Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 6pm 20150521

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developers. >> it's more complicated. >> reporter: because the land is jointly owned by the city and county. jointly used by the a's and raiders and the city is on the hook for $12 million a year for the next 12 years. mayor schaaf also blamed former mayor jean quan's handling of the raiders. >> they received a number of false promises from the previous administration. >> reporter: and she pointed out they have asked the raiders to submit plans too. >> in fact, maybe they could get carmen policy to help them on their oakland proposal. >> reporter: that dig because the raiders hired the former 49er exec to lobby for the carson project. one of the projects that got some love from the commissioner today while oakland got the cold shoulder. >> that proposal is necessary to have, sure. >> reporter: june 21 is the deadline for developers to submit their financial proposals but the mayor hopes that there will be more answers before then. live in oakland, ryan takeo pictures. some of san francisco's catholic school teachers are standing up to archbishop salvatore cordileone tonight. they are rejecting his latest attempt to rewrite the teacher handbook. elizabeth cook has the details from the newsroom. >> reporter: protestors say this latest draft is a little softer in tone but the substance remains the same. at issue is language reclassifying teachers as ministers and requiring them to adhere to strict church teaching in and out of the classroom. a group of teachers, parents and students rallied this afternoon in front of the archdiocese office. they are trying to get a conversation going. >> we are hoping that he will get a chance to know us and see he doesn't have to use these draconian measures to, um, to make us, um, fall in line. i mean, we're good teachers. we care about what we do. we don't think any of this is necessary. >> teachers are concerned about their employment rights. they say if they are reclassified as ministers, they could lose certain federal and state protections. contract negotiations are ongoing. in a statement today, the archdiocese said, quote, both sides are hopeful they are getting closer to resolving the few remaining bargaining issues on which there is disagreement. the teachers are now requesting a return to the current handbook which has been used for years under multiple previous archbishops. >> thank you. a blue tal attack on mother's day has an elderly woman fighting for her life. it happened as she got off a muni bus in chinatown. kpix 5's mike sugerman on how a good samaritan could be the key to solving the case of the brutal attack. >> reporter: this is a very troubling confusing situation. this woman 78-year-old lillian leong her english name was taking the bus home on mother's day when she was apparently attacked getting off, beat with two fists to the head. able to walk home but couldn't talk when she got there. her daughter said she could only make sounds like a baby. three days later, she became unconscious. and only then was taken to the hospital. now she is on life support and not expected to survive. the police were notified a week after this happened! and that's where all the questions come in. >> first of all, what i say we don't want to bother anybody. and second, we all get intimidated because if we call police, we are afraid -- [ indiscernible ] and here i stick me head out, i'm also worried too. >> reporter: the suspect is described only as an african- american and they are looking for the good samaritan who helped her off the bus. muni is going through surveillance video. a jury found a man guilt of killing his girlfriend and dumping her body in vacaville. he was also found guilty of robbing sandra coke on the day she went missing. she was an investigator of the federal public defender's office when she disappeared in august 2013. her body was found a few days later. alana and coke had an on and off again 20 year relationship. prosecutors say it went sour when coke tried to end things with randy alana and accused him of kidnapping her dog. prosecutors say alana murdered coke in the back of a north oakland motel before dumping her body. he faces up to 90 years to life in prison. we have learned that crews working on the central subway project hit a gas line by moscone center this afternoon. you can see from chopper 5 the big trench at 4th and folsom where digging has been going on. pg&e capped the leak before 5:00 tonight. several streets were blocked off while crews were working and that didn't help traffic as you can imagine. it's always tough in that area. city streets are still backed this up evening. bart service is on track tonight after another commute crippling equipment failure earlier. but it seems like bart is literally falling apart these days. transit agency told our phil matier that it's clear what needs to be fixed. the real problem is finding the time and more importantly, phil, probably the money to do it, huh? >> it is. and plus it's coming at a time when the system is operating at a peak. i have to tell you, these days, sometimes riding bart is like playing roulette. let's