The question of drop the knife can turn into you have the knife and start the dialogue and conversation with the person they are encountering to find out why they have a knife. Numbers are encouraging. It is a great beginning of the conversation. Some of the things we are interested in seeing his accurate reflection of where that information is coming from. Reporter henderson said more needs to be done to find out how the department is arriving at those results. In particularly an Agency Responsible for reporting on itself. How can we make it how in making sure that the trend to diminish use of force continues. Reporter the city requires the Police Department to file quarterly reports about use of force. The department was highlighting in the report that they have not had a fatal officer involved shooting since june 2018. Live in San Francisco, Christien Kafton ktvu fox 2 news. Thank you so much. Residence of the butte county town of paradise stopped today to remember the lives lost one year ago. They stood silent this morning and many in tears for 85 seconds. One second for each person killed in the camp fire. The fire destroyed nearly 19,000 structures and almost wiped out the town of paradise. Nearby towns also lost homes and businesses. Those losses are still taking their toll. It changed everybody. People barely got out with their lives appear and they dont understand how horrific the fire was and how scary it was. It changed people. It changed this town. This man lost several friends in the fire. Flames raced up the ridge and trap them in their cars. Greg ran to a creek and survived that his friends didnt make it. With tens of thousands and buildings and cars destroyed there was cleanup that had to be done over the last year. This was shared from sacramento. Cars burned out and abandoned as if there were a war zone here. It left this rubble. One year later the drone flew over those same areas and cleanup work seems to have been completed. Piles of rubble hauled away. Cars are all gone and even the plans have regrown in the burn area. The lot is now all cleared up. Alex savidge is live in paradise. There will be a Community Ceremony tonight. Reporter there will be a ceremony happening shortly. At the Paradise Alliance church. As you can see behind us people from throughout the town of paradise and some surrounding communities are coming together to share a meal. This is a meal provided free of charge by world central kitchens. This free meal is a chance for people to come together to see their neighbors and in a lot of cases we are seeing people walk up to one another and ask them how they are doing. These are folks they havent seen in some time. Obviously after the camp fire swept through this area, people moved to different places. Some people were planning to return to paradise and some people already starting to rebuild but it will be a slow process for this community to come back. All day long here on the anniversary of the deadly and destructive camp fire there have been a series of tributes to the lives that were lost and the homes that were destroyed by the fire. Let me show you what was unveiled earlier today. A unique sculpture that will honor the 85 people who lost their lives in this fire one year ago today. This is called ridge key phoenix. It is made up of 12,000 individual keys. All of them were collected from various homes here in butte county that burned in the camp fire. The artist behind this project, Jessica Mercer said she turned these keys into a phoenix that is seen rising from the ashes. All the personalized keys making out some details to try to make this look joyful as much as i could even though memory was sparse. You look at paradise elementary school, we lost that school. I get to work with those kids every day and it is beautiful. To know that their key is on here, that they dont have the school anymore and that they are sharing a school is so powerful. There is a diary key from a sevenyearold. She told me to keep her secret safe. This goes so much further than art. The ridge key phoenix sculpture sits in central paradise. That was just one of a number of tributes that were unveiled today here in this community as people here stopped to mark a very somber anniversary. As you drive around the town of paradise and the surrounding communities what is really noticeable here just one year out from the fire is how much cleanup has been done during that time. You see lot after lot after lot all clear of debris and what you also see as you drive through town is a whole lot of construction. Hundreds of homes are under construction right now. Rob roth talked with some people who are returning to paradise right now and choosing to rebuild here in an area where wildfires are always going to be a threat. Reporter amid the fire scarred landscape of paradise, the seemingly empty rows of endless lot where homes once stood. A sign still stands from last christmas belonging to a store no longer there. Life is returning from the ashes. Here on forest lane victoria sinclair and her family are living in the rebuilt home. It is 100 the most relaxing place to be. I enjoy every single moment i hear. Reporter the sinclairs were the first homeowners to move back. This area is my shrine to my home. Reporter the little the family was able to salvage is on display in the living room. My grandmother gave me this teapot when we first got married. On november 8, 2018 the camp fire came on so fast people have little time to evacuate. Things were blowing up and catching on fire and lines were coming down. You were just in this apocalyptic environment and it was unreal. Reporter sinclair said she drove through flames using windshield fluid to put out embers on her car. Still she her daughter and husband are happy to be back in