Tuesday, 31 May 2022

Bay Area homes are undervalued: Fortune Magazine

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) – Housing prices in the Bay Area are far from “affordable,” as many know. But new data suggests prices in the Bay may even be “undervalued.”

An article by Fortune says two-thirds of the nation’s housing markets are “overvalued,” particularly in places like Austin or Charlotte. But the Bay Area is considered undervalued.

Alexandra Stein, a realtor with Corcoran Global Living, says the high-paying tech industry keeps boosting real estate prices.

“Companies like Apple are now offering bonuses because they don’t have enough engineers, so when you see that type of money that’s being thrown around it makes sense the housing market is still ticking up,” she said.

Despite rising mortgage rates, as the federal government tries to put the damper on inflation, Stein says there are still bidding wars for houses selling for 2 or 3 million dollars in the Bay Area.

“For people that are still trying to get into that million and under market it doesn’t really exist,” she said.

Stein says as long as the area has good weather and a thriving tech industry, there will most likely be an increase in prices, because the demand is there.



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Twin Peaks' Pink Triangle will feature daytime sparkle

SAN FRANCISCO (BCN) - This year's pink triangle installation on San Francisco's Twin Peaks will sparkle both day and night with the addition of more than 1 1/2 miles of sparkling streamers, organizers said.

The lighting of the acre-sized triangle to kick off Pride Month is set for Wednesday evening.

The pink triangle project was started in 1996 by Patrick Carney, who worked with volunteers to create the pink canvas triangle over Pride weekend. In 2020, the arts nonprofit Illuminate partnered with Carney to light the triangle with 2,700 pink LED lights, and in 2021 Illuminate extended the triangle's run to all of June.

This year, sparkling pink streamers will be added to give the triangle a daytime look.

"We celebrate the return of the full Pink Triangle, now visible day and night," said San Francisco Mayor London Breed, who will officially light the triangle at 8 p.m. Wednesday. "Now more than ever, this symbol of love and inclusion needs to be seen across the city - and the world. Our civil rights are under attack, and we need to be vigilant."

The triangle lighting will be preceded by The Pink Torch Procession, which starts just before noon at Oakland City Hall. The procession will work its way across the bay, with the help of more than 50 "LGBTQ heroes" on the way to Twin Peaks for the lighting ceremony.

The torchbearers will be guided by San Francisco Dykes on Bikes, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence and SF Cheer. Additional support will come from "Rosie," a hot pink VW bus with rainbow interior (donated by The Painted Ladies Tour Company) and "Pride" (a rainbow car donated by Cruise).

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf will begin the torch procession.

"I've been involved in this growing tradition since it started three years ago," Schaaf said. "It's poignant, beautiful, emotional, zany and important - all rolled into one."

Copyright (c) 2022 Bay City News, Inc.



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Study shows negative effect of inappropriate antibiotics on kids and resulting costs

ST. LOUIS (KTVI) – A new study from Washington University in St. Louis says inappropriate antibiotics cause serious medical conditions for children, resulting in at least $74 million in excess health care costs in the United States.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, antibiotics "ONLY treat certain infections caused by bacteria."

Even so, antibiotics are a common prescription for children.

"There is a general sense that antibiotics are benign, but, in fact, antibiotics are not benign," said Dr. Anne Mobley Butler, an epidemiologist and assistant professor of infectious diseases at Washington University.

Past studies looked at a few hundred children and their antibiotic use, while Washington University researchers looked at 2.8 million children in the U.S. They examined insurance company claims to determine the cost of excess care and the negative side effects on children.

"The children who received inappropriate antibiotics had a higher risk of several complications, including skin rash, diarrhea ... and a dangerous intestinal infection," Butler said.

Children who were prescribed unsuitable antibiotics in outpatient settings such as doctors’ offices and urgent care centers were up to eight times more likely to develop complications.

“For influenza, we only saw about 4% of children receive antibiotics inappropriately. For bronchitis, we saw that 70% of children received antibiotics inappropriately,” Butler said.

The bottom line of the study is more education is needed for doctors and health care professionals in outpatient settings on guidelines for prescribing antibiotics and that parents should question pediatricians about their prescriptions

"When parents bring their children to the pediatrician's office with a common bacterial or viral infection, they should feel empowered to ask questions and say my understanding is that we don't need antibiotics for viral infection," Butler said.

Many hospitals have stewardship programs for doctors and health care workers to learn about the appropriate use of antibiotics. Such programs are less common in outpatient settings.

The CDC says there are some common bacterial infections that don't need antibiotics, including many sinus infections and some ear infections, since those ailments typically get better on their own.

"Taking antibiotics when they’re not needed won’t help you, and their side effects can still cause harm," the CDC stated.



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Monday, 30 May 2022

Petaluma woman dies after being run over by her own car

PETALUMA, Calif. (BCN) -- A woman in Petaluma who was run over by her own car has succumbed to her injuries, a spokesperson for the Petaluma Police Department announced on Monday.

The 72-year-old woman was attempting to stop the roll of her vehicle, which had somehow rolled down her driveway and started down a hill on Glen Eagle Drive on Friday, police said.

"The victim attempted to give chase, fell to the ground and was ran over and became trapped," said the PPD.

Fire personnel were able to rescue her and she was conscious and alert at the time but later died of her injuries, authorities said.

Police are withholding her name pending the notification of family members.

Copyright © 2022 Bay City News, Inc.



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San Jose: Hundreds of campaign signs stolen

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) – Who could possibly be stealing election signs in San Jose? 

That’s the big question being asked amongst politicians in the South Bay. New video shows someone ripping an election sign down just days before voters cast their ballots.

The video, which you can see in the video player above, showed a man taking San Jose mayoral candidate Matt Mahan’s election sign right outside his headquarters.

“The intimidation that comes into play, when someone is tearing down someone’s law sign, is just unacceptable. No place for that in our democracy,” Mahan said.

It’s not just him. Two other candidates – Rolando Bonilla and Van Le  – say hundreds of their election signs have been torn down too. Both are running for San Jose City Council seats. Le said roughly 200 of her campaign signs have been torn down

“I believe it’s another candidate who did it to my candidate because maybe I have a strong campaign,” she said.

“You can tell this is not an accident when the metal that holds the sign up is all warped and distorted,” Bonilla said.