take a look. >> you get text alerts from bart and every day something is wrong or broken. >> it's like rolling the dice. >> reporter: today it was a damage control switch in downtown oakland that set off 30-minute delays throughout the system. two weeks ago it was a broken rail that delayed the evening commute for hours. >> it's frustrating to be a bart rider when it's one thing after another. >> reporter: in bart's case, frustrating could be the new normal. aging tracks already have the system slowing trains down in 37 locations. and closing down other entire sections for repairs on weekends. at the same time, bart ridership is hitting record highs of over 400,000 trips a day. >> we have 86.5% of our entire fleet out during the peak commute. no other large transit system has that amount. >> reporter: and when something goes wrong, it's likely to be in one of five hot spots like today's trouble. >> so look at, every, single line that's going to the city is impacted. and that's why you get delays up t 60 minutes. the other horrible hot spot is outside interlocking here. anything in downtown san francisco as we know impacts the entire system. >> it's awful. i -- i -- i'm stuck there on the platform for like, you know, 10, 15 minutes at a time and everyone is getting frustrated. >> reporter: are we putting enough money into maintenance? >> we have millions in the budget going towards maintenance. >> reporter: is it enough? >> there's a tremendous need. no. >> decided to take a train an hour earlier than i was supposed to. >> reporter: were you checking to see if there was a delay? >> yes. it's sometimes a mixed signal. >> reporter: it seems that even bart's delay app can have a delay. >> other outlets are better information than bart which gives you misinformation. >> reporter: and ken, were you also right about the lack of time. enough time to get those repairs made. they can't do it any more just overnight like they used to a few years back. it's getting too much use. there's too much trains and now it's getting into weekend service and as we saw today when things go wrong, it really goes wrong. in oakland, phil matier, kpix 5. >> well, an east bay mayor who made bart and more specifically its labor his central campaign issue is now california's newest state senator. steve glazer of orinda beat out assemblywoman susan bonilla in a runoff for the district 7 seat. district 7 covers parts of alameda and contra costa counties. glazer gained traction early oncoming out strongly against the bart strikes. he replaces mark desaulnier who vacated the seat after being elected to congress. apple could be taking a bigger bite out of silicon valley. the company is reportedly shopping for moreland. new at 6:00 kpix 5's len ramirez is at a spot in san jose that could be its first choice. len. >> reporter: veronica, san jose is long called itself the capital of silicon valley. and it does have a lot of high- tech companies but they tend to be smaller component companies or companies that do the infrastructure for the internet and things like that. not the big name brands that everyone knows about like apple. but that could be about to change in a big way. the massive apple headquarters campus is still under construction in cupertino. but in silicon valley, real estate circles, the word is out that it won't satisfy the company's massive appetite for office space. >> i have heard that the facebook campus is already full. they need more space. it wouldn't surprise me here. >> reporter: apple wouldn't comment but the company is reportedly eyeing the 101 tech complex near 87 and 101 in san jose. the site has buildings that are move-in ready with up to a million square feet of room to expand. >> the right place for apple and for others as well. >> reporter: others could include google and tesla. both of which are also said to be interested in big developments in san jose. >> we have had large companies looking for major expansions for headquarters and consolidations. >> reporter: the city's economic development department can't yet name names but kim waller says they include the major players. >> these are big players who recognize that the communities north of us are built out, are facing real constraints to adding additional office space and san jose has a lot of room for new development and a lot of really attractive space near where the talent lives. >> reporter: gaining a company like apple would be a big boost to the economy of san jose and would boost the city's image and branding which long suffered from a bedroom community identity. >> apple is one of those premier companies that everyone likes to have. they are a great employer. they treat their employees well. >> reporter: now, where we are in north san jose is one of several hot spots in san jose. they also include downtown san jose, santana row and edenvale in south san jose. san jose has always had a lot of people and a lot of land, and now that may be more important to silicon valley's future than ever. reporting live in san jose, len ramirez, kpix 5. still ahead, paving the way for scenes you would see in "breaking bad." the discovery from bay area scientists about home brewed drugs. >> ground beef