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season's play-off run, but with one big addition. >> get back to the rams, beat 'em, and take the conference this year, get through the play-offs and straight to the super bowl. >> reporter: 49ers super fan jesse mendez was part of the 408 faithful's fan group that helped fill opponent stadiums in dallas, green bay and l.a. for the play-offs. this year fans haveheexpectatio questions remain. will jimmy garoppolo be traded? can trey lance lead another play-off run? and what about deebo? >> we've had a lot of off-season stuff going on. and i'm hoping they work all that out before we get through training camp. >> today i met with 49ers president al guido. >> in terms of personnel, any changes to announce at this time? >> no, no personnel changes to announce. >> reporter: but the team did just publish its 2022 training camp schedule, which includes 11 open practice dates, the first since they were sidelined by the pandemic. >> can't wait to welcome fans back, getting into that experience and environment. i know you've been down to training camp before. i know it's always funny that rookies do their dance and pump up the crowd. please, if you're interested, we'd love to have you. >> reporter: a game against arizona in mexico city. >> it's an amazing stadium. i think there is a great opportunity. but both here at levi's and on the road to come see your favorite team. >> jesse mendez and their group already have their mexico ticket and hope to make it levi south of the border. >> i started counting down the day we walked out of the rams stadium, the championship game. and i've been counting down ever since then. >> in san jose, len ramirez, kpix 5. >> can't start our countdown to kickoff without vern glenn. >> he is the man of the hour. he is in santa rosa. he is covering a hockey tournament. but as always, he still has a lot to say about the 49ers. right, vern? >> hey, the great charles schultz of charlie brown and peanuts fame. two things he loved as he built this arena, hockey and football. now we'll get to his hockey tournament next hour and do a deep dive there, because the team that drives the bus in this market, the 49ers. big story lines. big headlines surrounding this team headed into camp. deebo samuel's contract. he wanted to be traded if he didn't get a new deal. well, it's mid-july, and nothing has changed. the same is true for jimmy garoppolo. still on the roster after shoulder surgery. could the 49ers actually keep him on the roster if they can't find a trade? and then the big one. trey lance, taking over as the starting quarterback. everyone is anxious to see what he can do. hall of famer steve young had a message for the faithful last week while in tahoe. >> if you're going to watch the first two games to go, i'm going make a decision about trey lance, that's a mistake. this is going to be a process. and even if he comes out gangbusters, it's going to be -- it's a couple years. you got to relax and ride along, and try not to judge it throw to throw. >> i can't wait for this team to report on july 26th. and then they will strap on the helmets and get after it. speaking of getting after it, these guys are big enough to put on the pads and play football. they're tough guys. but again, the big team, the 49ers. back to you in studio. >> that's right. thanks, vern. the countdown is on. >> all right, vern, thanks. in san jose, a standoff between santa clara authorities and a knife-wielding woman ended peacefully after more than an hour of negotiations. authorities responded to a call near the corners of nor bascom and bel air avenue around 11:00 this morning when they were confronted by a woman holding supposedly both a knife and a gun. thanks to a negotiations team, the woman was detained with no injuries to herself or any of the officers. >> the biggest call with the situation, we want to provide a peaceful resolution from this. so we're going to apply all de-escalation tactics from the sheriff's office to provide that peaceful resolution. >> the woman was transported to a local hospital for a medical evaluation. police have not yet released her identity. and an 89-year-old -- 83-year-old man is currently facing charges for shooting and killing his neighbor. around 6:30 last night, authorities were called to the river glen mobile park where they found man dead. further investigation led them to arrest a suspect, the victim's neighbor. san jose resident burt maclaine any. he was booked into jail this morning. no word on the victim. berkeley seem to vote on rent control in less than half an hour. the city council will meet to decide whether to place the item on the november ballot that would expand the rent board's authority over certain newly constructed buildings. it would also remove exemptions on owner occupied units such as golden duplexes. properties built before 1980 where an owner occupies at least 50% of the property. federal grants are available to child care providers in alameda county. the board of supervisors approved $4 million from the american rescue plan to go towards child care and licensed programs. applicants have to apply online through the county. larger programs will get around $3300 at least. and while smaller programs will get at least $2300. still ahead, a tragic accident in new york city. two people killed, including a child when a boat capsized. the rescues on the hudson river. and how an alert cabdriver helped steer a northern california veteran away from a scam. coming up all new at 6:00, what is san francisco doing to make sure that people can get the monkeypox vaccine? plus -- >> the new district attorney