All of the candidates feel that whoever is behind the sign-stealing is resorting to dirty politics. It’s also confusing voters. Some people have even asked Le if she withdrew from the city council race.

All of the candidates said that whoever is stealing their signs will not deter their campaign.



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Livermore community helps man recover after devastating RV fire

LIVERMORE, Calif. (KRON) – On this Memorial Day, members of the Livermore community are chipping in to help a Navy veteran who lost his home and most of his possessions in a fire. Ronald Weber, 67, and his dog, Buddy, managed to make it out as his RV went up in flames.

Weber’s home now looks blackened, melted and destroyed by fire. His RV was parked outside the Lowe’s on first street in Livermore. When Weber turned it on,  there was a popping noise, then smoke and flames.

Dwayne Woods was leaving Lowe’s on Friday around 1:00 p.m. when he saw firefighters putting out the RV fire. Woods lives nearby. He hadn’t met Weber yet, but he knew of him.

Weber lost all of his possessions, including cherished family photos, but he did gain a friend. Woods has started fundraising to help Weber get back on his feet.

“It's off the charts what people are doing,” Woods said. “We actually had a motorhome donated.”

The people that donated the new home want to remain anonymous, but before hearing Weber's story, they were going to sell it for $10,000.

KRON4 asked Weber where he would be if he didn’t have the support of the community and his new friend, Woods, over the last few days.

“I would be in the street and that’s not where I want to be.”

To donate to Weber's GoFundMe, click HERE.



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One shot near Fruitvale BART station

OAKLAND, Calif (KRON) -- One person was shot near the Fruitvale BART station on Monday, the Oakland Police Department confirmed to KRON4. The incident occurred just before 6:00 p.m. in the 3300 block of East 12th Street.

Police were notified of the shooting by a ShotSpotter activation and responded to the scene, providing medical aid to the victim until paramedics arrived. The victim was hospitalized and listed in stable condition.

In an unrelated case, OPD said that a dead body was found lying in the street near Lake Merritt on Monday morning. The body was found in the 200 block of 13th Street just after 6:00 a.m. OPD is investigating the death as suspicious.

Anyone with information about Monday's shooting is asked to contact the Oakland Police Felony Assault Unit at (510) 238-3426. 



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Berkeley police looking for missing woman

BERKELEY (BCN) - Berkeley Police are looking for 68-year-old Syth Hershey, who has been missing from her home on the 1700 block of Russell Street since Friday morning.

Hershey is described as a white female of medium build, 5 feet 9 inches tall. She was last seen wearing a black beanie with gray stripes, a blue and yellow sweatshirt, and red pants.

Hershey is known to spend her days in People's Park, in the area of Telegraph and Shattuck avenues, and near the Ashby BART station.

Anyone with information on Hershey's whereabouts is asked to call Berkeley Police at (510) 981-5900.

Copyright (c) 2022 Bay City News, Inc.



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Biden set to honor fallen US service members

WASHINGTON (NewsNation) — President Joe Biden Monday is set to honor fallen U.S. service members on Memorial Day.

The president is expected to be joined on Monday by first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff in a somber ceremony at the Virginia cemetery’s Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, which is dedicated to the fallen U.S. service members whose remains have not been identified. Biden will then deliver remarks on the day. He has attended the Arlington ceremony nearly every year for decade.

NewsNation will live stream the ceremony and Biden's remarks in the player above.

Hours before the ceremony, the president and first lady attended a memorial Mass for Beau Biden, who died of brain cancer seven years ago Monday. Beau also was a veteran, a personal connection the older Biden has drawn upon in the past on Memorial Day. Beau Biden served two terms as Delaware’s attorney general before declaring a run for governor. He also served in Delaware’s National Guard.

This year’s Memorial Day comes just months after the U.S. withdrawal in Afghanistan, which marked the end of America’s longest war.

This story is developing. Refresh for updates.



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How crosses and mementos help some Marines remember fallen comrades

(The Conversation) - Many members of the public don’t have a clear understanding of what service means to people in the military. How do they honor their own? What kind of spaces and activities help them reflect and remember – beyond Veterans Day and Memorial Day?

We are cultural geographers who study how people’s emotions and connections with the past are represented physically in landscapes. Recently, our research has focused on commemorative place names in the military – particularly names associated with the Confederacy, which the U.S. armed forces are now reviewing and renaming.

In 2021, one of us (Katrina Finkelstein) visited Camp Pendleton in California to research commemoration on Marine Corps bases and understand how active-duty Marines and veterans interact with those spaces. In addition to official memorials and monuments sanctioned by the military, there are more informal and intimate examples of commemoration.

These ongoing, “living” memorials can be especially meaningful for service members processing their experiences and remembering those they lost, and physically represent the emotional weight they carry every day.

A living memorial

Camp Pendleton, one of the U.S. Marines’ busiest bases, sits between San Diego and Los Angeles on miles of undeveloped coastline.

Thirteen hundred feet above the base, more than 30 crosses stand on a hillside – a memorial site established in 2003. Before deployment to Iraq, a group of seven service members – two Marine officers, two enlisted Marines, two Navy corpsmen and one Navy chaplain – carried a cross made of an old telephone pole up to the site. It was an effort to remember a peer they lost and to prepare for the mission ahead of them. Three of the seven were later killed in action.

Today, the hilltop is still used for physical training and events before and after deployments. Meanwhile, its informal commemorations have expanded and changed, as many active-duty military and veterans develop a relationship with the space.

Destroyed in a fire in 2007, the original cross was replaced, and dozens of others added. Some are more intentionally constructed, engraved and carried up the steep hillside, while others might have been made from sticks on the way.

Contributing to the memorials has become an ongoing tradition. In August 2021, for example, after 13 service members were killed in a blast at Kabul airport – including nine Marines and one sailor based at Pendleton – new crosses appeared on the hillside. Others were erected at different Marine Corps bases, echoing the spontaneous way the first Camp Pendleton cross was installed.

This living memorial receives frequent attention, despite its isolated location and despite several official memorials throughout the base.

In an oral history interview, one of the original cross bearers from 2003, chaplain Scott Radetski, attributes the site’s popularity to the “life” that exists on the hilltop. Because of its more intimate nature — secluded from the public and requiring an hourlong hike to visit — it has become especially meaningful for service members. The crosses are not a public memorial, he said, but “a warrior memorial.”

