Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 3pm 20240708 : compareme

Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 3pm 20240708



not the only crime he committed that day. soaring prices with record inflation and how it is hitting your wallet. some in the industry say they are hurting for different reasons and there are impacts for you at home. to and thank you for watching. i am reed cowan. the top story at 3:00 on kpix5 and streaming on cbs news bay area, the changing rules for when and where to put the mask on and take it off. a lot of you calling saying it is confusing so we are keeping on the latest. if you get on the airport and get on the plane, you don't need to wear. a judge struck down the federal guidelines and all of the airports say they're not enforcing their own rules. buses and trains on the screen, not the same. on the ground, unique, bark, transit, they say if you want to get on, put a mask on. golden gate transit are not enforcing masks. we will keep watching throughout the day as things change. if you took buses or trains or flew in today, you could notice a little different feel in the air. for some relief, others more confusion and added concerns for your help. kenny choi has more. >> reporter: now that the federal mask mandate at airport is no longer in effect, transportation agencies like art and muni have a decision to make whether to be more stringent and keep the restrictions in place or not. some riders thought the restrictions would be automatically lifted by today but that is not the case. those meetings to discuss this issue are happening today, this is a very fluid situation so we could have updates from various agencies throughout the day. we will hear from riders later tonight, some are confused, others have strong opinions on whether the mandates should be rolled back or not. in san francisco, kenny choi with kpix5 . theft and destruction of evidence charges announce for several san francisco police officers in separate incidents. first, the department has two active officers, kevin lyons and kevin i am allen martin. allegedly destroyed evidence july of last year. both officers assigned to the tenderloin, they had no contact with the public. the second case involved a retired officer. mark williams was working with sfpd in part-time role and accused of stealing a machine gun. all three set to be arraigned on may 19th. we will get their pictures out on social media and kpix.com. should investigate and underway in oakland. chopper 5 mac over the scene with a look, still pretty active. this picture taken after noon on 83rd avenue. police walking off traffic and a lot of them searching a yard area. did not give in many details about victims or suspects in the case but we are watching and asking questions. new details on a massive fire that burned down entire home depot. san jose investigators say one man did it on purpose. anne makovec has more on the suspect. >> reporter: still a lot of questions about why this man would've started this huge fire at the san jose home depot. here is his mug shot, identified as dylan of san jose and charged with aggravated arson and other felonies. investigators say the fire was his doing on april 9th on a busy saturday evening at the home depot on blossom hill road. he set the fire in the lumber department and tried to walk out of the store with the cart full of tools. then they say he left in car driven by another person and went to other stores to steal including macy's store in the east bay. he was arrested april 15, six days after the fire. >> this was incredibly reckless and dangerous act and i felt appropriate way to hold somebody accountable for this crime was the most serious charge. >> reporter: still under investigation, if any accelerant was used in the fire as well as the status of fire protection units in the building. luckily, no one was seriously injured in that fire. as ours multis, aggravated arson charge alone could raise possible penalty of 10 years to life in prison. anne makovec with kpix5. authorities in santa clara county identified woman killed by so-called happy face killer some three decades after her death. thanks to dna evidence were authorities were able to finally identify 45-year-old patricia. the body found in unincorporated gilroy in 1993. for decades, her case was mysteriously referred to as we play chetco based on the blue clothing they found her in and where they found her on pachecho pass. >> this individual identified as keith hunter jespersen, known as the happy face cereal killer , he wrote a letter to the district attorney's office further confirming the homicide. >> the happy face killer whose real name you hurt his teeth hunter jespersen pled guilty to her death in 2007. he is 67 years old now and admitted to killing eight women in the 1990s. nationwide search for two san mateo the suspect has ended up along two year investigation. 