For each item today on the agenda if conversations can be held to a minimum, go in the hallway, thank you. Thank you. Each speaker allowed up to 3 minute when is you have 30 seconds you will hear a chime indicating your time is up. When your time is reached i will take the next person queued to speak. Well take comments fist city hall first and then the Remote Access line. For those call nothing to submit testimony call 4156550001 enter access code 2595 347 6734 at this points you should listen to the hearing live am you need to wait for the itemure interested in speaking to and for public ment to be announced. Enter star 3 to raise your hand. Im sorry if we could not interrupt the proceedings we would appreciate that. You will hear a prompt stating you praised your hand to ask a question. Wait until the host calls upon you. When you hear that you are unmuted that is your indication to begin speaking for those via web ex, you need to log in with the link on the agenda special enter pas
Durham a suspect driving a stolen car leads deputies on a high speed chase. Our crew on the scene says the camry crashed into another car on avondale drive. The men jumped out. A police dog captured one. And the others are still on the loose. Also new tonight. Ballot battle. A lawyer for the gop wants the state board of elections to take a closer look at 90thousand ballots in durham. Good evening im dejuan hoggard. Heather walig this all comes after durham rejected the mccrory campaigns appeal. Tim pulliam is in the Raleigh Eyewitness News Center to break it all down for us. The state board of elections could hold a hearing on thursday this new hearing stems from a rejected appeal to recount votes in the governors race in Durham County. This week, pat mccrorys campaign and its surrogates will once again zero in on some 90,000 ballots in Durham County. Stark want them recounted. Recently. The Campaign Even hinted publicly at calling off a request for a statewide recount, if one happens
Good evening. Welcome to this week in Northern California. Joining me for insight and analysis of the news are mina kim, kqed news reporter. Michelle quinn, politico Silicon Valley reporter. And scott detrow, kqeds Sacramento Bureau chief. In sacramento, the legislative session wrapped up this week after a flurry of bills and some 11th hour wrangling. Lawmakers reached a deal that broke an impasse over a federal court order on prison overcrowding. Some other measures debates, increasing the minimum wage, regulating fracking, tightening restrictions on guns. Scott, you spent some late nights there this week. What were some of the biggest winners. One of the Biggest Surprise was allowing undocumented immigrants to have drivers licenses. They thought that would stall but leaders got on board with that and it passed. A bill got passed regulating hydraulic fracturing that can cause a big oil boom here in california. Another bill increased the minimum wage to ten bucks, it could be the highe
Good evening. Welcome to this week in Northern California. Joining me for insight and analysis of the news are mina kim, kqed news reporter. Michelle quinn, politico Silicon Valley reporter. And scott detrow, kqeds Sacramento Bureau chief. In sacramento, the legislative session wrapped up this week after a flurry of bills and some 11th hour wrangling. Lawmakers reached a deal that broke an impasse over a federal court order on prison overcrowding. Some other measures debates, increasing the minimum wage, regulating fracking, tightening restrictions on guns. Scott, you spent some late nights there this week. What were some of the biggest winners. One of the Biggest Surprise was allowing undocumented immigrants to have drivers licenses. They thought that would stall but leaders got on board with that and it passed. A bill got passed regulating hydraulic fracturing that can cause a big oil boom here in california. Another bill increased the minimum wage to ten bucks, it could be the highe
Good evening. Welcome to this week in Northern California. Joining me for insight and analysis of the news are mina kim, kqed news reporter. Michelle quinn, politico Silicon Valley reporter. And scott detrow, kqeds Sacramento Bureau chief. In sacramento, the legislative session wrapped up this week after a flurry of bills and some 11th hour wrangling. Lawmakers reached a deal that broke an impasse over a federal court order on prison overcrowding. Some other measures debates, increasing the minimum wage, regulating fracking, tightening restrictions on guns. Scott, you spent some late nights there this week. What were some of the biggest winners. One of the Biggest Surprise was allowing undocumented immigrants to have drivers licenses. They thought that would stall but leaders got on board with that and it passed. A bill got passed regulating hydraulic fracturing that can cause a big oil boom here in california. Another bill increased the minimum wage to ten bucks, it could be the highe