More than crosses

On the journey to the Pendleton crosses, people carry mementos to leave at the top. At first, they were small rocks, but have evolved to include sandbags, combat knives, insignia, unopened beer and liquor bottles, and helmets, all piled at the base of the crosses.

At times, officials have moved to tidy it up, such as removing cans of alcohol. But some service members have objected, stressing that these items are deeply meaningful and carefully chosen. For them, these items they’ve carried to the top of the hill represent not only their comrades, but the emotional weight that veterans carry each day because of their experiences.

“Those mementos represented that suffering, that pain, that loss, that anguish, that angst, whatever it was” that service members needed to leave behind, Radetski said. The site is not always clean and neat, but he suggests it reflects the messiness of war and the traumatic experiences of the veterans who visit the site regularly.

In October 2021, before the battalion that sustained most of the losses at the Kabul airport returned to Camp Pendleton, the group Recycle for Veterans, which brings veterans together for cleanups on the West Coast, held an event to provide maintenance of the site. The group removed debris and empty bottles, but left mementos behind, leaving it ready for more commemorations in the future.

On ‘common ground’

While many memorial landscapes can seem “fixed”, representing a single moment or individual, the crosses at Camp Pendleton show that such spaces can actually change. The crosses reaffirm the idea that public memories are not static, and neither are spaces dedicated to them; new features are added as others are removed.

The crosses are not without controversy. A decade ago, after the Los Angeles Times ran a story about the memorial on Veterans Day, the Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers filed a complaint, arguing that their presence relegated “all non-Christians who have fought and died for our country […] to second-class citizenship.” Base officials reportedly conducted a review, and the memorial still stands.

For Marines who support the memorial, however, the site can serve multiple purposes: a destination during physical training, a way to prepare for a deployment, or a journey to come to terms with their experiences upon returning home.

Often, these activities are collective. Veterans organize semiannual hikes, meaning that the site does not become obsolete or forgotten. As the site of an ever-expanding memorial, the hillside is an example of how veterans continue to return to their own community, to a place that Chaplain Radetski called a “common ground,” for remembrance and healing.



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2 teens killed at graduation party

WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) -- Two teens were killed after a shooting that took place at a graduation party in Wichita late Saturday night.

According to the Wichita Police Department, officers were called out to the graduation party at a banquet hall in the northeast part of the city around 11:20 p.m. for a report of a shooting.

When they arrived, officers found 17-year-old Boisy Barefield, of Wichita, with a gunshot wound. He was taken to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead.

According to police, an investigation revealed that during the party, a disturbance ensued between two groups that led up to the deadly shooting.

The department said dozens of people were at the party.

"I would say anywhere from 50 to 100, just a guestimate," said Captain Travis Easter.

As people were leaving the scene of the shooting, a 15-year-old girl was hit by a car.

"There were several cars that were leaving the scene at the same time," said Easter. "Got reports of several cars leaving at high rates of speed."

She was brought to an area hospital where she later died from her injuries. Her identity has not been revealed.

According to police, 18-year-old Samara Rockmore has been arrested on suspicion of felony hit and run. An investigation is ongoing.

If anyone has any information, the Wichita Police Department asks you to call detectives at 316-268-4407, the See Something Say Something hotline at 316-519-2282, or Crime Stoppers at 316-267-2111. You can also report an anonymous tip online through Crime Stoppers by clicking here.



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This is the average price of a used car in each state

(iSeeCars) - The average one-to-five-year-old car cost an average of $34,392 in April. While this is down slightly from March when the average used car cost an average of $34,449, used car prices remain elevated from the ongoing microchip shortage.

How much have used car prices risen in recent months? According to iSeeCars.com’s latest analysis of over 1.5 million used car sales in April, used car prices increased 23.9 percent, or $6,631, compared to the same period the previous year.  

Average Used Car Price Increases by State

Are used car price increases consistent across the country? Here are the average used car price increases by state in ascending order:

Used Car Price Increases by State: April 2022- iSeeCars
Rank State Year-Over-Year % Price Change
1 Wyoming 14.8%
2 Idaho 17.6%
3 Rhode Island 17.7%
4 Utah 17.8%
5 South Dakota 18.4%
6 Oklahoma 18.7%
7 New Mexico 18.8%
8 Michigan 18.8%
9 Oregon 18.9%
10 Montana 19.4%
11 Alaska 19.9%
12 Arkansas 20.4%
13 Mississippi 20.5%
14 Vermont 21.1%
15 Texas 21.1%
16 Missouri 21.1%
17 Hawaii 21.6%
18 Tennessee 21.8%
19 Kansas 22.0%
20 Wisconsin 22.2%
21 Washington 22.3%
22 Nevada 22.4%
23 Arizona 22.4%
24 Alabama 22.4%
25 New Hampshire 23.1%
26 Maine 23.2%
27 Ohio 23.3%
28 North Carolina 23.4%
29 South Carolina 23.6%
30 Louisiana 23.7%
31 Georgia 23.8%
Average Used Can Price Increase 23.9%
32 Virginia 23.9%
33 Indiana 24.0%
34 West Virginia 24.2%
35 Maryland 24.4%
36 Kentucky 24.8%
37 California 24.9%
38 Illinois 25.0%
39 Colorado 25.1%
40 New Jersey 25.6%
41 New York 25.7%
42 Florida 25.9%
43 Pennsylvania 26.0%
44 North Dakota 26.2%
45 Delaware 26.6%
46 Minnesota 26.6%
47 Massachusetts 26.9%
48 Iowa 27.0%
49 Nebraska 27.5%
50 Connecticut 29.5%
  • Connecticut is the state with the greatest used car price increase in 2022 compared to 2021 at 29.5 percent, which amounts to $7,303.
  • Wyoming has the smallest used car price increase at 14.8 percent, which amounts to $5,599.