29-year-old john and 30-year- old -- both arrested for the execution style shooting of san mateo man in his driveway nearly 2 years ago. they were caught and handcuffed out-of-state thanks they found thousands of miles of evidence, the original crime scene extensive, the crime scene technicians had their hands full ringing this man to justice. >> 18 months, long time, entire investigations bureau played a role in this. a number of little clues kept us down the path so not one individual thing other than 18 months of not getting and staying on the case. >> extradition, currently the two out-of-state but they will be transferred to san mateo county. let's look outside for the first alert forecast, chopper 5 giving a beautiful lookout at the lovely skies and all things major and weather. we understand the rain is not giving up. chief meteorologist paul heggen has that. >> we will take all the rain chances while they last. looking live at san jose which was a little short in terms of rainfall last night into early this morning but that is we expect it, barely more than a trace of rainfall and that is what you received, 0.02 inches of rain at san jose, 0.1 inches at san jose, higher amounts, quarter-inch for richmond, almost third of an inch for the moment and santa cruz mountains. the next system will be more substantial, it will last longer. what we see tonight is locally dense fog. as we go through late tomorrow morning, checking the for showers moving into bay,spre the baarea betwee tomorr evening and tomorrow night with more rain expected thursday, thursday night and the first half of the day on friday so good soaking rain for most of the bay area. we take a look at the amounts we expect over the next few days and look ahead to the weekend in a few minutes. mother nature giving us a big gulp. family financial killed why police are getting legal help, filing wrongful death lawsuit. the shooting happened two years ago inside a walmart store after stephen taylor allegedly tried to steal a couple of things out of the store including a baseball that. prosecutors say former police officer jason fletcher tried to grab the bat that led to a confrontation cut on police body,. you can see the gun drawn and the intense moment. lecture was charged with manslaughter now the family is filing wrongful death lawsuit against him, another officer involved, the entire city of san leandro. >> failure to create appropriate mechanism to respond to people with mental health crisis despite knowing, not only stephen taylor specifically was in crisis, regularly in crisis in the community. >> we heard back from the city of san leandro, not a lot, pretty thin information, they intend to defend themselves against the lawsuit, no doubt that video will be huge in the case. in alameda, the family of anand who died into the ground during arrest held a vigil to mark the one year anniversary of the night that killed him. we learned last week three alameda police officers that confront this man, mario gonzalez, in a park happened in april, will not face criminal charges. autopsy pretty key in the case ruled that the death was a homicide but the medical examiner says the methamphetamine in his system was severe enough it was the primary cause of death. alameda county das office that the evidence in the case does not prove beyond reasonable doubt the officers broke any of the laws they are bound to follow. the family of gonzales file two federal rights civil lawsuit against the city and we are watching that as well. russian reinforcements, turned the focus of destruction to eastern ukraine. the country attacking cities and towns in heavily industrial part of ukraine. the, original assault on kyiv replaced with intensified efforts to secure the donbas region. the pentagon says russia is sending thousands of reinforcements to the war-torn country. ukraine's president says he is not going to give up in that area and once to reach a peace deal. the biden administration says the war in ukraine along with record inflation is pushing prices high where we lived. you can see some of the results when you go to the grocery store. nichelle medina with the industries getting hit the hardest. >> reporter: farmers are facing growing costs. at tri-county fertilizer in richmond, kentucky, prices are way up. >> fertilizer is up $300-$400 a ton, sometimes $600 or $700. >> reporter: shipping prices driving up costs and the war in ukraine having an effect. >> russia is the second-largest exporter of fertilizer and with the sanctions and trade embargoes that we have, it is limiting the amount of supply of fertilizer to our marketplace. >> reporter: patrick penfield is a professor of supply-chain practice at syracuse university and says that makes it more expensive to grow crops. >> to exasperate matters, we have this other issue where the ukraine is not farming, not producing anything, not able to ship stuff out. >> reporter: ukraine is one of the world's leading suppliers of wheat, corn, and other grains used in countless products we eat every day. those supply shortages will likely make the high price of groceries here at home even higher. businesses like new jersey's four city brewing are also paying more. >> have gone up 18.25 cents per pound, talking about 1000 pounds per batch, it is a lot of money. >> reporter: the price of kansas going