progress.

Eligible county residents can sign up for a vaccine appointment at https://ift.tt/2UrTJj2 or by calling (833) 829-2626.

County officials noted that eligibility for residents ages 16-49 is only in effect at county-operated vaccination sites and does not apply to retail pharmacies like CVS and Walgreens, which will open vaccine eligibility to all adults in accordance with the state on April 15.

"The day we gave the first vaccine in our county, we declared that getting everyone protected was our top priority," county Board of Supervisors Chair Diane Burgis said. "We haven't strayed from that goal.

Today, those efforts are getting a major shot in the arm." Tzvieli said he was confident that the county will meet its Memorial Day deadline for 1 million administered doses and could even do so earlier than the end of May.

"These vaccines are our strongest tools to end the pandemic," Tzvieli said. "Today is a good day."

Copyright © 2020 by Bay City News, Inc. 



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Marin County investigates 'clusters' of COVID-19 cases linked to team sports

MARIN COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- Marin County Public Health is currently investigating clusters of COVID-19 cases related to team sports.

It's unclear how many cases are being looked at, or what sports are involved.

But health officials say after two months of progress -- case counts are no longer declining.

And in some areas, they're actually increasing.

They add that not following sports safety guidelines, including traveling out of state, is leading to more infections.

Check back for updates.



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VP Kamala Harris to visit Bay Area next week

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) -- Vice President Kamala Harris is returning to her hometown next week, the Office of the Vice President announced Wednesday.

The VP will be spending the weekend in Los Angeles for the Easter holiday before traveling to Oakland on Monday, April 5.

Harris, who was born in Oakland and raised in Berkeley, is expected to discuss water infrastructure and small businesses.

She will also visit Chicago on Tuesday for an event on vaccine equity.

The Office of the Vice President said it will release more details at a later time.



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Homicide investigation underway in Hayward

HAYWARD, Calif. (KRON) -- Detectives are investigating a homicide in Hayward Wednesday afternoon, according to the Hayward Police Department.

The incident occurred in the area of B Street and Watkins Street.

Officials are asking the public to avoid the area.

No other details were provided.



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South Bay farm workers get second dose of COVID-19 vaccine

SANTA CLARA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- Frontline agricultural workers in the South Bay received second doses of the COVID-19 vaccine on Wednesday.

On Cesar Chavez Day, about 1,000 farm workers completed their COVID-19 vaccination.

The workers received their first dose of the vaccine on Feb. 28.

Now, these farm workers are some of the first in Santa Clara County to be fully vaccinated.

“Our farmworkers who harvest the food we put on our tables make California and this area one of the largest agricultural producing regions in the world generating billions of dollars in revenue every year,” Santa Clara County Supervisor Cindy Chavez said. "We need to keep them safe and protected by going to them with the COVID-19 vaccination because they are at increased risk of getting the virus due to working and housing conditions. With this collaboration we are bringing a significant portion of the farmworker population to safety.”

The vaccination drive was a partnership between the County of Santa Clara, United Farm Workers, Monterey Mushrooms, and the UFW Foundation.

Vaccines were completed by Santa Clara County’s mobile clinic to ensure equitable vaccine administration to all community members, especially those working in sectors and regions of the county most heavily impacted by COVID-19.

“This is a milestone in the effort to vaccinate our farm worker community in Santa Clara County,” Joe Deviney, Agriculture Commissioner for the County of Santa Clara, said. “This partnership enabled the County to offer easily accessible shots on the spot, where people work. It’s part of the path to get vaccines to impacted communities as effectively and quickly as supplies allow.”

More information about COVID-19 vaccination in Santa Clara County can be found on the County’s website at www.sccfreevax.org.



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How San Jose's Al Fresco outdoor dining program is vital for local businesses' survival

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) -- San Jose City Council unanimously voted Tuesday to extend a program that allows businesses to safely operate outdoors.