Average Used Car Prices by State

Some states pay more than others for used cars. Here is a ranking of the average used car price by state by ascending order:

Average Used Car Price by State - iSeeCars
Rank State Average Used Car Price
1 Rhode Island $31,190
2 Ohio $31,488
3 Vermont $31,907
4 New Hampshire $31,940
5 Connecticut $32,043
6 Delaware $32,141
7 Michigan $32,154
8 New Mexico $32,279
9 Utah $32,342
10 Maryland $32,539
11 Indiana $32,565
12 Nevada $32,651
13 Virginia $32,801
14 Pennsylvania $32,822
15 New York $33,001
16 Hawaii $33,110
17 Massachusetts $33,254
18 Maine $33,284
19 New Jersey $33,345
20 Oregon $33,498
21 Oklahoma $33,547
22 Arizona $33,574
23 Florida $33,627
24 Alabama $33,663
25 Tennessee $33,773
26 West Virginia $33,827
27 Kentucky $33,888
28 Wisconsin $33,925
29 North Carolina $33,930
30 South Carolina $33,933
31 Mississippi $33,994
32 Missouri $33,995
33 Kansas $34,049
34 Minnesota $34,199
35 Louisiana $34,260
36 California $34,293
Average Used Car Price $34,392
37 Texas $34,475
38 Nebraska $34,656
39 Illinois $34,724
40 Georgia $34,954
41 Iowa $35,332
42 Colorado $35,399
43 Arkansas $35,406
44 Washington $35,526
45 Idaho $36,529
46 North Dakota $38,585
47 South Dakota $39,643
48 Montana $39,878
49 Wyoming $43,496
50 Alaska $43,935
  • Rhode Island is the state with the lowest average used car price of $31,190.
  • Alaska is the state with the highest average used car price of $43,935.

What does this mean for consumers? The current state of the used car market presents a lucrative trade-in opportunity for consumers who have a used vehicle to sell. While consumers were previously advised to wait to purchase a used car if they were able to do so, the microchip shortage is expected to persist until early 2023. The best way to avoid severe price hikes for the foreseeable future is to purchase a used vehicle that isn’t in very high demand, such as a sedan, and if possible, purchase it from a state or region with lower price increases.

More from iSeeCars.com:

Methodology

iSeeCars.com analyzed over 1.5 million 1-5-year-old used car sales in April 2021 and 2022. The average listing prices of each car model were compared between the two time periods, and the differences were expressed as both a percentage difference from the price as well as a dollar difference. Heavy-duty vehicles, low-volume vehicles, vehicles discontinued as of the 2022 model year, and vehicles with fewer than 4 of the 5 model years for each period were excluded from further analysis.

About iSeeCars.com

iSeeCars.com is a car search engine that helps shoppers find the best car deals by providing key insights and valuable resources, like the iSeeCars free VIN check reports and Best Cars rankings. iSeeCars.com has saved users over $325 million so far by applying big data analytics powered by over 25 billion (and growing) data points and using proprietary algorithms to objectively analyze, score and rank millions of new cars and used cars.

This article, How Much Have Used Car Prices Gone Up in Your State?, originally appeared on iSeeCars.com. 



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Sunday, 29 May 2022

Stanford baseball wins inaugural Pac-12 Tournament

STANFORD, Calif. (KRON) -- The Stanford Cardinal baseball team won the first-ever Pac-12 Tournament by defeating Oregon State 9-5 on Sunday in Scottsdale, Arizona. Infielder Carter Graham led the Cardinal with 4 hits and 2 RBIs, including a double and a triple.

Stanford pitcher Brandt Pancer recorded the save by pitching two scoreless innings -- striking out one batter and allowing one hit. To win the conference's inaugural baseball tournament, Stanford had to win these three games over the past week:

  • May 25: 6-3 over Arizona State
  • May 26: 15-8 over Arizona
  • May 28: 5-4 over Arizona

The Cardinal's win comes against the nation's fourth-ranked team in Oregon State (44-15), according to NCAA's website. Stanford (41-14) came into Sunday's game ranked third in the country.

According to Stanford's Twitter page, the team has been named a regional host for the NCAA Tournament and a top-eight national seed. The Cardinal will find out Monday who they will host next weekend in Palo Alto.

The College World Series in Omaha begins June 17.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Red Flag Warning to be issued in North Bay

SANTA ROSA, Calif. (KRON) -- A Red Flag Warning is set to take effect in parts of the North Bay from Monday at 11 a.m. until Tuesday night.

Fire officials are asking people to be careful while taking part in Memorial Day festivities.

KRON4 spoke with a woman who spent decades as a firefighter. She says when you can pick up a leaf like this and essentially crush it into dust in your hand, you know just how little moisture there is in the air and just how high the fire risk is.

"Until you've been in front of it, until you've experienced it in person, you just don't know how fast or how big a fire can get in those conditions," said President of Fire Safe Sonoma Roberta MacIntyre.

MacIntyre says people should take the Red Flag Warning seriously. Fire officials are forecasting critical fire weather conditions.

"It just seems like there's been so much drought and dry weather and wind it's pretty much year round almost," MacIntyre said.

There will be a combination of low relative humidity, high winds, and warm temperatures.

Macintrye says any spark can cause a wildfire. It could be from a cigarette, a chain dragged behind a car, or even cooking.

Macintrye says most fires are caused by human error.

"Roughly 95% of fires in California are caused by people, whether it's equipment or people doing silly things," she said.

Santa Rosa firefighters have already been busy this week. A vegetation fire broke out on Wednesday.

On Sunday, there was at a structure fire in the Franklin Park area that required four engines and a ladder truck.

But when there is a Red Flag Warning in effect, Macintrye recommends having your go kit ready and make sure you know where your pets are just in case.

If you live in an area where a Red Flag Warning is in effect, officials say you should reach out to family or friends out of town in case you did need to evacuate and find somewhere to stay.



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1 dead, 7 injured in Oklahoma festival shooting

TAFT, Okla. (AP) — One person was killed and seven were injured in a shooting early Sunday at an outdoor festival in eastern Oklahoma, authorities said.

Two juveniles were among those shot at the Memorial Day event near Taft, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) southeast of Tulsa, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation said in a statement.

Witnesses said an argument preceded the gunfire just after midnight, the agency said. No one has been arrested, it said.

About 1,500 people attended the event. Members of the Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office were also in attendance and immediately began rendering aid, OSBI said.

The agency provided no other details including the conditions of those injured. The Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office referred the Associated Press to OSBI for more information. A bureau spokeswoman has not responded to the AP’s calls.