up because russia is a major exporter of aluminum. >> i think the problem in ukraine will ripple it will not affect us right right now but will affect us in general over time. the country has not raised prices for customers yet but the owners believe they will eventually have to. nichelle medina with cbs news, los angeles. at the president's push for ports. what joe biden says will make a big difference for your wallet at home. national teacher of the year has a lesson we i'm dan o'dowd and i approved this message. you are watching actual videos of the tesla full self driving technology as recorded by the drivers. from turning too tightly and hitting a pylon... [ expletive ] to swerving toward a pole. jesus. watch the bicyclist on the right almost get hit before the driver takes over. sometimes it seems the tesla doesn't want the driver to take over. i'm trying. this driver had to hit the brakes when the tesla didn't understand a detour sign. ok. here it almost hit a truck. obviously, i had to take over. and here it swerves into an oncoming lane. look at that! often, the tesla doesn't know what it wants to do. what is it doing? or just doesn't know how to turn. jesus, oh my god! tesla's full self driving software for drivers and pedestrians, it's unsafe at any speed. tell congress to shut it down. watching your wallet now, showing the closing bell first holiday of gains on the stock market. we will take a, the dow jumping more than 500 points. bigger percentage gains in the nasdaq and the s&p. president biden touting the new trillion dollar infrastructure law, his focus is on new hampshire, the nation's ports is and lingering supply-chain problems we are seeing where we live. skyler henry has the latest from capitol hill. >> reporter: at new hampshire portsmouth harbor, president biden highlighted his bipartisan infrastructure lot that includes $17 billion to fix the nation's ports and waterways. >> we could build better america. >> reporter: the portsmouth water harbor awarded more than $1 million for legislation to dredging lanes and sin, supply-chain access in the northeast, 3 million tons of cargo a year as the nation continues to grapple with backlogs and shortages. >> sending the message this port is open for business and will be for a long time. >> reporter: decade high inflation and soaring gas prices have overshadowed the president's popular infrastructure law. republicans are pouncing on those issues in their bid to take rhe control of congress in november. >> it is hard to find anything going in the right direction. i think it is likely to be a pretty big shift in congress. >> let's be absolutely clear about why we have such high prices now for two reasons, the first was covid. the second big reason for inflation is vladimir putin. >> reporter: among those joining president biden on tuesday were new hampshire senator maggie hassan and congressman chris's, both democrats up for re-election in the 2022 terms. the white house of politics does not play a role in the president's trips adding he is proud to discuss his agenda in red states, blue states, purple states. skyler henry with cbs news, capitol hill. president biden talking about funding for roads and bridges and aging water pipes. he says the war in ukraine will keep taking a toll on energy and food prices at home. we also understand outside lands just in the lineup for golden tate park this year. all new at 3:00, that includes the bay area's million green day, jack harlow, weezer. hopefully, i said that correctly. sorry if i didn't. this year's festival is august 5th through 7th. last year was halloween, tickets set to go on sale tomorrow morning at 10:00, three-day tickets start at $399. you have to pay for your own chow mein. check out kpix.com for the full and very exciting lineup. time for look at the forecast with first alert chief meteorologist paul heggen. you see the names come up, man, are the kids going to email in because i did not get that right -- >> you got green day right, that got me hooked. cross that bridge when we come to it in terms of weather early august. in the short-term, another round of rain moving in tomorrow with dense fog developing later tonight. stick around early tomorrow morning, could have impact on the wednesday morning commute. showers move in wednesday north to south, the further south you are the longer you have to wait. san jose likely not to see showers until wednesday evening. widespread rain with us on a thursday with leftover showers on friday so nice prolonged stretch of wet weather. right now, showers falling, snow showers in the high sierra, a few showers to the north, much resubstantial area of moisture taking shape and heading toward us by midday tomorrow, switch over the futurecast, the fog developing, the gray around the bay area early tomorrow morning, if that dissipates, disappeared replaced by clouds high up in the air, not much sun above the golden gate, by 11:00 a.m., showers moved to the north bay, partly cloudy skies and warmer temperatures, mixed bag of weather depending where you are but the rain will take over, by 5:00, drop down port and pass