The Al Fresco outdoor dining program - which will now run through the end of the year - has allowed many businesses to continue to operate by moving outdoors to comply with state and county COVID-19 restrictions.

“We know many more are actually taking advantage of this and we want it to continue,” said San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo. 

“And I think we ought to be realistic about the reality of this pandemic, although we all hope everyone gets vaccinated quickly and we do all the right things,” Liccardo added.

"I think the virus is going to be with us in a pretty substantial way for quite a while, for a year or two.”

For Jennifer Echeverri, owner of Habana Cuba located in the SoFA Market in downtown San Jose, over the last year the Al Fresco program has helped her restaurant significantly to stay afloat. 

“Al Fresco allows us to have more seating since right now you can only seat every 6 feet, so we’ve lost a lot of dining area,” said Echeverri. 

“Having the Al Fresco, we took over some parking spots, we’re able to add 5 or 6 more tables that we wouldn’t have had if we didn’t have that.”

Currently, Santa Clara County is in the less-restrictive orange tier, allowing restaurants to seat customers indoors but only at 50% capacity. 

Echeverri tells KRON4 News she hopes the program will stick around permanently as the county and city slowly begin to reopen. 

“We need Al Fresco,” said Echeverri. 

“San Jose has perfect weather, so we need people to come out to feel safe and the longer that we can provide those opportunities to eat outside, the better for all of us in the long run.” 

The SoFA Market and the city as a whole have seen an influx of business as the county moved into the orange tier last week. 

As more residents continue to get vaccinated, more people are taking the opportunity to enjoy the outdoors after more than a year of adhering to stay-at-home orders. 

“The SoFa Market is in a unique position because we actually already had backdoor patio dining as well as our front door parklet dining, it’s always good to have extra seating outdoors, it really helps us, people definitely utilize it,” said David Ma, SoFA Market General Manager. 

“The mood has shifted upwards, it’s better just with the increase of foot traffic due to the weather in general,” Ma added. 

“I think the weather combined with the fact that people are getting vaccinated, I think the morale is a little bit better recently and not just at the market but the entire neighborhood really, so that’s a positive we’re happy to see.”

Allowing the Al Fresco program to continue will help the more than 130 businesses that signed up for the program that don’t have the means or capacity to to operate outdoors by parking lots, city streets and parks for free. 

The program also allows for gyms and cafes to move outdoors.

“For some businesses who have nice seating areas and had supportive customers, they’ve done ok, nobody is doing close to their pre-pandemic numbers, but there are bright spots amidst all of this,” said Nate LeBlanc Business Development Manager for the San Jose Downtown Association

LeBlanc says the process to apply for the Al Fresco program was seemingly easy to apply for, he also hopes the city is able to keep the program around permanently. 

“I would hope that we can continue post-pandemic as a model for things that make so much common sense like this,” said LeBlanc. 

“We have some of the greatest weather in the world, we’ve not utilized our outdoor areas to their fullest extent pre-pandemic, so this is something that I hope to see continue well into the future.”

The Al Fresco program will be extended to Dec. 31.



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'Fossil fire' burning near Boulder Creek

UPDATE - Forward progress has stopped on the Fossil fire in Santa Cruz County.

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) - Firefighters are working to contain a vegetation fire in the Boulder Creek area along Highway 9.

The fire is between 3 and 5 acres, according to Cal Fire.

No structures have been reportedly damaged.

We will continue to update this story.



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Knife-wielding attacker slashes man's face in San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) - San Francisco police are looking for the attacker who allegedly stabbed a man in the face without provocation.

The unidentified man attacked a 31-year-old man around 7th and Market Streets on February 13 at 1:15 p.m. who was with a friend and his co-worker.

The victim was transported to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

After the attack, the suspect, who is described as Black man, 30-40 years old, 5'6" tall, medium build and last seen wearing a black hat and jacket, fled the scene eastbound on Market Street and was not initially found by police after a search of the area.

Anyone with information is asked to call police.