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Public fight leads to arrest for 'ghost gun'

SANTA ROSA, Calif. (KRON) -- The Santa Rosa Police Department arrested two people at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds after being dispatched to the area due to a reported fight.

At approximately 7:39p.m. officers were dispatched to the scene and learned that multiple parties were involved in a fight. The officers were informed by witnesses that a female walking away from the scene was in possession of a firearm. Officers reported that they lost sight of the woman for a moment when she walked away, and they believed she placed something underneath a nearby vehicle.

When police searched under the vehicle they found a loaded polymer-80 'ghost gun' hidden within clothing. Officers believe that the gun was originally being held by a male on the scene, who then reportedly passed it to the female in order to conceal it.

Because police believe both people to have been in possession of the firearm they were both arrested and booked into the Sonoma County Jail for possession of a loaded firearm not by the registered owner. The male and female were later identified by police as Sergio Duque, 31, and Cinthya Hernandez, 30, both of Santa Rosa.



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Mtula Payton, suspect in downtown Sacramento mass shooting, arrested in Las Vegas

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) — Mtula Payton, the third named suspect in the downtown Sacramento mass shooting that occurred on April 3, has been arrested in Las Vegas, according to the Sacramento Police Department.

Payton, 27, was arrested Saturday by officers from the Las Vegas Metro Police Department and the FBI Criminal Apprehension Team.

Payton's arrest comes almost two months after a shooting between two groups of men near K St. and 10th St. in downtown Sacramento left six people dead and 12 people injured.

In the weeks since then, police and the Sacramento County District Attorney have determined that "at least five people" fired their weapons during the shooting.

Brothers Dandrae Martin, 26, and Smiley Martin, 27, were

arrested in the days after the shooting, and on April 12th, Sacramento Police announced the search for a third suspect, Mtula Payton.

Payton was arrested at a residence on the 1300 block of East Hacienda Avenue in Las Vegas.

He faces multiple counts of murder related to the downtown Sacramento shooting, as well as for a separate incident of felony domestic violence, according to Sacramento Police.

Payton was booked into a custodial facility in Nevada and will later be transported to Sacramento, where he will be booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail, according to Sacramento Police.

The Sacramento Police Department asks that any witness with information regarding this investigation to call (916) 808-5471 or Sacramento Valley Crime Stoppers at (916) 443-HELP (4357).



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SF national parks 'not safe,' US police union says

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) - The union representing the United States Park Police who patrol San Francisco's national parks stated "families should avoid unnecessary travel to the Golden Gate National Recreation Area and the Presidio" — just days ahead of Memorial Day Weekend.

Kenneth Spencer, the chairman of the U.S. Park Police Fraternal Order of Police, stated May 24 in a press release that "with the Memorial Day holiday weekend here, millions of American families are putting the final touches on their summer vacation plans. It saddens me to say that those plans should not include visits to the Golden Gate National Recreation Area or the Presidio because, simply put, they are not safe."

The statement is a very public surfacing of a labor dispute between the union and the National Park Service, which oversees the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. It also comes comes as concern about crime in San Francisco has become a topic of national concern, fueling next month's recall election of District Attorney Chesa Boudin.

For its part, the National Park Service disputes the assertion, saying it doesn't "represent the facts or reality on the ground."

The Golden Gate National Recreation Area includes several sites in San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin counties, including Alcatraz Island, China Beach, Fort Funston, Fort Mason, Lands End, the Presidio, Ocean Beach, the Sutro Baths, Fort Baker, Marin Headlands, Muir Woods, Stinson Beach and Mori Point.

Spencer said the reason parks aren't safe is "an officer staffing crisis at the agency's San Francisco Field Office." Spencer said that there are only 11 patrol officers to secure the area on a 24/7 basis, but the "massive area" of San Francisco's national parks requires at least 83 officers.

"As a result, the thousands of families and tourists who visit areas like Aquatic Park, Fort Mason, Fort Funston, and Ocean Beach are dangerously vulnerable almost all the time," Spencer said.

According to Spencer, Park police patrol officer's salaries start at $67,769 — far lower than the starting San Francisco Police Department salary of $92,560. He suggested people visit Yosemite instead.

The National Park Service's public information office disputed the assertion that its parks aren't safe.

"We are disappointed to see these misleading claims that don’t represent the facts or reality on the ground," the statement reads. "[US Park Police] current staffing in San Francisco includes patrol officers, detectives, identification technicians, canine officers, and horse mounted officers, all of whom work to keep the public safe, protect, parks, and provide public service as sworn law enforcement officers. In addition to USPP, law enforcement national park rangers also patrol parks and respond to emergencies on national park lands in San Francisco and Marin and San Mateo Counties."

Nonetheless, the NPS conceded that park police and the service as a whole have "seen a decrease in staffing over the last decade."

"Restoring staffing capacity across the National Park Service is a priority of NPS leadership and is reflected in the 2022 and 2023 NPS budget requests," the statement concludes.

The union was created in the mid-1990s to represent park police privates, technicians, investigators and detectives. It does not speak for the U.S. Park Police itself.

President Joe Biden's budget for the coming fiscal year hasn't yet been approved by Congress. The offices of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-California) and Alex Padilla (D-California) did not respond to immediate requests for comment Thursday morning.



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Saturday, 28 May 2022

Multiple people hospitalized after shooting in Chattanooga

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (KRON) -- "Several" victims were taken to the hospital after a shooting Saturday night in Chattanooga, Tennessee, the Chattanooga Police Department said in an email to KRON4. Officers said multiple parties were exchanging gunfire and numerous people then proceeded to run away from the scene.

The shooting around 11:48 p.m. ET (8:48 p.m. local) happened in the of 100 Cherry Street in downtown Chattanooga, which is right outside of the Tennessee Aquarium, according to a Chattanooga police spokesperson. Police do not believe there is a public safety threat at this time as one person of interest was detained at the scene shortly after the shooting began.

Officers assisted and provided aid to the victims as well as assist others to safety, police said.

No status on the conditions of the victims in the hospital, but police say most of them are either teenagers or in their early 20s. There were large groups of juveniles walking around the city's downtown area when the shooting happened.

Police said they do not believe all of the victims were an intended target.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.