paradise even if it means running the risk of another wildfire. I saw the promise of something new that was going to come from that and for me it was a feeling of being home. Reporter on the day of the fire 26,000 people lived in paradise. Since then just 3000 have moved back. Folks say recovery will be slow. We lost 80 of the congregation in our church. Reporter of 18,000 homes destroyed just 11,000 are finished with 450,000 more in the pipeline. The towns Building Department expects those numbers to keep growing. The clements are living in an rv on their property but expect their home will be ready by christmas. Our mailman clapped because we were coming back. Reporter clement keeps the scraps of his melted harley. They understand why many wont return with problems of securing loans. But the clements cant picture living anywhere else. It will be a new paradise. It wont be as busy. But i think the community is really strong. Reporter this woman wears her love of paradise on her arm. You cant out run mother nature. Why not just adhere . Why not stay here where you know the people. Reporter many wont return to paradise but for those who do come backa community that comes back stronger than ever. Rob roth, ktvu fox 2 news. Certainly there is a lot of optimism in this Community One year out from the camp fire about what the future is going to look like here as rob alluded to. Only a fraction of the people who once lived in this bustling town of about 26,000 people, only a fraction of them are here right now so things feel quiet right now but they are certainly in a rebuilding mode and a lot of people here looking to the future as this town tries to bounce back from an unbelievable tragedy. We will check back in and about 20 minutes or so. Thank you for that report. Many First Responders are now looking back at the horrifying events that unfolded exactly one year ago. Cal fire butte county captain played a Critical Role in the initial response to the camp fire. He said he along with another veteran ute county fire commander simply could not believe how quickly the huge flames were racing across the city of paradise. You hear the reports of where the fire was going and how fast it was going, took us both by surprise because we fought numerous fires appear in the area which has a ridge fire history. So it really took us by surprise with how fast the fire was moving. The captain has been a firefighter in butte county for 24 years. He said he knew immediately the fire that broke out on november 8 2018 was unlike anything he had seen before. After the camp fire raged last november, chicobased Sierra NevadaBrewing Company stepped up in a big way. The Company Created a beer called resilience ipa to raise money for the recovery. Before long 1400 different breweries around the country were also making and selling the beer. We just got updated numbers. So far 8. 4 million have been raised. 100 of that money goes to the butte strong fund. It is the fund focused on the longterm restoration butte county. We will have more coming up in 20 minutes. Police department turning to modern technology to solve cold cases. They are using social media in the podcast craze to get answers. San franciscos Federal Building on seventh and mission is not the cities prettiest building. The courtyard has become popular every night with drug dealers, drug buyers, drinkers and a whole lot of other folks. When it comes to health coverage, it helps to have someone in your corner. Thats why theres covered california. Were the only place where you can get financial help to pay for your health insurance. New this year, almost a Million People could receive additional financial help from the state to help lower the cost of health insurance. More for those already getting it, and new help for many who havent gotten help before. So check to see how much you can save. It only takes 5 minutes. To be covered by january 1st, enroll by december 15th. South of market is known for hightech companies, restaurants and highend nightlife. People who live near seventh and Mission Street status another kind of nightlife that is impacting health and safety of the neighborhood. We are talking about the Federal Plaza outside the Social Security building. Drug use and drug dealing is scaring and angering those who live nearby. Tom vacar spent the day in the city looking at the problem. Reporter during daylight the plaza is part of the San FranciscoFederal Building at seventh and mission is mostly empty across its white space. Supervisor matt haney says when it starts to get dark and until the wee hours of the morning for the last few months it has become far far different. There hundreds of people out there. Many of whom are selling and using drugs. Serious health needs their. Spre it has a Ripple Effect throughout the neighborhood. Reporter there are tment bu Residential Hotels brought the area filled with people who are sick of it. We dont come out here at night. We go home. No one comes out this way. It is all right outside the Federal Building. I lived in the city all my life born and raised. It is getting outrageous. No one is there to help. No security or foot patrol. No maintenance from the federal government. Reporter you might think that this nightly assemblage must have some rules and there are. In fact it says no disturbances, no narcotics drugs, alcoholic beverages, soliciting, debt collection, explosives or weapons. Well, that is what it says. I am seeing crack addicts and people shooting heroin in the middle of the street. I am seeing people that do not care about their lives. Reporter the supervisor wrote 13 local officials requesting a multipronged solution. That includes private and federal security , regular maintenance and cleaning of the plaza, access to healthcare and most