the golden gate spreading out across the bay area. the first wave of showers may evaporate before it reaches the ground, plan on shower addition for that wednesday afternoon and commute and more showers tomorrow evening with more bands of rain lining up and moving in from the pacific as we head there wednesday night, thursday, thursday night into the first half of the day friday. add that up, the estimate from the weather prediction center and the amounts as they usually do, varies widely, shades of green on the low end of things, 0.1 inches to .25 inches, inland and the east bay and santa clara valley, you get the darker shade, picking up .25 inches to .5 inches of rain, good soaking of rain, east bay, san francisco, the peninsula. the shade of blue, half inch to inch of rainfall and higher elevation spots down the peninsula and north of the golden gate with 1 inch and higher elevations of the north bay and santa cruz mountains and the atmosphere will try out for a while, make the most of the rain chance moves through. temperature is right now it is nice out, anywhere from 61 degrees downtown 60 degrees downtown san francisco. the game against the orioles, first pitch 6:40. low 60s. don't worry about passing showers tonight, mix of clouds and sunshine for the first pitch. temperatures dropped into the 40s with locally dense fog to start the day, how much we warm up depends how early, stuck around 60 degrees in the north bay with temperatures in and santa clara valley reaching closer to 70 degrees. little mid-60s around the bay with high temperatures near 60 degrees along the coast, cooler temperatures and rainy conditions often on thursday. it will not rain everywhere all the time, generally wet day and wet the first half of the day on friday before we dry out warm-up as we head through the weekend. and lynn temperature for the east bay could approach 80 degrees on sunday and running above average on monday. thanks. if you need inspiration, ahead area, life lessons in a fun w this national teacher of the year it's a done and leads the way for all of us. coming up on our streaming service cbs news bay area , sitting down with four stanford women's bask story will need to watch, national teacher. lesson books but teaches life lessons and makes it apply. michael george sat down with the winner to see what makes the learning really stick with students. are you sure, are you positive? kurt russell with the students at oberlin high school in ohio already know he is one-of-a- kind. >> the best teacher i ever had. >> reporter: now the whole country knows too. russell selected by that council of chief state school officers as this year's national teacher of the year. >> i'm nervous, excited, humbled, so many great teachers out there, just to be selected as national teacher of the year is mind blowing. it demands your attention. >> he is so passionate about what he teaches. >> reporter: i asked russell what his secret is. >> i believe what i have is what other great teachers have. we have te at a time when some are trying to ban teachers from discussing racism in the classroom, russell regularly introduces discussions with his students about race, culture, and representation. >> students are more than capable of having these conversations if they want to have it. >> he does a really good job fostering conversations where everyone can have a perspective and that perspective is totally valid. >> reporter: a teacher that challenges and engages his students and earned their respect. michael george with cbs news, new york. >> russell look at to visit the white house and meet president biden and of course first lady jill biden, who is also a teacher so they can shop talk a little bit. one key ingredient could make your next surgery more successful. the study that might be coming up at 5:00, small homes built after the 1906 earthquakes still stand to this day and some of them are coming up for sale. a look at this unique piece of san francisco history that really feel the need at the time . new medical study finds when surgeons rock out in the operating room, they do a better job. is study german university did a new study that loud hard rock music improved both accuracy and speed of the surgery. a centers for disease control and prevention when you are fixing the captioning sponsored by cbs >> o'donnell: tonight, putin's new offensive. thousands of russian troops bombard a stretch of 300 miles in ukraine as the battle for donbas begins. constant shelling in the eastern part of the country as the kremlin begins its fight for what's called the industrial heartland of ukraine. >> reporter: this river effectively serves as a front line between russian-held territory, including the nuclear power plant. >> o'donnell: tonight, ukrainian forces dig in as zelenskyy promises "we will fight." mask mandate overturned. now what? >> congratulations. ( applause ) >> o'donnell: the new maskless reality. what you need to know for your next flight or ride share, just as the c.d.c. warns of a more-contagious omicron strain

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Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 3pm 20240708 : Comparemela.com

Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 3pm 20240708

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not the only crime he committed that day. soaring prices with record inflation and how it is hitting your wallet. some in the industry say they are hurting for different reasons and there are impacts for you at home. to and thank you for watching. i am reed cowan. the top story at 3:00 on kpix5 and streaming on cbs news bay area, the changing rules for when and where to put the mask on and take it off. a lot of you calling saying it is confusing so we are keeping on the latest. if you get on the airport and get on the plane, you don't need to wear. a judge struck down the federal guidelines and all of the airports say they're not enforcing their own rules. buses and trains on the screen, not the same. on the ground, unique, bark, transit, they say if you want to get on, put a mask on. golden gate transit are not enforcing masks. we will keep watching throughout the day as things change. if you took buses or trains or flew in today, you could notice a little different feel in the air. for some relief, others more confusion and added concerns for your help. kenny choi has more. >> reporter: now that the federal mask mandate at airport is no longer in effect, transportation agencies like art and muni have a decision to make whether to be more stringent and keep the restrictions in place or not. some riders thought the restrictions would be automatically lifted by today but that is not the case. those meetings to discuss this issue are happening today, this is a very fluid situation so we could have updates from various agencies throughout the day. we will hear from riders later tonight, some are confused, others have strong opinions on whether the mandates should be rolled back or not. in san francisco, kenny choi with kpix5 . theft and destruction of evidence charges announce for several san francisco police officers in separate incidents. first, the department has two active officers, kevin lyons and kevin i am allen martin. allegedly destroyed evidence july of last year. both officers assigned to the tenderloin, they had no contact with the public. the second case involved a retired officer. mark williams was working with sfpd in part-time role and accused of stealing a machine gun. all three set to be arraigned on may 19th. we will get their pictures out on social media and kpix.com. should investigate and underway in oakland. chopper 5 mac over the scene with a look, still pretty active. this picture taken after noon on 83rd avenue. police walking off traffic and a lot of them searching a yard area. did not give in many details about victims or suspects in the case but we are watching and asking questions. new details on a massive fire that burned down entire home depot. san jose investigators say one man did it on purpose. anne makovec has more on the suspect. >> reporter: still a lot of questions about why this man would've started this huge fire at the san jose home depot. here is his mug shot, identified as dylan of san jose and charged with aggravated arson and other felonies. investigators say the fire was his doing on april 9th on a busy saturday evening at the home depot on blossom hill road. he set the fire in the lumber department and tried to walk out of the store with the cart full of tools. then they say he left in car driven by another person and went to other stores to steal including macy's store in the east bay. he was arrested april 15, six days after the fire. >> this was incredibly reckless and dangerous act and i felt appropriate way to hold somebody accountable for this crime was the most serious charge. >> reporter: still under investigation, if any accelerant was used in the fire as well as the status of fire protection units in the building. luckily, no one was seriously injured in that fire. as ours multis, aggravated arson charge alone could raise possible penalty of 10 years to life in prison. anne makovec with kpix5. authorities in santa clara county identified woman killed by so-called happy face killer some three decades after her death. thanks to dna evidence were authorities were able to finally identify 45-year-old patricia. the body found in unincorporated gilroy in 1993. for decades, her case was mysteriously referred to as we play chetco based on the blue clothing they found her in and where they found her on pachecho pass. >> this individual identified as keith hunter jespersen, known as the happy face cereal killer , he wrote a letter to the district attorney's office further confirming the homicide. >> the happy face killer whose real name you hurt his teeth hunter jespersen pled guilty to her death in 2007. he is 67 years old now and admitted to killing eight women in the 1990s. nationwide search for two san mateo the suspect has ended up along two year investigation. 