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VP Harris tells Buffalo mourners: 'We will come together'

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Mourners laid to rest the last of 10 Black people killed in a racist attack at a Buffalo supermarket with a service on Saturday that became a call to action and an emotional plea to end the hate and violence that has wracked the nation.

The funeral for 86-year-old Ruth Whitfield — the oldest of the 10 people killed in the attack two weeks ago — included an impromptu speech by Vice President Kamala Harris. She attended the service at Mount Olive Baptist Church in Buffalo with second gentleman Doug Emhoff.

Harris told the mourners this is a moment in time for “all good people” to stand up to the injustice that happened at the Tops Friendly Market on May 14, as well as at the Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and in other mass shootings.

“This is a moment that requires all good people, all God-loving people to stand up and say we will not stand for this. Enough is enough,” said Harris, who wasn’t scheduled to speak and came to the microphone at the urging of the Rev. Al Sharpton. “We will come together based on what we all know we have in common, and we will not let those people who are motivated by hate separate us or make us feel fear.”

Following the funeral, Harris and Emhoff visited a memorial outside the supermarket. The vice president left a large bouquet of white flowers, and the pair paused to pray for several minutes. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden had placed flowers at the same memorial on May 17 and had visited with the victims’ families. Biden is expected to head to Texas for a visit this weekend with the families of victim's of Tuesday's school shooting.

Harris later told reporters that the administration is not “sitting around waiting to figure out what the solution looks like” to the nation's gun violence problem.

“We know what works on that,” she said, reiterating support for background checks and a ban on assault weapons.

“Let’s have an assault weapons ban,” she said. “An assault weapon is a weapon of war with no place, no place in civil society. Background checks: Why should anyone be able to buy a weapon that can kill other human beings without at least knowing: Hey, that person committed a violent crime before, are they a threat against themselves or others?"

Harris said the nation has to come together, as well.

“We have to agree that if we are to be strong as a nation, we must stand strong, identifying our diversity as our unity,” she said.

It's been a sad week of goodbyes for family and friends of the Buffalo shooting victims, a group that includes a restaurant worker who went to the market to buy his 3-year-old’s birthday cake; a father and die-hard Buffalo Bills fan who worked as a school bus aide; and a 32-year-old sister who moved to the city to help a brother battling leukemia.

Whitfield, a grandmother and mother of four, had been inside the supermarket after visiting her husband of 68 years in a nursing home when a gunman identified by police as 18-year-old Payton Gendron began the deadly onslaught.

Authorities said Gendron, who is white, targeted the store three hours from his home in Conklin because it is in a predominantly Black neighborhood.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who delivered a fiery tribute to Whitfield at the beginning of the funeral service, called for all “accomplices” who aided and abetted “this monster” who opened fire in the supermarket to be held accountable, from the gun manufacturers and distributors to the parents of the suspect.

Crump said those those who “instructed and radicalized this young, insecure individual” should also be held to account for taking Whitfield from her family, the Buffalo community and the planet. He called her “one of the most angelic figures that we have ever known.”

“It is a sin that this young depraved man, not a boy, went and killed Ruth Whitfield and the ‘Buffalo 10,’” Crump said, referring to the victims.

Sharpton described being floored to learn the shooter live-streamed his assault on Twitch, noting how his mother had grown up in Alabama, where hooded members of the Ku Klux Klan once killed Black people.

Today, he said, white supremacists “are proud to practice racism.”

Sharpton made a pitch for gun control measures during his eulogy, saying all communities need to come together and “disarm the haters.”

“There is an epidemic of racial violence that is accommodated by gun laws that allow people to kill us,” he said. “You ain’t got to love us, but you shouldn’t have easy access to military weapons to kill us.”

In all, 13 people were shot in the attack which federal authorities are investigating as a hate crime. Three people survived.

Whitfield was the mother of former Buffalo Fire Commissioner Garnell Whitfield.

Gendron is charged with first-degree murder and is being held without bail. His attorney has entered a plea of not guilty on his behalf.



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Uvalde a mix of pride and anger as it grieves school attack

UVALDE, Texas (AP) — Days after a local man burst into an elementary school and killed 19 children and two teachers before officers managed to kill him, the signs of grief, solidarity and local pride are everywhere in Uvalde.

Many are wearing maroon, the color for Uvalde's school district. And light blue ribbons adorn the giant oaks that shade the city's central square, where mourners come to lay flowers around a fountain and write messages on wooden crosses that bear the victims' names. In front of a day care center on one of the city's main streets, 21 wooden chairs sit empty.

Everyone in the predominantly Latino city of roughly 16,000 people seems to know someone whose life has been turned upside down by losing a family member or close friend in the attack at Robb Elementary School, which was one of the deadliest of its kind.

Joe Ruiz, pastor of Templo Cristiano, said a teacher who is friends with his wife — herself a former Uvalde teacher — summed up the community's mood best by saying people have “cried out everything” they could and are now just tired and needing rest.

Police have come under heavy criticism for waiting more than 45 minutes to confront the 18-year-old gunman, Salvador Ramos, inside the adjoining classrooms where he unleased carnage.

As the investigation into the attack continues, including Ramos' reasons for carrying it out, some residents have expressed anger toward the police. Among them is 24-year-old carpenter Juan Carranza, who said he watched the attack unfold from across the street from the school. The next day, he called the officers cowards.

Steven McCraw, who heads the Texas Department of Public Safety, said Friday that the school district's police chief, Pete Arredondo, made the “wrong decision” to wait so long before sending officers into the locked classrooms. He said Arredondo, who was in charge of the law enforcement response during the siege, believed Ramos was barricaded inside the two adjoining classrooms and that children were no longer at risk. Arredondo, who graduated from Uvalde High School and was recently elected to the City Council, hasn't spoken publicly since McCraw criticized his decision-making, and his house now has a police guard.

Oasis Outback, where Ramos bought his guns, has stayed open and its barbecue restaurant did its usual brisk Friday night business. The gun shop at the back of its sporting goods section was temporarily closed out of respect to victims' families, according to a posted sign.

An Oasis employee who declined to give her full name said the store has been getting angry calls blaming it for the attack, but the callers' phone numbers were not from the area.

Support for gun rights is strong in Uvalde, which is roughly halfway between San Antonio and the border city of Del Rio. But some parents and relatives of victims are calling for change.

