on there. this is roughly the time that the maximum shadow would fall on justin hermann plaza, so you can see it is the top of the hermann plaza and falls on a portion of the sunken plaza and a bit on the market street extension. this park, as i mentioned, is shadowed by a couple different buildings, so this potential max mm 50 minute time is not consistent. it is a few minutes from the transit center, i will let it play. almost an hour goes by. another building goes by roughly over the market street extension area, where the market is where people pass back and forth through the ferry building. then by 3:00 it is totally gone. we can come back and show the videos during question and answer but i will move on back. so one other thing we did for four of the major open spaces was to actually go out this summer and actually do some usage observations of how many people were using the park at these hours, where they were in the park, what they were doing so if we can see if there
tower. it is almost indiscernible on the ground. whereas the person taking the photo is dark overlaid that from sutro. it explains diffusion. on the right, the transamerica pyramid taken at some distance from the pyramid there is no hard line distennesseerable. where does the shooed doe begin or end because it is shining around the side of the tower and a broad amount where there are light amounts of shadow. if you quint maybe you tell. the there is a gradation. the quantitative analysis shows a dark shadow. this is not something we have found a way to easily capture in our calculations but something we know empirically happens. so now the park-by-park look. first justin hermann plaza. justin hermann plaza is about 2,000 feet from the transbay tower , a similar distance from the other two buildings that might shade it. the potential shadow from the new buildings would happen in late fall, very early winter. as little as 15 minutes, as much as 50 minutes total. the times of
leading architects in the campaign to pass prop 8. he believed a child is better off with a father and a mother. that tells me both are important, not just to manufacturer the baby but they are both important in the life of that child. child needs the influence of a father that only a man can give. and influence of a mother that only a woman can give as mother. without that something is missing. reporter: but tanya disagrees. she and her partner has a daughter. i think every child deserves loving parents. it has to do with their ability to love and care for a child. jim is a 32-year-old parishioner of holy redeemer church in the castro district. will it drive some people away? i hope not. my own particular faith journey is what it is. reporter: 56-year-old san diego native says there are many challenges ahead but vowed to work hard to bring people together. he addressed the issue of sexual abuse by priests which he called shameful. we have made a lot of progre
i m craig miller. i ll ask the head of noaa s coastal services center in a climate watch conversation coming up. belva: good evening, i m belva davis, and welcome to this week in northern california. joining me on our news panel are lisa aliferis, editor for kqed s state of health. david bacon, new america media s associate editor. and josh richman, bay area news group s political reporter. you re back, josh, with news about the state budget. that s not new for you. how bad is the news this time? pretty bad. you know, when you consider how many dozens of times we ve talked about there just on this show, you have to sort of put it in the context of all of those other bads. but the news is that started&poor s said we may be in more trouble. we already have the lowest credit rating of any state, but we may be in more trouble if lawmakers can t bass a balanced budget by the june 15 deadline. we ve got two major complications for that. one, we re short on revenues again.
belva: good evening, i m belva davis, and welcome to this week in northern california. joining me on our news panel are lisa aliferis, editor for kqed s state of health. david bacon, new america media s associate editor. and josh richman, bay area news group s political reporter. you re back, josh, with news about the state budget. that s not new for you. how bad is the news this time? pretty bad. you know, when you consider how many dozens of times we ve talked about there just on this show, you have to sort of put it in the context of all of those other bads. but the news is that started&poor s said we may be in more trouble. we already have the lowest credit rating of any state, but we may be in more trouble if lawmakers can t bass a balanced budget by the june 15 deadline. we ve got two major complications for that. one, we re short on revenues again. we started this calendar year knowing that we had about a $9 billion deficit. and now we ve got somewhere in the