especially better San Francisco police prioritization of the plaza and more foot patrol. Add to that regular outreach by the Homeless Outreach team, more High Definition security cameras and a sped up redesign of the plaza itself. The federal government sent a statement that said it is aware of the problem and his concern for Public Safety as federal Law Enforcement working with local police and supports outreach to get help for these people. Tom vacar, ktvu fox 2 news. Airbnb has offered to pay for the funerals of those killed in the halloween night massacre in orinda. He cover funeral expenses for the victims and provide counseling for the family. Five people were shot and killed at the home that had been rented for the party. The company is vowing to change its rules in regard to party houses in response to the tragedy. Santa clara police want your help to solve the coldest of cold cases. They are highlighting six on their website in the hopes that might generate interest and leads. As ann rubin explains they are not alone in hoping the more views and chairs they get the more likely they are to get answers. Most of this wall is backlog cases. Field ski Matthew Florez was gunned down execution style in the parking lot of Applied Materials. It would have been his ninth day on the job. There were 20 witnesses who saw nothing and the shooting happened out of view of surveillance cameras. A suspicious Ford Explorer was spotted leaving the scene. You learn to deal with the heartache. Nothing will bring them back. Field ski Santa Clara Police havent given up the search for answers. They are revisiting some of their coldest cases in the hope that the passage of time and advances in technology might work in their favor. The information is also posted on their website and social media pages. Given the fact that the internet is so popular and so much information can be shared easily we wanted to put these cases out for anyone to look at at any time. Reporter in Mountain View police are creating a cold case podcast launching next year. New york city has had success with something similar. We are always hopeful that something will come of these types of stories and that some information will come will help us break the case. Reporter Matthew Florez was an army veteran and a father at the time of his murder. His family said they hold out hope that someday they will get justice. One break and i will tell you you can go home and pop the champagne. But i pray for that. Reporter in the Matthew Florez case Applied Materials is still honoring the 100,000 reward they started offering in 1994. There are also smaller rewards being offered in the other cold cases. In santa clara, ann rubin ktvu fox 2 news. Bay area whether has been another cool twomile day across a good portion of Northern California. We have been locked in the summer whether pattern near the coast and the bay. Inland another round of hazy sunshine. We have been using this graphic to show you what has been happening. November has been off to a dry start. We will continue with that dry theme into the weekend and next week. Maybe a week from today some of the forecast models have been going back and forth and maybe hinting at some rainfall but it would be light rain. A few showers and that is a long ways away and there is a lot of uncertainty between now and then. Here is satellite showing you the storm track out in the pacific. Right now fog near the coast and pushing back into the bay are upper portions of the bay. Right now it is a warm 70 in walnut creek. Look at the cool spots San Francisco and half moon bay, that fog nearby in the lower 50s. In fact there is a live camera looking above the fog deck that you can see pushing into the bay. Up above we saw a layer of haze. A few high clouds paying us a visit as well. Overnight lows will spots in the upper 30s. Areas of fog near the coast and portions of the bay. Partly cloudy skies inland. Tomorrow the forecast model showing you that fog pattern. In the afternoon hours clouds clear back to the storm line. We will watch out for that. Still some patchy overcast of theres your temperature range for tomorrow. Hazy sun in the forecast for saturday. As far as rainfall it is still a distant visitor in the bay area whether pattern. You can see dry conditions up and down the state. We are looking for rainfall and heres the longrange forecast model. We are dry through the weekend and early next week. You will see a little activity starting to show up in extreme Northern California around the north coast. This is wednesday at 4 pm. Look at what happens beyond thursday. Into friday, maybe. 01 in San Francisco. This could be changing. There is that slight glimmer of hope that we could be tracking showers a week from today. In this forecast model bringing it into the weekend. It is still a long ways out and hopefully we can add more detail to that forecast for the next few mperatures for tomorro 50s. 70s around the bay and the warmest locations inland approaching the 80 degree mark. No big changes for sunday. Breezy hills. That is one thing we will be tracking. Offshore winds returned to boost the fire danger. No red flag fire warning. We will watch out for fire danger into early next week. It is open to everyone but targeting a specific techie. We will take you to the Fourth Annual afro tech conference in oakland. A space specifically empowering people of color in technology. All around the wind blows we would only hold on to let go blow a kiss into the sun we need someone to lean on blow a kiss into the sun we needed somebody to lean on all we need is someone to lean on it takes a village to raise to build a bridge. To throw a baseball. To throw yourself into the unknown. To lose fear, to create hope. We believe that it takes a village of ove