being pulled from shelves all across the country. all because of what a bay area woman found in her meatloaf. >> plus, a new drought plan from california farmers. their offer to share water but it comes with a catch. >> reporter: if you have not been counting at home, i perfectly understand. we have been counting for you. 19 consecutive days with temperatures running well below normal. cloudy conditions. but we're playing baseball tonight. we'll show you a little little league and talk about when this ♪ ♪ ♪ female announcer: through monday get up to four years interest-free financing or save up to $400 on beautyrest and posturepedic. even get up to four years interest-free financing on serta icomfort and tempur-pedic. but this special financing offer ends memorial day at sleep train. imagine being able to home brew drugs that could potentially save your life. a breakthrough at uc-berkeley could be paving the way. new at 6:00 our john ramos tells us it could be a double- edged sword. >> reporter: in this building at uc-berkeley, in this laboratory, a breakthrough has occurred that could change the way life-saving drugs are produced. the professor's research team has discovered a process to create pharmaceuticals -- >> that enable production of these products in a yeast cell which we can grow similar to how you brew beer. we can grow very quickly abundantly. >> reporter: this graduate student was working with beet cells when suddenly they began to produce a fluorescent orange substance found in a completely different plant. they discovered they could make common yeast turn sugar into an entire class of plant-based pharmaceuticals including cancer therapy drugs and painkillers such as morphine and codeine. >> and with this, it is just like night and day. >> reporter: this is a true breakthrough. >> yeah. it is. and it's pretty exciting. >> reporter: they say the ability to produce drugs from sugar is still a ways off but not that far. they believe it could happen within two years' time. but now the scientists have discovered what they can do, it raises an even more difficult question to answer. should they? >> i was good at it. >> reporter: the tv show "breaking bad" told the story of a high school chemistry teacher who creates a pure form of crystal meth and eventually becomes a violent drug kingpin. he says the ability for someone to create morphine and its offspring heroin as easily as brewing beer has raised ethical questions among scientists. >> what should we do? what are the steps that we should be thinking about? so that we can minimize the risk of the illicit use. >> reporter: they believe this discovery could lead to an abundant supply of more effective beneficial drugs. but as always, it is the side effects of this breakthrough that are raising concerns. in berkeley, john ramos, kpix 5. >> the researchers say both law enforcement and the scientific community need to prepare for the coming technology that will make controlled substances much easier to produce. a car fire at oakland was made much worse by fireworks and m-80s found inside the vehicle. flames were shooting from this black suv on the west mcarthur on-ramp to westbound 580 this afternoon. the roadway was shut down as crews worked on the scene. the flames were knocked down pretty quickly. no one was hurt. scare today inside the terminal at l.a.x. had some passengers diving for cover. [ yelling ] >> the police caught up with the guy who had forced his way past the tsa checkpoint. he was uncooperative and got past the officers, ran toward a gate. you can see how it ended. the suspect on the ground and airport police officer using a taser on him with dozens of people looking on. >> airport police officer walked up to the man and the man pushed the officer, tried to go around him. the officer stopped him again. the the man pushed him again went past him and made his way to gate 66. >> the man did have a ticket for an alaska airlines flight but he was taken to the hospital for treatment. he is going to face some charges of trespassing and obstructing a peace officer farmers with the older water rights in california are offering up a deal to reduce water use. reporter lee martinez with why some farmers are willing to give up precious water. >> reporter: this farmer is looking forward to his week drying out. he only irrigates twice a week on this crop. he says california's four-year drought has never been a problem here. >> we're in the delta. so we have never had a situation where we have been lack of water. >> reporter: delta farmers have senior water rights. priority access to water because their land sits on the river. but the winds of change have blown through the delta. the state is requiring them to report monthly water usage. to avoid deep cuts later, delta farmers are volunteering to take a 25% water cut now. >> while the alternative is the state come in there and say, sorry, there won't be any water. you can't divert at all. so they have the big stick is what it amounts to. >> reporter: the farmers aren't particularly heartbroken losing the water. this farmer pulled out his walnut grove this year. the fear is not the lack of water but the quality. >> we are dealing with a higher