“I just don't know how people can sell that type of gun to a kid 18 years old. What is he going to use it for but for that purpose?” said Siria Arizmendi, a fifth grade teacher whose niece, Eliahna Garcia, was killed. She spoke in her dining room shortly before Eliahna's great-grandparents, also Uvalde residents, arrived.

Javier Carranza, a 43-year-old gun owner and Army veteran whose daughter, Jacklyn, was killed, said it was “kind of ridiculous” to sell such firepower to an 18-year-old and that better background checks are needed.

Uvalde sits amid flat fields of cabbages, onions, carrots, corn and peppers, but mechanized farming replaced many jobs. Construction material companies are among its most coveted employers.

The city is home to a Border Patrol station that operates a highway checkpoint and monitors freight trains in what has suddenly become one of the busiest corridors for illegal crossings. A massive camp of Haitian migrants that sprang up under a bridge in Del Rio last year made headlines around the world.

Many residents can trace their family's presence in Uvalde through three or four generations, creating a cherished sense of community. On one Friday night each month, stores stay open late and food vendors occupy the central square outside a neoclassical courthouse.

“Uvalde Strong” messages adorn store windows, T-shirts and lawn signs. Curbs and sidewalks are less common the farther one gets from the central square, with roosters walking on cracked pavement near Robb Elementary School.

Ruiz, the Templo Crisitano pastor whose children and grandchildren live in Uvalde, asks new parishioners about their ancestry to get to know them better.

Before Tuesday, occasional traffic deaths were the biggest tragedies to befall Uvalde.

“We've had individuals murdered, but not on a mass scale like this," said Tony Gruber, pastor at Baptist Temple Church.



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Free buses to replace trains between South Hayward and Union City this weekend

UNION CITY, Calif. (BCN) -- Free buses will replace BART trains between the South Hayward and Union City stations this weekend.

The track closures are so crews can make extensive track upgrades, according to BART officials.

BART riders should expect delays of 20 to 25 minutes on their trips, officials said.

Copyright © 2022 Bay City News, Inc.  All rights reserved.  



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Petaluma police investigating prowling, attempted burglary incident

PETALUMA, Calif. (BCN) -- Police in Petaluma are investigating a prowling and attempted burglary incident that occurred at a residence on Thursday. On Thursday at 8:11 a.m., officers with the Petaluma Police Department responded to Webster Street on a report of an unknown suspect who walked to the rear of a residence and attempted to enter through a rear door.

Responding officers searched the residence and surrounding area but did not locate the suspect. At 6:56 p.m., police received another call from a neighbor who saw the suspect walk to the rear of the same residence.

Police said the neighbor confronted the suspect, and the suspect fled the area in a dark gray or silver Toyota sedan. Police said officers responded to two similar incidents in the area in the past eight days.

There is no connection between the suspect and the resident of the home, police said. Investigators are working to identify the suspect, and the police department is providing extra patrol to the neighborhood. The suspect is described as a White man between the ages of 30 and 40 years old, about 6 feet tall, and with a slight build and bald head.

Anyone with information about the suspect is asked to call the Petaluma Police Department at (707) 778-4372.

Copyright © 2022 Bay City News, Inc.



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SF national parks 'not safe,' US police union says

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) - The union representing the United States Park Police who patrol San Francisco's national parks stated "families should avoid unnecessary travel to the Golden Gate National Recreation Area and the Presidio" — just days ahead of Memorial Day Weekend.

Kenneth Spencer, the chairman of the U.S. Park Police Fraternal Order of Police, stated May 24 in a press release that "with the Memorial Day holiday weekend here, millions of American families are putting the final touches on their summer vacation plans. It saddens me to say that those plans should not include visits to the Golden Gate National Recreation Area or the Presidio because, simply put, they are not safe."

The statement is a very public surfacing of a labor dispute between the union and the National Park Service, which oversees the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. It also comes comes as concern about crime in San Francisco has become a topic of national concern, fueling next month's recall election of District Attorney Chesa Boudin.

For its part, the National Park Service disputes the assertion, saying it doesn't "represent the facts or reality on the ground."

The Golden Gate National Recreation Area includes several sites in San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin counties, including Alcatraz Island, China Beach, Fort Funston, Fort Mason, Lands End, the Presidio, Ocean Beach, the Sutro Baths, Fort Baker, Marin Headlands, Muir Woods, Stinson Beach and Mori Point.

Spencer said the reason parks aren't safe is "an officer staffing crisis at the agency's San Francisco Field Office." Spencer said that there are only 11 patrol officers to secure the area on a 24/7 basis, but the "massive area" of San Francisco's national parks requires at least 83 officers.

"As a result, the thousands of families and tourists who visit areas like Aquatic Park, Fort Mason, Fort Funston, and Ocean Beach are dangerously vulnerable almost all the time," Spencer said.

According to Spencer, Park police patrol officer's salaries start at $67,769 — far lower than the starting San Francisco Police Department salary of $92,560. He suggested people visit Yosemite instead.

The National Park Service's public information office disputed the assertion that its parks aren't safe.

"We are disappointed to see these misleading claims that don’t represent the facts or reality on the ground," the statement reads. "[US Park Police] current staffing in San Francisco includes patrol officers, detectives, identification technicians, canine officers, and horse mounted officers, all of whom work to keep the public safe, protect, parks, and provide public service as sworn law enforcement officers. In addition to USPP, law enforcement national park rangers also patrol parks and respond to emergencies on national park lands in San Francisco and Marin and San Mateo Counties."

Nonetheless, the NPS conceded that park police and the service as a whole have "seen a decrease in staffing over the last decade."

"Restoring staffing capacity across the National Park Service is a priority of NPS leadership and is reflected in the 2022 and 2023 NPS budget requests," the statement concludes.

The union was created in the mid-1990s to represent park police privates, technicians, investigators and detectives. It does not speak for the U.S. Park Police itself.

President Joe Biden's budget for the coming fiscal year hasn't yet been approved by Congress. The offices of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-California) and Alex Padilla (D-California) did not respond to immediate requests for comment Thursday morning.



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Suspect stole OPD car, led officers on chase that ended in Vallejo

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) -- A suspect was arrested on Friday after stealing an Oakland Police Department vehicle and leading officers on a chase, OPD said. The pursuit ended in Vallejo, where the suspect was arrested.