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How to make a vaccine appointment in California if you're 50+

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - Are you 50+ and eager to get a COVID-19 vaccine?

It's finally your turn!

On Wednesday, California's MyTurn site officially made the option to book appointments for the age group.

Previously, only high-risk Californians aged 50 to 64-years-old with were eligible to make an appointment.

Visit MyTurn.CA.gov to make an appointment.

After you fill out your address and information, the site may tell you there aren't any appointments available.

Try refreshing the page and checking back periodically.

You can also enter different zip codes to see if there are available appointments in surrounding cities.



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Here's everything allowed in Alameda County orange tier

ALAMEDA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- Alameda County is the latest in the Bay Area to make a move to the less restrictive, orange tier of reopening in the state's plan.

The change goes into effect on Wednesday morning.

Starting at 8 a.m., businesses will be allowed to bring in more visitors at a time. The orange tier signals a 'moderate' risk of COVID-19 transmission, and is the second-least restrictive tier.

State officials are using average daily cases, test positivity rates and vaccination rates to determine whether counties are progressing or regressing.

But it will take at least three weeks before the county could see the yellow tier on the horizon.

“The key to keeping newly permitted activities open and moving Alameda County closer to the Yellow Tier is to continue practicing the safety measures we know work against COVID-19: wearing masks whenever we leave home (even if fully vaccinated), watching our distance, washing our hands frequently, and limiting mixing with people from different households. When it is your turn, get vaccinated with the first vaccine made available to you,” said Dr. Moss

Most of the Bay Area is now in the orange tier, with the exception of Napa, Sonoma, Solano and Contra Costa counties.

Here's what is now allowed, according to county officials:

  • Bars: Outdoors with modifications, no meals required to be served
  • Breweries, Distilleries, and Wineries: Indoors at 25 percent maximum capacity or 100 people whichever is fewer; No meals required to be served
  • Family entertainment centers: Indoors for naturally distanced activities like bowling, escape rooms, and billiards; 25 percent maximum capacity
  • Gyms, fitness centers and studios (including at hotels): 25 percent maximum capacity and indoor pools are permitted; Indoor hot tubs, saunas, and steam rooms continue to be closed
  • Movie Theaters: 50 percent maximum capacity or 200 people, whichever is fewer
  • Museums, Zoos and Aquariums: 50 percent maximum capacity
  • Offices: Indoors with modifications and remote work (telework) is strongly encouraged
  • Places of worship: 50 percent maximum capacity
  • Restaurants: 50 percent maximum capacity or 200 people, whichever is fewer
  • Retail: Open indoors with modifications and food courts permitted with indoor dining restrictions

Starting April 1, Alameda County said the following will be allowed:

  • Outdoor sports and live performances with fans/attendees: In the Orange Tier, capacity will be limited to 33 percent and with advanced reservations only.
    • Concession sales will be primarily in-seat (no concourse sales). Designated indoor seated dining area capacity will be limited to 25 percent.
    • Attendance will be limited to in-state spectators and guests must attest their reserved seats are only for one household.
  • Amusement parks: In the Orange Tier, overall park capacity and indoor capacity will be limited to 25 percent, including indoor dining.
    • Small groups with a maximum of 3 household groups may attend together. Attendance will be limited to in-state visitors. Walk up ticket sales will be permitted, but park operators must collect name and contact information of the ticket purchases for necessary contract tracing.

The reopening come with the standard reminder that face masks and social distancing are still necessary.



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Google Maps will soon guide you through indoor spaces

CHICAGO (NewsNation Now) — Google announced several new features coming to Google Maps. But the feature users are finding most fascinating is the one that allows you to use augmented reality to find your way indoors at large public places like malls, airports, stadiums and transit centers.

Live view for Google Maps first launched for Android and iPhone in 2019, but only worked outdoors. It uses arrows and other indicators to guide you to your location.

You can access the live view feature by searching for something in Google Maps on your phone.