29-year-old john and 30-year- old -- both arrested for the execution style shooting of san mateo man in his driveway nearly 2 years ago. they were caught and handcuffed out-of-state thanks they found thousands of miles of evidence, the original crime scene extensive, the crime scene technicians had their hands full ringing this man to justice. >> 18 months, long time, entire investigations bureau played a role in this. a number of little clues kept us down the path so not one individual thing other than 18 months of not getting and staying on the case. >> extradition, currently the two out-of-state but they will be transferred to san mateo county. let's look outside for the first alert forecast, chopper 5 giving a beautiful lookout at the lovely skies and all things major and weather. we understand the rain is not giving up. chief meteorologist paul heggen has that. >> we will take all the rain chances while they last. looking live at san jose which was a little short in terms of rainfall last night into early this morning but that is we expect it, barely more than a trace of rainfall and that is what you received, 0.02 inches of rain at san jose, 0.1 inches at san jose, higher amounts, quarter-inch for richmond, almost third of an inch for the moment and santa cruz mountains. the next system will be more substantial, it will last longer. what we see tonight is locally dense fog. as we go through late tomorrow morning, checking the for showers moving into bay,spre the baarea betwee tomorr evening and tomorrow night with more rain expected thursday, thursday night and the first half of the day on friday so good soaking rain for most of the bay area. we take a look at the amounts we expect over the next few days and look ahead to the weekend in a few minutes. mother nature giving us a big gulp. family financial killed why police are getting legal help, filing wrongful death lawsuit. the shooting happened two years ago inside a walmart store after stephen taylor allegedly tried to steal a couple of things out of the store including a baseball that. prosecutors say former police officer jason fletcher tried to grab the bat that led to a confrontation cut on police body,. you can see the gun drawn and the intense moment. lecture was charged with manslaughter now the family is filing wrongful death lawsuit against him, another officer involved, the entire city of san leandro. >> failure to create appropriate mechanism to respond to people with mental health crisis despite knowing, not only stephen taylor specifically was in crisis, regularly in crisis in the community. >> we heard back from the city of san leandro, not a lot, pretty thin information, they intend to defend themselves against the lawsuit, no doubt that video will be huge in the case. in alameda, the family of anand who died into the ground during arrest held a vigil to mark the one year anniversary of the night that killed him. we learned last week three alameda police officers that confront this man, mario gonzalez, in a park happened in april, will not face criminal charges. autopsy pretty key in the case ruled that the death was a homicide but the medical examiner says the methamphetamine in his system was severe enough it was the primary cause of death. alameda county das office that the evidence in the case does not prove beyond reasonable doubt the officers broke any of the laws they are bound to follow. the family of gonzales file two federal rights civil lawsuit against the city and we are watching that as well. russian reinforcements, turned the focus of destruction to eastern ukraine. the country attacking cities and towns in heavily industrial part of ukraine. the, original assault on kyiv replaced with intensified efforts to secure the donbas region. the pentagon says russia is sending thousands of reinforcements to the war-torn country. ukraine's president says he is not going to give up in that area and once to reach a peace deal. the biden administration says the war in ukraine along with record inflation is pushing prices high where we lived. you can see some of the results when you go to the grocery store. nichelle medina with the industries getting hit the hardest. >> reporter: farmers are facing growing costs. at tri-county fertilizer in richmond, kentucky, prices are way up. >> fertilizer is up $300-$400 a ton, sometimes $600 or $700. >> reporter: shipping prices driving up costs and the war in ukraine having an effect. >> russia is the second-largest exporter of fertilizer and with the sanctions and trade embargoes that we have, it is limiting the amount of supply of fertilizer to our marketplace. >> reporter: patrick penfield is a professor of supply-chain practice at syracuse university and says that makes it more expensive to grow crops. >> to exasperate matters, we have this other issue where the ukraine is not farming, not producing anything, not able to ship stuff out. >> reporter: ukraine is one of the world's leading suppliers of wheat, corn, and other grains used in countless products we eat every day. those supply shortages will likely make the high price of groceries here at home even higher. businesses like new jersey's four city brewing are also paying more. >> have gone up 18.25 cents per pound, talking about 1000 pounds per batch, it is a lot of money. >> reporter: