Pedestrians of the importance of safety when using our roadways. According to the police, in all four of the crisis, the drivers were made at the scene cooperated. It does not appear that drugs or alcohol played a factor. Diana says drivers, nonetheless, should be extra cautious, given the consequence of the crash between a car and someone on foot or a bicycle. If there is a collision , the person thats more likely to not withstand that is the bicyclist or the pedestrian. Reporter there is no single group that is solely responsible for these crashes. Drivers, pedestrians, and cyclists all share the road and share some responsibility for being as cautious as they can be. In the meantime, the Police Department is beefing up patrols in no trouble spots. In sunnyvale, devin fehely, kpix 5. Elon musk showed up today at twitter headquarters in San Francisco and made his grand entrance in a very unusual way. Our anne makovec shows us what he brought with him as the clock is ticking on his tak
Marin County has launched a newer version of its COVID-19 dashboard, which provides residents with data and information relating to the virus, the county announced on Friday. Marin Public Health Officer Dr. Matt Willis introduced the new launch on a YouTube video, which can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhuJAXEpz0A. | By Bay City News Service The latest public health developments around the region as of Tuesday evening include: Marin County has launched a newer version of its COVID-19 dashboard, which provides residents with data and information relating to the virus, the county announced on Friday. Marin Public Health Officer Dr. Matt Willis introduced the new
Oakland mayor-elect Sheng Thao won over opponent Loren Taylor by less than 700 votes after ranked-choice vote tabulations, but Taylor supporter's demands for a recount will not proceed, according to the county.
KQED's Marisa Lagos and Scott Shafer sat down with newly elected Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao to discuss her background, the election and what she hopes to accomplish in Oakland.
By Ken Epstein The sweep of progressive-leaning local candidates in November’s elections potentially means a seismic shift toward democratic and egalitarian policies in Oakland as the city seeks to grapple with ballooning homelessness, garbage-filled streets, violent crime, a police department still unable to emerge from federal court oversight, and lack of commitment to building housing | By Ken Epstein The sweep of progressive-leaning local candidates in November’s elections potentially means a seismic shift toward democratic and egalitarian policies in Oakland as the city seeks to grapple with ballooning homelessness, garbage-filled streets, violent crime, a police department still unable to emerge from federal court oversight, and lack of commitment to building housing