is quickly moving to implement change in san francisco, starting with the tenderloin. not all business own developing story coming out of new york. emergency crews rat the hudson river right now after a boat capsized and left several people stranded on the water. two people have died, including a 7-year-old child and a 50-year-old man. the captain telephone boat is also reportedly in critical condition. in total, there were 12 people on board. both houses of congress are looking into the issue of abortion today. it comes in the wake of the supreme court overturning roe v. wade. the senate heard from people impacted by the decision, including a planned parenthood doctor. >> lupus, arthritis, cancer, medications that we use frequently to control those conditions are being denied to patients because they might also contribute to miscarriage. >> for the first time in half a century, the people threw our elected representatives have the legal authority to affirm the dignity of women and fully protect unborn babies. >> this comes after president biden signed an executive order aimed at protecting access to reproductive health care services. also today, a house committee took up the women's health protection act which would codify abortion. a second bill would ban interfering with someone's right to travel to another state to get the procedure. new york's surgeon has transplanted a genetically modified pig heart to a brain dead man. his family donated his body to science and he was chosen to be the first patient in the study. the team did tests for three days while the body was kept alive. during that time, the heart showed no signs of rejection. researchers hope the study will help determine if animal organs can be successfully used in people needing a transplant. inflation worries still rattling wall street. the dow dropped about 193 points. the nasdaq fell 108 and the s&p 500 closed down 36. investors are looking toward a key report tomorrow that is expected to show inflation hitting a new 40-year high. coming up, a multicultural work of art. meet the muralist who is trying to paint a more inclusive picture of one east bay my tribe has lived on this land for 12,000 years. we call it oleyumi. you call it california. our land, our culture, our people once expansive, now whittled down to a small community. only one proposition supports california tribes like ours. while providing hundreds of millions in yearly funding to finally address homelessness in california. vote yes on 27. tax online sports betting and protect tribal sovereignty and help californians that are hurting the most. a sacramento area cabdriver went out of his way to protect an 82-year-old veteran from being scammed before it could happen. >> reporter steve larch has more on how the driver went above and beyond for his passenger. >> what was the first sign that something was wrong? >> we got a call, and it was to go pick up a friend. >> reporter: he is a cabdriver with no cape. >> our red flags go off all the time. >> reporter: but joel carstones is being hailed hero. >> well, he got in the car. and what happened is he showed me he had $8,000 cash. >> reporter: he saved 82-year-old vietnam veteran bill miller. >> he wanted me to put $2400 in this account. >> reporter: from losing thousands of dollars in a phone scam. >> no, it was from publisher's warehouse. >> i said well, bill, what are we doing? he says something about publisher's clearing house. so right then i knew exactly what was going on. >> reporter: the scam artists had set up the cab ride, counting on carstones to deliver military a bank he had never gone to before to make a deposit in an account he'd never set up before. the promise? millions of dollars and a mercedes. and if anything sounds too good to be true, it is. >> reporter: karstens took a detour and drove miller to miller's bank instead, even walking him inside the branch to talk to the teller. >> i told him he was a hero. when i went into the bank, other people heard what happened and came up and shook his hand and said thank you very much. for helping. >> reporter: this vietnam vet's hard-earned savings saved by a conscientious cabdriver. >> don't fall for this stuff. >> if it sounds too good, it's bad. >> nice guy right there. according to aarp, there has been an average of 4.1 billion scams and spam calls a month since may of 2021. a big day in television. nominations for the 74th annual emmy awards were announced today. >> love? >> hbo's "succession" leads the pack with 25 emmy nominations, including outstanding drama series. netflix' "squid game" is on the first non-english language series to compete for tv's top honor, receiving a total of 14 nods. "ted lasso" is back to defend best comedy title, scoring 24 nominations. there were some snubs in this year's batch including only one nomination for the rap family drama "this is us." trophies will be awarded in september. a push to paint a new portrait in an oakland neighborhood has meaningful intention behind it. kpix 5's justin andrews introduces us to a muralist in montclair. >> reporter: opening a can of paint also opens possibilities for zoe. with every brush stroke she creates. >> i feel like art is the expression of anything creative. >> reporter: painting pictures and making murals that move your mind. >> taking the visionious have inside and you're able to express them on canvas. able to portray messages and explain things to people. >> reporter: for as long as zoe can remember, she has been a creative, an artist, doing what she can to uplift. >> i've noticed a lot more smiles when the people come out here. it's a lot brighter out here now. literally