the price of kansas going up because russia is a major exporter of aluminum. >> i think the problem in ukraine will ripple it will not affect us right right now but will affect us in general over time. the country has not raised prices for customers yet but the owners believe they will eventually have to. nichelle medina with cbs news, los angeles. at the president's push for ports. what joe biden says will make a big difference for your wallet at home. national teacher of the year has a lesson we i'm dan o'dowd and i approved this message. you are watching actual videos of the tesla full self driving technology as recorded by the drivers. from turning too tightly and hitting a pylon... [ expletive ] to swerving toward a pole. jesus. watch the bicyclist on the right almost get hit before the driver takes over. sometimes it seems the tesla doesn't want the driver to take over. i'm trying. this driver had to hit the brakes when the tesla didn't understand a detour sign. ok. here it almost hit a truck. obviously, i had to take over. and here it swerves into an oncoming lane. look at that! often, the tesla doesn't know what it wants to do. what is it doing? or just doesn't know how to turn. jesus, oh my god! tesla's full self driving software for drivers and pedestrians, it's unsafe at any speed. tell congress to shut it down. watching your wallet now, showing the closing bell first holiday of gains on the stock market. we will take a, the dow jumping more than 500 points. bigger percentage gains in the nasdaq and the s&p. president biden touting the new trillion dollar infrastructure law, his focus is on new hampshire, the nation's ports is and lingering supply-chain problems we are seeing where we live. skyler henry has the latest from capitol hill. >> reporter: at new hampshire portsmouth harbor, president biden highlighted his bipartisan infrastructure lot that includes $17 billion to fix the nation's ports and waterways. >> we could build better america. >> reporter: the portsmouth water harbor awarded more than $1 million for legislation to dredging lanes and sin, supply-chain access in the northeast, 3 million tons of cargo a year as the nation continues to grapple with backlogs and shortages. >> sending the message this port is open for business and will be for a long time. >> reporter: decade high inflation and soaring gas prices have overshadowed the president's popular infrastructure law. republicans are pouncing on those issues in their bid to take rhe control of congress in november. >> it is hard to find anything going in the right direction. i think it is likely to be a pretty big shift in congress. >> let's be absolutely clear about why we have such high prices now for two reasons, the first was covid. the second big reason for inflation is vladimir putin. >> reporter: among those joining president biden on tuesday were new hampshire senator maggie hassan and congressman chris's, both democrats up for re-election in the 2022 terms. the white house of politics does not play a role in the president's trips adding he is proud to discuss his agenda in red states, blue states, purple states. skyler henry with cbs news, capitol hill. president biden talking about funding for roads and bridges and aging water pipes. he says the war in ukraine will keep taking a toll on energy and food prices at home. we also understand outside lands just in the lineup for golden tate park this year. all new at 3:00, that includes the bay area's million green day, jack harlow, weezer. hopefully, i said that correctly. sorry if i didn't. this year's festival is august 5th through 7th. last year was halloween, tickets set to go on sale tomorrow morning at 10:00, three-day tickets start at $399. you have to pay for your own chow mein. check out kpix.com for the full and very exciting lineup. time for look at the forecast with first alert chief meteorologist paul heggen. you see the names come up, man, are the kids going to email in because i did not get that right -- >> you got green day right, that got me hooked. cross that bridge when we come to it in terms of weather early august. in the short-term, another round of rain moving in tomorrow with dense fog developing later tonight. stick around early tomorrow morning, could have impact on the wednesday morning commute. showers move in wednesday north to south, the further south you are the longer you have to wait. san jose likely not to see showers until wednesday evening. widespread rain with us on a thursday with leftover showers on friday so nice prolonged stretch of wet weather. right now, showers falling, snow showers in the high sierra, a few showers to the north, much resubstantial area of moisture taking shape and heading toward us by midday tomorrow, switch over the futurecast, the fog developing, the gray around the bay area early tomorrow morning, if that dissipates, disappeared replaced by clouds high up in the air, not much sun above the golden gate, by 11:00 a.m., showers moved to the north bay, partly cloudy skies and warmer temperatures, mixed bag of weather depending where you are but the rain will take over, by 