"With indoor Google Maps, visitors can spend less time searching for building directories and more time discovering new points of interest. Simply zoom in and out of a building and go floor to floor with indoor maps," according to Google's website. 

The augmented reality feature will overlay those same digital guides to provide directions when you're indoors. For example, if you're inside an airport and need help to find your gate. You can search for what you're looking for on Google Maps and the arrows will guide you.

Google plans to first roll out the feature in some malls in Chicago, New York, L.A. and Seattle.
In just a few months, it will also launch in airports, malls, and transit stations in Tokyo and Zurich.

Google's other big map update includes information on the environment, including air quality information and an option to select the most eco-friendly route while driving.



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Murder parolee arrested in attack on Asian American woman in NYC

HELL'S KITCHEN, N.Y. (WPIX) — Police overnight arrested a man accused of punching and kicking an Asian woman to the ground outside a Midtown Manhattan building Monday, an attack that was caught on camera, according to the NYPD.

Police arrested Brandon Elliot, 38, just after 1 a.m. Wednesday in connection with the assault that's been in the headlines all week, authorities said.

Elliot, who lives just blocks from where the attack happened, is expected to face multiple charges, including assault as a hate crime and attempted assault as a hate crime, police said.

State records show Elliot has several past arrests, including in 2002 for stabbing his own mother to death in her Bronx home when he was only 19 years old.

He was sentenced at the time to 15 years to life in prison for the murder, however he received parole in November 2019, records show.

The incident occurred shortly before noon in Midtown Manhattan, just blocks from Times Square, according to police.

Authorities said the 65-year-old woman was on her way to church when she was approached by the suspect, who suddenly punched and kicked her, causing her to fall to the ground.

The suspect continued to kick her multiple times as she laid on the sidewalk, officials said. Law enforcement sources said he told the victim "you don't belong here," before fleeing the scene.

Police said the woman, whose name has not been made public, suffered a pelvis injury and contusions to the head.

According to a hospital spokesperson, she was discharged from the hospital Tuesday after being treated.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called Monday’s attack “absolutely disgusting and outrageous.” He said it was “absolutely unacceptable” that witnesses did not intervene.

Two workers inside the building have come under scrutiny after being seen on surveillance video witnessing the attack but failing to come to the woman’s aid. One of them was seen closing the building door as the woman was on the ground.

The management company who owns the building on Tuesday said that the door staff had been suspended pending an investigation, while the union representing the employees maintains they called for help immediately.

The attack Monday was among the latest in a national spike in anti-Asian hate crimes and happened just weeks after a mass shooting in Atlanta that left eight people dead, six of them women of Asian descent. 

Mayoral candidate Andrew Yang, the son of Taiwanese immigrants, said the victim “could easily have been my mother.” He, too, criticized the bystanders, saying their inaction was “exactly the opposite of what we need here in New York City.”

This year in New York City, there have been 33 hate crimes with an Asian victim as of Sunday, police said. There were 11 such attacks by the same time last year.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea announced last week that the department would increase outreach and patrols in predominantly Asian communities, including the use of undercover officers to prevent and disrupt attacks.

According to a report from Stop AAPI Hate, more than 3,795 incidents were reported to the organization from March 19, 2020, to Feb. 28. The group, which tracks incidents of discrimination, hate and xenophobia against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the U.S., said that number is “only a fraction of the number of hate incidents that actually occur.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Elderly pedestrian hit and killed in San Bruno

SAN BRUNO (BCN) -- The death of a pedestrian struck by a driver Friday night is under investigation, San Bruno police said.

The accident was reported at 10:40 p.m. at the intersection of San Bruno and Masson avenues, where officers located the pedestrian, a 74-year-old San Bruno resident, unresponsive and suffering from major injuries.

The pedestrian was treated by San Bruno Fire Department personnel and paramedics before being taken to an area hospital.

The driver, a 56-year-old San Jose resident, remained on scene and cooperated with officers, police said, adding that alcohol narcotics do not appear to be a factor.