i'm painting life, bringing life into a space. >> reporter: this mural she's named natural praise. and it doesn't take long to see why. it's on the back side of crew fit, a family on the other hand gym in montclair. but it's more than just a canvas. it's a community space. zoe started working on this mural in june. she hopes her work helps bridge the gap, making montclair more inclusive for all people in an area of oakland that's typically not diverse. >> i envision hopefully murals everywhere. more color, more life, more vibrancy, more diversity in montclair. >> reporter: so while zoe finishes this special piece, planned to be done in august, she hopes every blend of color on this mural is also reflective of every person who comes by and takes it all in. >> i want them to feel at peace and have a place to kind of reflect and just take things in. >> reporter: justin andrews, kpix 5. >> organizers want to inspire other small businesses in the area to take on similar initiatives. the whole goal is to get more emerging black artists and their work on display. okay. let's check in with first alert meteorologist paul heggen. i'm looking at that graphic behind you. do i see drizzle? >> yeah, a little bit of drizzle along the coast. i went for a run yesterday evening once the fog rolled in, and it was occasionally damp in the evening. nothing that you would call measurable. but still, it's moisture in july. >> that's why we didn't go! >> that's why. didn't want to embarrass me. you didn't go. >> because i was eating mcdonald's. [ laughter ] >> at my desk. >> there are no lies here. let's take a look at weather-wise. the pocket of more drizzle. perhaps more fast food in sara's feature as she hangs her head. fog spreading across the bay into the inland valleys. copy and paste from today to tomorrow. similar temperatures. the fog should back up at about the same rate. a little warming trend is going to start to kick in on thursday. the warmest days will be friday and saturday. it is not going to be excessively hot. but just a slight increase in temperatures by the end of the workweek in the first half of the weekend. there is the fog and low cloud cover rolling back through the golden gate already. temperatures today, especially for inland spots, boy, that's a relief after concord topped out at 99 yesterday. only 4 dath day of july. santa rosa only made to it the mid 70s. same thing in fremont. temperatures in the 60s in san francisco and along the coast. we still have 60s, 70s and 80s, but no 90s on the map at this hour. 61 in half moon bay. 85 at fairfield. it's 81 in concord and livermore. other inland temperatures in the 70s already. and that drop will continue as we head through the rest of tonight as the fog continues to surge into the inland valleys. it's going to be widespread and fairly dense to start the day. but it's going back up out of those inland valleys pretty quickly. it will take a little longer around the bay and the coast for the fog to lift and gradually dissipate, but it will happen by early afternoon. temperatures tonight cropping down to what's normal. mid- to upper 50s to around 60 degrees. high temperatures tomorrow once again with ina knew degrees of what's average for the middle of july. 60s, 70s and 80s. mid 60s along the coast. mix of 60s and 70s down the peninsula. mostly low 80s in the santa clara valley. farther inland it gets up to 86 for los gatos and 86 in morgan hill. temperatures inland in the east bay, only low to mid-80s until you go a little farther east through the delta, up into the mid-80s for fairfield and pittsburgh. upper 80s for antioch and brentwood. those are some of the warmest spots on the map in july? we'll take that. upper 60s in san francisco. upper 60s and 70s for oakland and the east bay with a mix of mostly upper 70s and low 80s for inland parts of the north bay. still getting marine influence as opposed to other parts of the inland bay area. you get away from the marine influence, around 90 degrees for inland mendocino and lake counties. another day where a fire danger isn't going to be out of control. it starts off near zero thanks to the intrusion of fog into the inland valleys. it doesn't climb a whole lot the first half of the day. but even when our warmest temperatures shape up by late afternoon to early evening, our fire danger index a 3 or 4. not seeing any yellow spots showing an elevated fire concern. it's never going to be a zero in the month of july. but any time we see this kind of map with these numbers, it's about as good as it gets this time of year. the fire dangler ramp up slightly as warmer temperatures take over inland. again, it's not going to be another round of excessive heat. just a few degrees warmer by friday and saturday. temperature nears 70 over the weekend in san francisco. low to mid 70s in oakland with mid- to upper 80s in san jose. the warmest spots will be inland into the north bay and east bay topping around 90 degrees far inland hitting the mid-90s, but we can handle that in july. along the coast, not much change. staying in the mid-60s. a look at tomorrow's dog walking forecast coming up at 6:00. >> thanks, paul. all new at 6:00, san francisco's new district attorney spent the day in the tenderloin. her message for the neighborhood and how it was perceived by the people who live there. plus, people are lining the streets trying to get a monkeypox vaccine. what officials are doing to increase supply. and how north bay residents rally to get a north bay district to stop a leak. the news at 6:00 is coming up in about five minutes. still ahead at 5:00, a big day for space exploration. a big window to our