salt level and that's basically because of the drought without the water coming -- the freshwater coming from the mountains, we don't have any way to dilute the salt that comes in from the ocean. >> reporter: and some farmers would rather have nothing than put saltwater on the ground potentially ruining the soil for future crops. lee martinez, kpix 5. clouds, clouds everywhere today but not a drop of rain. dreary skies over ocean beach in san francisco earlier and cooler temperatures to match as we head towards the memorial day weekend. >> chief meteorologist paul deanno live in albany with the mobile weather lab. paul, it really was cool everywhere today. >> reporter: it was chilly. now what's really interesting the rest of the northern hemisphere half of earth is warming up right now with one glaring exception. that would be the san francisco bay area where some of you are still colder than may than january. that said, it's baseball season. we have the reds and the white sox. we just had a pitching change. the reds are defense. right now the white sox are battling. it's play-off time for aaa little league baseball in albany and it's brisk. not one soul is wearing long sleeves when it comes to the kids. they are used to it here, one of our cooler spots is albany with that flow off san francisco bay directly from the golden gate. 69 in santa rosa today. so even the warmest spot didn't hit 70. san jose and concord your high 67. fremont 65. oakland 61. san francisco 59 for a high today. radar is active especially north. numerous thunderstorms over the sierra. but watch out, clearlake. just to your east, right east of the lake, we are talking 8 to 10 lightning strikes just in the past few minutes. if you are up in lake county, or mendocino county, you're likely hearing or seeing this thunderstorm activity north of san francisco this afternoon. no problems for the dodgers game tonight. it will be cloudy and cool. they are taking on our giants. tim lincecum on the mound from olympia, washington, used to the chilly temperatures. 57 degrees for the first pitch. cloudy again in albany, high in the low 60s with minimal afternoon sunshine. if you are hiking toward yosemite watch out for late day thunderstorms there. monterey mostly cloudy, 63. it's all because of a big trough of low pressure. it is still in place. it's been here for three weeks. the cool and cloudy pattern will continue with changes coming up but not until the weekend. upper 60s tomorrow for livermore and san jose. redwood city 67. pacifica your high 59. and only 61 in san francisco. so we are cooler cloudy and with a minimal shower chance and thunderstorms toward lake county again through friday. saturday winds northwesterly that will warm us up a bit. low 70s for the holiday weekend inland mid-60s near the bay still below average. the skies look ominous. mostly cloudy over the east bay hills. no rain around here but please watch out. bring the kids inside up toward lake county. thunderstorms there threatening chilly skies here in albany. back to you. >> thank you. still ahead, a big summer movie blockbuster centered around something that we're all too familiar with. >> earth will literally crack open! >> buildings crashing down! total destruction! [ laughter ] >> great for hollywood. but the quake experts give us a reality check. >> don't scare us. >> with the big one. we are hours away from the last late show the trailers are everywhere. disaster film san andreas comes out next week. here in earthquake central, it looks like a californians' worst nightmare but how realistic is it really? >> i'm guessing. we sent our devin fehely to separate the science from the science fiction. ♪[ music ]♪ >> reporter: the movie san andreas rests at the ever shaky intersection of movie magic and earthquake science. its dramatic images from the skyscrapers that come crashing down to the earth's crust ripping over to even that massive tsunami poised to wipe out the golden gate bridge are tailor-made for a summer blockbuster but scientists say are unlikely to occur. >> the likelihood of a tsunami occurring due to an earthquake on the san andreas is very unlikely just because of the type of fault the san andreas fault is. >> reporter: the movie depicts a doomsday scenario, a massive earthquake that causes untold devastation along the west coast. researchers say that even if hollywood didn't get the science quite right, that earthquakes remain an enormous threat. >> we will have buildings likely topple or bridges fall. not to the magnitude as we see in the film. >> reporter: scientists say the damage depicted in the movie is unlikely to occur along the san andreas fault. and more closely resembles the pattern of destruction from earthquakes off the coast of japan, for example. but there is an essential truth they say amid all the hollywood hype. the big one is coming. we don't know when. but now is the time to prepare. >> it's always overstated. it's hollywood, right? but i do think it plays an important part in having this conversation that as a society i don't think we really have. >> reporter: in san jose, devin fehely, kpix 5. >> san andreas hits theaters next friday may 29. >> he has a good point. at