The collision will be investigated by the Regional Major Accident Investigation Team, consisting of specially trained personnel from the San Bruno, Burlingame, South San Francisco, Hillsborough and Daly City police departments.

Anyone with any information about the collision is urged to contact the San Bruno Police Department at (650) 616-7100 or sbpdtipline@sanbruno.ca.gov. Information can be left anonymously.

Copyright © 2021 by Bay City News, Inc. 



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Pfizer says its COVID-19 vaccine protects younger teens

Pfizer announced Wednesday that its COVID-19 vaccine is safe and strongly protective in kids as young as 12, a step toward possibly beginning shots in this age group before they head back to school in the fall.

Most COVID-19 vaccines being rolled out worldwide are for adults, who are at higher risk from the coronavirus. Pfizer’s vaccine is authorized for ages 16 and older. But vaccinating children of all ages will be critical to stopping the pandemic — and helping schools, at least the upper grades, start to look a little more normal after months of disruption.

In a study of 2,260 U.S. volunteers ages 12 to 15, preliminary data showed there were no cases of COVID-19 among fully vaccinated adolescents compared to 18 among those given dummy shots, Pfizer reported.

It's a small study, that hasn't yet been published, so another important piece of evidence is how well the shots revved up the kids’ immune systems. Researchers reported high levels of virus-fighting antibodies, somewhat higher than were seen in studies of young adults.

Kids had side effects similar to young adults, the company said. The main side effects are pain, fever, chills and fatigue, particularly after the second dose. The study will continue to track participants for two years for more information about long-term protection and safety.

Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech in the coming weeks plan to ask the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and European regulators to allow emergency use of the shots starting at age 12.

“We share the urgency to expand the use of our vaccine,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a statement. He expressed “the hope of starting to vaccinate this age group before the start of the next school year" in the United States.

Pfizer isn’t the only company seeking to lower the age limit for its vaccine. Results also are expected soon from a U.S. study of Moderna’s vaccine in 12- to 17-year-olds.

But in a sign that the findings were promising, the FDA already allowed both companies to begin U.S. studies in children 11 and younger, working their way to as young as 6-month-old.

AstraZeneca last month began a study of its vaccine among 6- to 17-year-olds in Britain. Johnson & Johnson is planning its own pediatric studies. And in China, Sinovac recently announced it has submitted preliminary data to Chinese regulators showing its vaccine is safe in children as young as 3.

While most COVID-19 vaccines being used globally were first tested in tens of thousands of adults, pediatric studies won’t need to be nearly as large. Scientists have safety information from those studies and from subsequent vaccinations in millions more adults.

One key question is the dosage: Pfizer gave the 12-and-older participants the same dose adults receive, while testing different doses in younger children.

It's not clear how quickly the FDA would act on Pfizer's request to allow vaccination starting at age 12. Another question is when the country would have enough supply of shots — and people to get them into adolescents' arms — to let kids start getting in line.

Supplies are set to steadily increase over the spring and summer, at the same time states are opening vaccinations to younger, healthier adults who until now haven't had a turn.

Children represent about 13% of COVID-19 cases documented in the U.S. And while children are far less likely than adults to get seriously ill, at least 268 have died from COVID-19 in the U.S. alone and more than 13,500 have been hospitalized, according to a tally by the American Academy of Pediatrics. That’s more than die from the flu in an average year. Additionally, a small number have developed a serious inflammatory condition linked to the coronavirus.

Caleb Chung, who turns 13 later this week, agreed to volunteer after his father, a Duke University pediatrician, presented the option. He doesn't know if he received the vaccine or a placebo.

“Usually I’m just at home doing online school and there’s not much I can really do to fight back against the virus,” Caleb said in a recent interview. The study “was really somewhere that I could actually help out.”

His father, Dr. Richard Chung, said he’s proud of his son and all the other children volunteering for the needle pricks, blood tests and other tasks a study entails.