5:00, drop down port and pass the golden gate spreading out across the bay area. the first wave of showers may evaporate before it reaches the ground, plan on shower addition for that wednesday afternoon and commute and more showers tomorrow evening with more bands of rain lining up and moving in from the pacific as we head there wednesday night, thursday, thursday night into the first half of the day friday. add that up, the estimate from the weather prediction center and the amounts as they usually do, varies widely, shades of green on the low end of things, 0.1 inches to .25 inches, inland and the east bay and santa clara valley, you get the darker shade, picking up .25 inches to .5 inches of rain, good soaking of rain, east bay, san francisco, the peninsula. the shade of blue, half inch to inch of rainfall and higher elevation spots down the peninsula and north of the golden gate with 1 inch and higher elevations of the north bay and santa cruz mountains and the atmosphere will try out for a while, make the most of the rain chance moves through. temperature is right now it is nice out, anywhere from 61 degrees downtown 60 degrees downtown san francisco. the game against the orioles, first pitch 6:40. low 60s. don't worry about passing showers tonight, mix of clouds and sunshine for the first pitch. temperatures dropped into the 40s with locally dense fog to start the day, how much we warm up depends how early, stuck around 60 degrees in the north bay with temperatures in and santa clara valley reaching closer to 70 degrees. little mid-60s around the bay with high temperatures near 60 degrees along the coast, cooler temperatures and rainy conditions often on thursday. it will not rain everywhere all the time, generally wet day and wet the first half of the day on friday before we dry out warm-up as we head through the weekend. and lynn temperature for the east bay could approach 80 degrees on sunday and running above average on monday. thanks. if you need inspiration, ahead area, life lessons in a fun w this national teacher of the year it's a done and leads the way for all of us. coming up on our streaming service cbs news bay area , sitting down with four stanford women's bask story will need to watch, national teacher. lesson books but teaches life lessons and makes it apply. michael george sat down with the winner to see what makes the learning really stick with students. are you sure, are you positive? kurt russell with the students at oberlin high school in ohio already know he is one-of-a- kind. >> the best teacher i ever had. >> reporter: now the whole country knows too. russell selected by that council of chief state school officers as this year's national teacher of the year. >> i'm nervous, excited, humbled, so many great teachers out there, just to be selected as national teacher of the year is mind blowing. it demands your attention. >> he is so passionate about what he teaches. >> reporter: i asked russell what his secret is. >> i believe what i have is what other great teachers have. we have te at a time when some are trying to ban teachers from discussing racism in the classroom, russell regularly introduces discussions with his students about race, culture, and representation. >> students are more than capable of having these conversations if they want to have it. >> he does a really good job fostering conversations where everyone can have a perspective and that perspective is totally valid. >> reporter: a teacher that challenges and engages his students and earned their respect. michael george with cbs news, new york. >> russell look at to visit the white house and meet president biden and of course first lady jill biden, who is also a teacher so they can shop talk a little bit. one key ingredient could make your next surgery more successful. the study that might be coming up at 5:00, small homes built after the 1906 earthquakes still stand to this day and some of them are coming up for sale. a look at this unique piece of san francisco history that really feel the need at the time . new medical study finds when surgeons rock out in the operating room, they do a better job. is study german university did a new study that loud hard rock music improved both accuracy and speed of the surgery. a centers for disease control and prevention when you are fixing the captioning sponsored by cbs >> o'donnell: tonight, putin's new offensive. thousands of russian troops bombard a stretch of 300 miles in ukraine as the battle for donbas begins. constant shelling in the eastern part of the country as the kremlin begins its fight for what's called the industrial heartland of ukraine. >> reporter: this river effectively serves as a front line between russian-held territory, including the nuclear power plant. >> o'donnell: tonight, ukrainian forces dig in as zelenskyy promises "we will fight." mask mandate overturned. now what? >> congratulations. ( applause ) >> o'donnell: the new maskless reality. what you need to know for your next flight or ride share, just as the c.d.c. warns of a more-contagious omicron strain

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