least we're talking about it, you know? hopefully going to go home and get out our earthquake preparedness kits. >> i think people who are afraid ought to go back to ohio or where they came from and give us more parking spaces. >> stop. >> i didn't say that. an unwelcome meatloaf surprise. shards the glass found in packaged meat at one grocery change taking action. >> plus a luxury bus service hits a serious roadblock. why these buses won't be going anywhere anytime soon. >> and one last show for comic icon david letterman and the stars are out to honor him tonight. we'll have a live report from new york coming up next. bulldog: get a queen serta set for just $397. save up to $300 on tempur-pedic breeze. and get up to four years interest-free financing on the entire tempur-cloud collection! the memorial day sale ends monday. ♪ mattress discounters ♪ it marks the end of an era in late night television. david letterman will say good- bye his last show tonight. fans lined up for the final show and celebrities arrived to be part of it. welcome back. dave's final show, his 33-year tv career about to end. suzanne marques joins us with a preview. >> reporter: veronica what excitement is happening out here tonight. folks who left the final taping had huge smiles on their faces. they said it was the best sendoff. they said they felt great. they didn't feel depressed. they felt bittersweet because there won't be any more of them but they loved the way he said good-bye to everyone. david letterman poked his head out the side door of the ed sullivan theater and waved to fans. he finished taping his last show. >> his family was there he was emotional. >> reporter: jerry seinfeld, chris rock, tina fey all part of tv history delivering the last top 10. the final things i would like to say to david letterman. fans say the whole show was a fitting tribute. >> it was exactly what i expected. maybe even a little bit better. >> reporter: spoiler alert. the last band to play on the stage was the foo fighters. he said their music helped them while he was recovering from heart surgery. leading up to his last show, letterman admitted to jane pauley on cbs sunday morning he is nervous about retiring. >> any enormous uprooting change in my life has petrified me. really petrified me but once i have come through the other side, the reward has been unimaginable. >> reporter: letterman's final appearance in american living rooms will take place in just a few short hours. >> reporter: veronica, we saw dave coming out the front entrance just about a half-hour ago even though taping end a few hours ago. so it means he was really taking in everything, every moment because -- we don't know if they will keep the marquis. it's been 33 years we have had david letterman on tv. so can't wait to see the full show tonight. >> it really is the end of an era. all right. suzanne marques live in north carolina, thank you. you can watch the last late show with david letterman right here following kpix 5 news at 11. a bay area woman cooking dinner for her family finds glass in her meatloaf! now a grocery chain is pulling the beef from its stores nationwide. there have been fakes in the past. kpix 5's da lin with why the grocery chain is taking this report seriously. da. >> reporter: yeah, ken. that customer says his family actually ate some of that meat and got sick. now, when he discovered the glass in the meat, that's when notified grocery outlets. grocery outlet is taking this very seriously. they have since removed all of the 5-pound prepackaged harris ranch ground beef from its stores across the country. this oakley man says his family had made sloppy joes with the portion of this meat and ate it last week. >> we didn't notice it while we were eating it. so as far as like that, i'm not sure if, like, anything in there was like a sharpness of it would cause any problems. >> reporter: mike said they got sick but didn't realize the problem until his wife used the remainder of the ground beef monday to make a meatloaf dinner. >> we started to tear the meat apart and saw glass pieces this big and could you tell it went through a meat grinder at some point because it was charred up and smooth. they were all consistent about the same size. >> reporter: if you look closely you can see a couple of small glass shards in the meat. >> we pulled out probably about 20 pieces within 30 seconds. >> reporter: mike says he bought the ground beef from this outlet. they pulled harris ranch 5- pound prepackaged meat from all 220 stores nationally. >> we believe the customer if you want to not truth. we have no reason not to believe the customer's story and what's important to us is that if there is some problem, that our customers are safe. >> reporter: but not everyone is convinced. some are reminded of the chili finger hoax. others will inspect their meat from now on. >> i'll probably like touch around it before i buy it to see if there's anything in there. >> reporter: grocery outlet is working with harris ranch to investigate the claim. mike says he is not interested in money. >> we went to the store to make sure our local community was taken care of and nobody else would have problems. >> reporter: harris