“We need kids to do these trials so that kids can get protected. Adults can’t do that for them,” Chung said.

___

AP video journalist Federica Narancio contributed to this report.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.



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World's last Blockbuster even more popular after Netflix documentary

BEND, Ore. (AP) — The Blockbuster video rental store in Bend, Oregon, soared to international fame when it became the last such franchise on Earth two years ago.

Now, a new Netflix documentary called “The Last Blockbuster” brought even more interest in the form of visitors, mail and online orders to the unassuming location in a central Oregon strip mall 170 miles east of Portland.

Since the documentary aired March 15, people from all over the world have sent flowers and called the store just to say “thank you” for staying open. In the backroom, staff members have been busy packaging thousands of online orders for Blockbuster T-shirts, hats and face masks, which are all made by Bend businesses.

The movie focuses on the manager’s day-to-day work running the store, which became the last in the world when the Blockbuster in Perth, Australia, closed two years ago. It was made by two local filmmakers who saw history and nostalgia in the store's perseverance.

“It’s a little bit crazy, but it’s a very good thing,” store manager Sandi Harding told The Bulletin in Bend. “We’ll take a little crazy if it means keeping the store open.”

Harding is the star of the movie, which peaked as high as the No. 4 movie in the United States since it appeared on Netflix March 15.

The Blockbuster video rental store in Bend was already popular when it became the last location on Earth. It drew visitors from across the United States and as far as Taiwan and London.

“It’s good for the store. It’s good for the community,” said Harding, who has been stopped in the grocery store by fans who want to take her picture. “And I can learn to live with my newfound fame as long as it doesn’t mess with what we are doing every day.”

The two Bend filmmakers behind the documentary, Taylor Morden and Zeke Kamm, had no idea if the store would stay open when they started filming in 2017. Morden said he has heard from people who call Harding a national treasure and say the store must remain open at all costs. He is pleased to know the film’s attention on Netflix may be what keeps the store open.

“For us to have some small part in helping the store stay open is amazing,” Morden said. “Not a lot of documentaries actually accomplish the goal of their story.”

The Bend Blockbuster has no plans to close. It has a steady lease agreement, and the local owners, Ken and Debbie Tisher, have leased the property since 1992, when it was a Pacific Video store. The store was franchised in 2000 and became a Blockbuster.

In its heyday, Blockbuster Video had 9,000 stores around the world. But in-store video rental stores began struggling with the rise in on-demand streaming services such as Netflix — the very streaming service now offering the Blockbuster documentary.

In 2010, Blockbuster declared bankruptcy, and by 2014, all corporate-owned stores had shuttered. That left locally owned franchises like the one in Bend to fend for themselves, and one by one, they closed.

When stores in Anchorage and Fairbanks, Alaska, shut down in 2018 — barely outlasting a Redmond, Oregon, store — Bend’s Blockbuster was the only U.S. location left. Then, in 2019, the only other Blockbuster in Perth, Australia, shut its doors, leaving Bend as the last store.

The movie also reveals that Blockbuster had an option to buy Netflix years ago, when the company was still a mail-order DVD service and hadn't transformed into the dominant streaming service it is now. The video empire's leadership, however, saw Netflix as a niche market with limited potential and declined to buy it, according to the documentary and previous news reports.

But beyond the business details, the movie taps into the nostalgia felt by people of a certain age as the world speeds up and personal interactions become less frequent, the filmmakers said. Many watching it recall working in Blockbuster stores themselves or renting from them often in their younger years.

“It’s affected people emotionally,” Kamm said. “I think it reminded people that we had this thing that was such an important part of our lives. Hopefully it reminds people to appreciate the things they have now.”

Both filmmakers feel connected with the Bend Blockbuster, even though they are done filming their movie. They contact Harding regularly to find out if she needs more DVDs of their movies or movie posters to sell at the store.

“I’m sure I’ll be involved with the folks at the last Blockbuster until they ever close,” Morden said. “There is no way we are not going to be connected.”