galaxy from the world' today marks a big day for science. nasa released the first images from the james webb space telescope, the largest and most powerful ever launched into space. at the lockheed martin advanced lab in palo alto with the scientists who built this incredible telescope. >> here we go. [ applause ] >> reporter: a historic moment in astronomy. scientists and engineers at lockheed martin watched together along with the rest of the world as nasa live streamed the first high resolution full color images from the james webb space telescope, a telescope they spent years making. >> wow! so proud. so excited. right, very inspired. >> this is so exciting. it was so neat to see our work being broadcast out to the world. it's like 16 years of my life. and it's finally, finally get to see it. >> reporter: the webb telescope's camera can look farther back in space and time than ever before, offering the deepest, sharpest look into our universe ever captured. >> the team here at lockheed martin designs and builds the main camera called the near cam on the james webb space telescope. this is a mock-up of just one piece of the camera that allows the near cam to look at different wavelengths of light. scientists are calling the james webb space telescope a time machine. the telescope's infrared camera helps us see farther and more clearly into the past than ever before. this incredible image shows thousands of galaxies as it looked more than 13 billion years ago. this stunning image cause the cosmic cliffs brought a collective gasp to the lockheed martin scientists and engineers. the image shows more detail, depth and texture than we've ever seen with hundreds of previously hidden baby stars now uncovered. and you may recognize this famous galaxy group. it was featured in the holiday classic "it's a wonderful life." but this latest image sheds a whole new light on the five galaxies, showing sparkling clusters of young stars and starburst regions of new stars being born. and check out the southern ring nebula. approximately 2500 light years away. the dimmer star at the center has been sending out rings of gas and dust for thousands of years in all directions, and now the webb telescope is revealing for the first time this star is cloaked in dust. >> now we build an instrument that can see 13.5 billion years. so very, very close to the -- when the universe started. that helps us. we think on that relative scale that we're going to be able to look very close when everything got started, and that's why we're going to be able to see formation of galaxies, formation of stars, the very first ones. >> scientists are excited to discover more about space through this telescope, saying this could change what we think and know about our universe. at lockheed martin advanced technology center in palo alto, mary lee, kpix 5. >> that's it for the news at 5:00 kpix 5 news at 6:00 begin news with ryan yamamoto. >> right now kpix 5 and streaming on "cbs news bay area," san francisco's district attorney hitting the streets. her promise to help a struggling neighborhood. >> i'm concerned about whether this is another political move that's going to keep us at ground zero or not. >> lining up for a shot. the rush to get the monkeypox vaccine. bay area health officials now begging washington for more. i'm john ramos in marin county. water districts tell us the most effective way to save water is to patch leaks. but what happens when it's the district itself that's leaking? we have that story coming up. >> good evening. i'm ryan yamamoto. our top story at 6:00, the latest effort by a politician to clean up san francisco's tenderloin neighborhood. the city's new district attorney vowing to crack down and end the open air drug market. but as kpix 5's lauren toms reports, not everyone is optimistic that change is on the horizon. >> reporter: change is coming to san francisco, vowed new district attorney brookes jenkins. but not all business owners are convinced. today i caught up with one man who describes himself as the unofficial mayor of the tenderloin who said that politics is not the answer to preventing drug use in this neighborhood. >> we have some very consistent in our approach. >> reporter: while new district attorney brooke jenkins vowed to clean up these streets, delsy moore has a different picture of the tenderloin. >> because it's so beautif unique and loving. we know every one of our neighbor's name. >> reporter: he has lived in this neighborhood for 35 years. >> there is so much hope down here. this is the only place people can go and not be beat down. i look at my life when i was sleeping in dumpsters and where i'm at now. that's because of the help i got from the tenderloin. >> reporter: seymour is all too familiar with politicians claiming change pour the tenderloin, but falling short. >> politics should never be part of the treatment of the tenderloin, but it tends to always get there. >> reporter: in a press conference tuesday, jenkins vowed to ban open air drug markets. >> i don't believe in a one size fits all approach in any regard. we need to approach each case and see what that person's circumstances is individually. so that's what i'm committed to doing so that we are dealing with repeat offenders differently than we are the first-time offender. >> we're affected. we're down here every day, 18 hours a day, seven days a week. >> reporter: but seymour spoke up, saying she did not get the full picture of his neighborhood. >> she reached out to people on the third floor this morning. we're on the bottom floor. 12 felony drug arrests myself.

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