ranch will have an independent lab verify the claim. they say they won't talk about it until the lab results come back sometime next week. live in oakley, i'm da lin, kpix 5. >> just coming in, three men wanted for a wild night of crime and deadly hit-and-run in san francisco's financial district are now under arrest. the crash happened last month at california and kearney streets. police were after the three men for a bunch of robberies. investigators say as the suspects sped away in a stolen car think hit a woman who was crossing the street. she worked in a cafe at google. the three men face numerous charges including murder. there's a brand-new estimate out now. authorities are now saying 105,000 gallons of oil leaked on a beach near santa barbara. that's much worse than the initial 21,000 gallons first reported. clean-up crews are frantically working along that nine-mile stretch to deal with the contamination. investigators still trying to figure out how an onshore oil pipeline ruptured yesterday. santa barbara county district attorney is also considering criminal and civil charges against the pipeline company. still ahead, no more rides for a luxury bay area bus service. what's forcing the start group put on the brakes. >> plus, when is the last time you got up close with a wild animal? this bay area couple has made it their life's work female announcer: when you see this truck, it means another neighbor is going to sleep better tonight. because they went to sleep train's ticket to tempur-pedic event. through memorial day, save up to $300 on the cooling comfort of tempur-breeze. plus, get up to four years interest-free financing. sleep risk-free with sleep train's 100-day money back guarantee. and of course, free same-day delivery! are you next? announcer: but don't wait! sleep train's ticket to tempur-pedic is ending soon. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ williams-sonoma stock jumped 5% in after-hours trading. the company topped estimates with revenue up 5.8% in the 1st quarter and they say things look good for the 2nd quarter. luxury bus startup leap is in park because of permit problems t provides an upscale alternative to muni. it takes people from the marine ma district to downtown san francisco. the state regulators says it doesn't have proof of insurance, permits or complying with drug and alcohol testing. san francisco police department has a new headquarters but tonight we find out it's even harder than ever for cops to respond to calls there. we are going to explain why tonight on bay area nightbeat at 10:00 on our sister station, kbcw; join us on 44/cable 12. and still ahead, here at 6:00, they walk on the wild side. how a north bay couple has made it their mission to get you up close and personal with some pretty majestic animals. >> the kpix 5 mobile weather lab is reporting just 55 degrees in albany right now. it's not cold enough to stop baseball. that's still going on. we'll show you little league action and talk about a minor warmup. that and your holiday weekend forecast next. >> and i'm dennis o'donnell. just how loud was oracle last night? >> too loud, daddy. >> i know. >> i didn't quite get that. >> how many times can i tell you that? >> hey, hey, somebody's a little testy. >> i don't know if it's a point of frustration. >> get your frustration out in sports, coming up she taught kindergarten, he taught high school. but now a retired sonoma county couple lives on the wild side. >> here's sharon chin with this week jefferson award winner. can't wait to hear from these people. >> reporter: these days, rob and barbara dicely are offering a different kind of education. one that brings wildcats up close. reporter: >> rook at howlook at how his back legs point out to the side. >> reporter: they give a rare look at wildcats like os let and leopard. >> she is not a solid black cat. she has the same rose sets that a goal leopard husband. >> reporter: the team ranks among the students' favorite visitors. >> they're awesome. they're just great people. they are authentic. the kids are captivated by it. they just love it. >> reporter: rob and barbara have been educating school and community groups all over the bay area for 30 years through their nonprofit, wildcat education and conservation fund. >> the message is, that these amazing animals are disappearing. >> the cheetah is the fastest land mammal. >> researchers feel that the way things are going 20 years from now the cheetah in the wild will be extinct. >> in order to care about something you have to know about it. >> reporter: and students get the message. like this 8th grader. >> we need to create habitats or leaving them habitats because it's sad how a bunch of animals is becoming extinct because of us. >> reporter: the dicelys take their ambassador cap to about 70 groups a year. >> that's our siberian lynx. >> reporter: they travel from their home a licensed compound in the sonoma county forest. >> very nice treats. >> reporter: the couple cares for 21 wildcats on their 22- acre property including this mountain lion. they range from 6 to 100 pounds and come from licensed breeding facilities. the wildcats are young enough for the dicelys to train by hand to go