the floor of the church, but hope was running high because of an offer from the governor s office. they were going to receive some brand-new trailers to temporarily house these teens, part of a fleet dispatch from sacramento. 15 trailers were dropped off in the city of oakland lot but nine months later, they are still there. sitting empty. some of the trail is not reallocated before we could use them. frisking the pandemic so oakland told they had to reclaim the trails to house covid patients. that never happened but he waited patiently. that in july a positive update. they were going to make available a lot in west oakland, at third and peralta for all 15 trailers. within a few months we had a plan that was ready to execute so our youth were prepared to move, our staff was prepared to move. then another roadblock. this time from washington. much of administration revoked federal approval to use highway land for any homeless projects across california. and this comes
the president s initial 15- day period of social distancing expires tomorrow. he s now extended the voluntary worse case scenario when it comes to the national shutdown by 30 days. good evening, everyone. i m frank somerville working from home tonight. coronavirus pandemic. i m julie haener. many state leaders are calling on the government to provide his recommendations come as more medical equipment. california is ramping up its they say they desperately need efforts to fight the virus. the u.s. navy hospital ship mercy has docked in los angeles more medical equipment, but those requests at least right and is now taking its first now are not being granted. patients. the ship is taking reporter: as the number of noncoronavirus patients so coronavirus infections surges other nearby hospitals can nationwide, hospitals are handle the increase in covid-19 facing a desperate shortage of medical supplies and equipment. among the most critical, patients. the usns mercy has 1,
hi everybody. i first want to thank the command staff. i appreciate everything you guys do for the cadet program and for me to give me advice. huge shoutout to my family always there for me. thank you. it is a privilege to receive this award. thank you. congratulations, dexter. the next difference maker award is currently a senior at sacred heart where she has a gpa between 3.6 and 4.0 throughout her school career with two jobs at starbucks. oldest of four and has a natural mother instinct to take care of other people and their needs. beautiful smile to light up the room and personality you will love and fall in love with her right now. you are the next award de. congratulations on being a 2020 san francisco black history month difference maker. how too you feel? good. hi. i want to thank the chief of police for giving me this opportunity and thank my family for being my number one supporters. congratulations. a round of applause. thank you. [applause] the next awar
were innocent and they did not deserve this. just ahead, the search for the killer and the heroic actions of a 13-year-old boy who walked more than a dozen miles to save his siblings. about face, a crucial witness changes his testimony in the impeachment investigation. one of the president s biggest supporters now saying there was a quid pro quo with ukraine over military aid. all that plus the big chill, al s got the latest on the season s first blast of brutal cold and snow with millions of us in the cross hairs. outrage, a florida deputy arrested for body slamming a student to the ground. the local sheriff furious. it s embarrassing, okay. i m tired of it. and move over black friday, hello cash back day. the new consumer holiday that begins in just a few hours that s supposed to put money into your wallet. today, wednesday, november 6th, 2019. from nbc news, this is today with savannah guthrie and hoda kotb. live from studio 1a in rockefeller plaza. and goo
the committee plans to hold this congress. after examining the history of the scientific consensus on climate change and the public health effects of climate change in our first two hearings, today the subcommittee turns to the impact of climate change on natural disasters. this subcommittee has three goals today. first, we re going to illustrate how natural disasters are made both more intense and more frequent due to climate change. climate change is real. we are con substantiate constan of that fact. greenland lost 2 billion tons of ice in one day alone. 2 billion tons of ice lost in a day and we ve got people still telling us not to worry that climate change isn t a problem. the american people know better and they know because they are already suffering from the effects. michael man is here today to explain how and why we are seeing more intense hurricanes, more frequent wildfires and more devastating flooding because of climate change. our second goal today is to examin