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TikTok star was on phone with fiancee when tree limb fell and killed her

WATERVILLE, Maine (AP) — A motorist was talking on her cellphone to her future wife when powerful winds blew a tree limb onto her car and killed her, authorities said.

Rochelle Hager, 31, of Waterville, was an executive chef who posted popular TikTok videos and was engaged to be married this fall.

“It happened really quick,” Brittanie Lynn Ritchie told the Morning Sentinel. “She has a phone mounted in her vent. I just heard a crash and then there was nothing."

Hager was driving in Farmington when a storm that produced gusts topping 50 mph (80 kph) toppled the tree limb and killed her instantly, authorities said.

Hager was the sole occupant, and no other vehicles were involved, said Farmington Police Chief Kenneth Charles, who called the situation “tragic and unique.”

Hager and Ritchie were both popular on TikTok. Together, they had more than 400,000 followers. Ritchie posted a tearful tribute and said Hager “loved her TikTok fam.”



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Tuesday 30 March 2021

Outdoor dining in San Jose is here to stay

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) - While more and more counties are easing their pandemic restrictions, some COVID adjustments are here to stay.

San Jose's city council has voted to extend outdoor dining until the end of the year.

Outdoor dining is here to stay in San Jose.

City council is allowing for the "al fresco" dining program to continue through 2021.

Restaurants like Straits have been depending on outdoor dining to keep their businesses running.

COVID-19 has taken a financial toll and with health concerns about indoor dining continuing -- The extension is a big help.

The initiative was put together by Mayor Sam Liccardo and Councilmember Dev Davis last year. 

They say the program has helped small businesses while giving the city energy and life.

Since April of last year, the city has only received 13 complaints about the program. 

Among those was noise and the types of tent structures being put up to allow for outdoor dining. 

With Santa Clara County currently in the orange tier restaurants are limited to 50% capacity indoors but because of social distancing rules, outdoor dining has become an easier and safer option.



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Oakland community center heavily damaged in fire

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) - Just weeks before they were set to reopen after more than a year because of the pandemic, a longtime Oakland institution will now have to be rebuilt after a weekend fire destroyed most of the building. 

On Sunday night, flames heavily damaged the Junior Center of Arts and Science at Lake Merritt. 

On Tuesday night, the group that has helped many over its 65-year history now needs to help themselves as they look to recover. 

Since 1954, the Junior Center of Arts and Science has been providing valuable resources to the Oakland community. 

Just weeks before they were set to reopen from the COVID pandemic, a weekend fire destroyed much of their building. 

"It's been a really tough pill to swallow... we have been so eager to see our families in person again,” executive director Dominique Enriquez said. 

For nearly 70-years, the Junior Center of Arts and Science in Oakland has been a home away from home. 

Sunday night, the refuge that has provided a space to learn, along with resources went up in flames. 

"There is considerable damage to at least three of the learning spaces, the entire entry ways, some of the offices and the entire entryway," Enriquez said.  

Oakland Fire says the blaze likely started at a nearby homeless encampment, and then quickly spread. 

The fast moving flames that destroyed most of the building have also burned hope of re-opening the center, that's been closed since last April due to COVID. 

"We were this close to returning to in-person programming, so we've been in the middle of preparation and planning and to go back in-person,” Enriquez said.  

Through hands-on arts and science classes, camps, family playdates and more, the center serves more than 8,500 young people and their families each year.

Enriquez says even during the pandemic, they provided programs virtually. 

Now, they're looking forward to walking back through the doors that they call home. 

"We're still trying to wrap our minds around what happened, but I'm looking forward to how to continue our programs in the future,” Enriquez said. 

Organizers say this will not be the end of the center, or the programs.

They say they are in need of three things to get them back up and running:

  • Money
  • Volunteers to help clean up the damage
  • Someone willing to provide them a temporary space, so they can continue with providing resources and events until they're able to get back on their feet


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