on a leash. >> ready to go, bub. >> reporter: get into a transport carrier and feel comfortable with large audiences. only rob and barbara get close and touch them. >> people ask me how long it takes to train them. it takes a lifetime. because every day is a new day. i just love the animals and the fact that we're -- i think we're doing something worthwhile. >> reporter: so for three decades of wildcat conservation education, this week's jefferson award in the bay area goes to barbara and rob dicely. the dicelys do not get a salary. to pay for the animals' upkeep they charge a fee for their off site presentations and offer private property tours and hold fundraisers and donate part of that money to other conservation funds. >> beautiful. >> so healthy. >> beautiful. >> really good shape. >> they go through a lot of training and good care. >> wow. >> good for them. thanks. and you can nominate your local hero for a jefferson award online at cbssf.com/hero. paul deanno is in albany with mobile weather lab and a coat on today, paul. >> you need the coat today. it's chilly. 19 consecutive days where our wind has come direct from the pacific ocean, which water is 53 degrees. it has been in the 50s all afternoon down to the mid-50s but despite the chilly weather, the boys of summer are playing. let's take you on a tour. we'll show you two baseball games. we have two play-off aaa baseball games going on right now. and we have a great field here in albany, two fields and two different games going on despite the fact that it is brisk and breezy outside. we'll take you to dublin now. partly cloudy skies low cloud cover pushed all wait inland once again. oakland 60 right now. san bruno only 59. san francisco 58. san jose 63. and santa rosa 64 degrees. radar is active once again. we're talking three of the past five days toward clearlake and just east of the lake itself. numerous showers and a thunderstorm with about a dozen lightning strikes over the past hour or so. please watch out and bring the kids inside in this area of lake county watch out in mendocino county for some scattered thunderstorms this evening. overnight tonight, low cloud cover fog and drizzle will be back. san francisco down to 54. concord 54. santa rosa 49. and livermore your low tonight 53 degrees. [ signal breakup ] trough of low pressure remains in place it's been there the entire month of may keeping things unstable. keeping the flow of air from the chilly pacific ocean so the cooling cloudy pattern will hit 21 days after tomorrow and friday. tomorrow breezy chilly and cloudy. we'll see some minor changes as we head toward the weekend. futurecast shows you numerous clouds with also a bit of green on your television screen. some spotty showers overnight and tomorrow. drizzle is more likely going to be the culprit for you using your windshield wipers but watch out for an isolated shower or two tomorrow. mainly cloudy tonight with sprinkles two more days with a minimal shower chance especially in the high elevations. it will be trending milder coming up for the holiday weekend. so what about temperatures for tomorrow? late day thunderstorms around lakeport tomorrow with a high of 71. tomorrow and friday cool. trening milder as the winds turn -- trending milder as the winds turn more northwesterly. good for the barbecue for the holiday weekend. 70s inland. mid-60s near the bay. 50s at the coast with further warming next week. back out here live the mets, the brewers, play-off game aaa baseball in chilly albany. they are all wearing short sleeves. they are u bulldog: mattress discounters memorial day sale ends monday? oh boy! a queen size serta mattress and box spring set for just $397. mattress discounters has the largest selection of memory foam mattresses under one roof! well i'll be... up to $300 off tempur-pedic breeze. and wow! get up to four years interest-free financing on the entire tempur-pedic cloud collection! better hurry! the memorial day sale ends monday. ♪ mattress discounters ♪ dwight howard missed 41 games because of a knee injury during the regular season. now, another knee injury could force him to miss the second game of the western conference finals tomorrow night. howard took some friendly fire when teammate josh smith rolled into his left knee in the 1st quarter last night. an mri revealed he suffered a sprain and howard was asked during practice today if the game was tonight, could he play? >> thank god we don't have to play tonight. it's going to be on how i feel. but i feel like i can tolerate and go out and play through it then i will. but my career is the most important thing and, you know, um, i want to do whatever i can to help the team. but i can't help the team if i'm hurt. >> warriors ford green did an outstanding job defending howard today was named to his first career nba all-star all defensive team. he is the fourth warriors ever to be chosen to the first time. andrew bogut was flamed to all defense second team. and that means he gets a $1.9 million bonus in his contract. what's the value of the guys making all defensive only for the sake of perception? >> the value for andrew is $1.9 million. [ laughter ] >> nice little paycheck there. the warriors