The incident began just before 8:30 p.m., when an OPD officer responded to an unrelated assault incident. While the officer was investigating, someone entered the OPD vehicle and drove off.

OPD officers and other police agencies pursued the vehicle until the chase ended in Vallejo.

Anyone with information on this case is asked to contact the Oakland Police Department Criminal Investigation Division at (510) 238-3326. 

This is a developing story. Stay tuned for updates.



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44th annual Carnaval returns this weekend

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) – There will be all kinds of colorful costumes around San Francisco’s Mission District this weekend. That's because a major celebration – the Carnaval – is back.

Carnaval is a deeply rooted tradition in San Francisco. With the exception of a two-year break during the pandemic, the event has been a dazzling display of Latin talent for four decades.

The revelry is an ode to the homelands of the city's historic Latin American community. Thousands of musicians and dancers make their way both between and atop decorated floats, bringing with them the gift of song and dance born in countries far and wide, like Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Cuba.

It's a tradition dating back to 1979, and the memories for the festival's executive director Rodrigo Duran go way back. He attended the parade with his mother as a kid.

"So, I'm a Carnaval baby. My mom was actually pregnant seven months with me on a float about 33 years ago, so I'm a product of Carnaval, literally," he said.

Duran explained that the festival is so much more than what meets the eye. Throughout all the fun, the Mission becomes a place for people to unite and do business.

“A lot of us didn't have the privilege to this day to join a country club or be part of a space where you intentionally network,” Duran said. “Well, Carnaval always served as that platform. The festival and parade is a point for people to meet, to engage, to have dialogue and discuss and make business."

And for this year's Oakland-based headliners Los Rakas, Carnaval is exactly how the Panamanian hip-hop duo linked up.

"We got a lot of history with Carnaval,” said Raka Dun, a member of the duo. “Me and Rico have disconnected for like a year and then we meet up back again at Carnaval, and that's when I told him, ‘Yo, I’m making music to come check me out at this stage on this street.’ He came and checked me out and ever since we been making music."

“We from Panama but it was also born from out here in the Bay, so it's an honor," said Raka Rich, the other member of the duo. 

Musicians will be up on stage entertaining audiences well past the end of the parade at 2:00 p.m. But if you want to catch all the action, head over to 24th and Bryant Streets at 9:30 a.m. on Sunday. The parade will make its way down mission street to 15th Street and Harrison Street, where it will end around 2:30 p.m. For a full route of the parade, click HERE



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Friday, 27 May 2022

Bay Area travelers share plans for Memorial Day weekend getaways

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- The holiday travel season is in full swing at San Francisco International Airport as people head to their Memorial Day weekend destinations.

KRON4 had team coverage of Memorial Day weekend travelers -- some who traveled by air and others drove to their getaway destinations.

Travelers by Car

During the 6 p.m. hour, there was not a lot of traffic on Highway 101 in Novato.

KRON4 spoke with several people about their upcoming three day weekend plans. Most say they were going to celebrate with a staycation.

One says they are going to stay local here in the Bay Area -- citing COVID-19 as one of the factors.

In contrast, Oakland airport was buzzing with travelers. A spokesperson says the latest figures show a sharp rise in people leaving for a vacation and coming in to have some fun in the Bay Area.

Travelers by Air

It's been fairly quiet at SFO this evening, but overall people are grateful to travel again even if it costs more this year.

One family was departing from San Francisco International Airport Friday is heading to the Philippines. They said tickets were more expensive but were worth it.

"It was worth it after two years," the traveler said.

Travelers we spoke with say they noticed airfare has gone up, especially for one woman going to Hawaii.

She said her last-minute ticket was more than $5,000.

Most travelers say airfare went up a few hundred dollars more for this holiday weekend, according to Hopper, an online travel site that analyzes prices.

Vacationers can expect to see airfare to the highest prices this summer in more than five years -- due to rising jet fuel prices, surging demand and lower overall capacity.



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NBA Finals brings tourism boost to SF

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) – With the Warriors winning the Western Conference on Thursday, the NBA Finals are returning to the Bay Area. There is plenty of excitement. Tourists, basketball fans and Dub Nation will pack city streets and spend money in San Francisco.

This is the first time Chase Center will host the finals, and businesses along the waterfront are hopeful they will see a boost.

“70 percent of all money spent not is not in hotels, it is out in the community. Whether they are buying souvenirs, buying clothing, eating out, going to bars, taking tours, going to museums, buying exhibits. It is very deep what people do when they spend money when they visit from out of town,” said Joe D’Alessandro, the president of the San Francisco Convention & Visitors Bureau.

With San Francisco in the spotlight, iconic scenes like Fisherman's Wharf and the Golden Gate Bridge should get some screen time during the games’ broadcast, showing off the city to an international audience and attracting them to come visit in the future! During the finals, Pier 39 Restaurant CEO Bob Partrite is bracing for a big boom in business before, after and during the games. 

“We need to buy a lot of extra beverages and food, and staff up because we are going to have good crowds over the next couple weeks,” he said.

The first finals game is Thursday and the second is on Sunday. That means a long weekend for basketball fans and their wallets. 



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How much does an NBA Finals ticket cost?

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- With a win over the Dallas Mavericks on Thursday night, the Golden State Warriors are headed back to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2019. But those who want to see the first-ever NBA Finals at Chase Center will have to pay up.

The cheapest ticket on TicketMaster for Game 1 of the series was listed at $731 on Thursday night. It gets even more expensive for Game 2, when the cheapest ticket costs $796. TicketMaster is the official ticketing partner of the NBA.

Other ticketing sites have similarly expensive prices. StubHub's cheapest Game 1 ticket was listed at $760. There was a $662 ticket on SeatGeek, but the price soars to $841 once fees are included.

People looking to sit closer to the action will have to pay even more. The cheapest lower-bowl ticket on TicketMaster for Game 1 was listed at $1,300.

Courtside seats (section VIP, row AA) were available on TicketMaster for Game 1 at $59,050. SeatGeek had a courtside ticket for $30,360 before fees and StubHub had one at $41,000.

The Warriors advanced to the finals, their sixth in eight years, with a 120-110 win over the Dallas Mavericks in Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals. They will face the winner of the series between the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat.



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