might have won the game but let's face it, steph curry's daughter riley stole the show in the post-game press conference. >> ha ha. >> we're both supposed to, um, you know. >> that's too loud, daddy. >> you know, hold on, one second, okay. >> be quiet. [ laughter ] >> he plays well and obviously he did that -- we'll live with those shots. so -- you play six games, um, against a team that has a certain style -- >> social media exploded over the cute 2-year-old. my favorite might be the comparison to the famous remember john-john kennedy oval office picture? there were a few who criticized curry for the distraction. >> come on. >> oh. >> i'm sure. >> she was a little too cute. [ laughter ] >> you should probably do something about that? >> find another daughter? [ laughter ] >> that was the most entertaining press conference ever. my wife was loving it. she thought it was the cutest thing ever. she is definitely a clown at home. so what you saw there is how she is. >> no laughing matter for the a's. they placed their starter drew pomeranz on the dl with a shoulder injury. so kendall graveman an appropriate name for the a's will likely take his place in the rotation. you might say the a's are sliding into an early grave. thank you, ken. [ laughter ] >> of course it doesn't help when your facing dallas kiako who hasn't lost since december. mark khanna avoids the double play at first. the a's haven't had a hit with runners in scoring position since [ indiscernible ] if he got a chris carter booted ball allowed butler to score and the game is tied at one. hahn pitching just as well as geico but made a bad mistake. the slugger gattis two-run shot in the 6th. they take a 3-1 lead there and win 6-1. 27-14, houston is off to their business start in franchise history. at the owners meeting in san francisco raiders owner mark davis made it clear he does not want to leave the bay area. >> well, how many times can i tell you that we're trying to stay in oakland? how many times can i tell you that? >> actions speak louder than words especially since davis hired former 49ers executive carmen policy to help push a new stadium plan in carson, california. today, nfl commissioner roger goodell said he hasn't heard from the raiders and was asked if the lack of communication is frustrating. >> i don't know if it's a point of frustration or -- but certainly a points of information. [ laughter ] >> yeah. you know what i sense that the communication between libby schaaf, the mayor, and mark davis is less constructive now and more destructive. and when it gets to that point,i think you start to have a tough time finding a solution. i saw it happen with gavin newsom and dr. john york. it gets to the point where it just doesn't work anymore. >> that stadium is 40 miles to the south now. >> where is riley curry when you need her? the latest news and weather are always on our website, cbssf.com. you tell us what you want to pay and we help find options to fit your budget. nah, nah, insurance, nah, nah, nah, discount. my name's flo, you want to go out with me? no. uh-huh-huh! female announcer: through memorial day at sleep train, get up to four years interest-free financing or save up to $400 on simmons beautyrest and sealy posturepedic. even get four years interest-free financing on serta icomfort and tempur-pedic. plus, free same day delivery set-up and removal of your old set. when brands compete, you save! but this special financing offer ends memorial day at sleep train. ♪ sleep train ♪ ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ joey fatone: it's time to play "family feud"! give it up for steve harvey! steve: come on champions, let's go. [cheering and applause] how y'all? i appreciate it. how y'all? i appreciate it. well, welcome to "family feud," everybody. i'm your man steve harvey. look, we got a good one for you today. returning for their second day. from westlake village, california, it's the tattersall family! [cheering and applause] and from marietta, georgia, it's the williams family! [cheering and applause] everybody's here trying to win theyself a lot of cash and a shot of driving out of her in a brand-new, fuel-efficient ford fusion hybrid. right there. [cheering and applause] let's go meet the williams family! [cheering] hey, palmer. palmer: how you doing, sir? steve: how you doing? good. good. good. palmer: i'm blessed and highly favorite, man. steve: all the time. what do you do? palmer: sir, i'm actually an actor on "tyler perry's house of pain." [cheering] thank you. thank you. as well as on the own, the oprah winfrey network. the actual news show, "love thy neighbor" by tyler perry as well. steve: you on that, too? palmer: yes, sir. hey, hey, hey. steve: they know it, too, 'cause they're going, "hey!" palmer: but don't get it twisted. that's why i need this money. [laughter] amen. yes, sir. steve: look, win yourself some money. you say money problem? palmer: yes, sir. steve: let's go to work. let's go play "feud," everybody. [cheering and applause] give me palmer. give me rachele. [theme music playing] here we go, guys. we got top 5 answers on the board. we asked 100 single men, you're at a bar

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