covered in police activity and search dogs looking for three burglary suspects in broad daylight. a police car rammed into the suspect's jeep. the suspects then took off on foot. >> it was a pretty significant collision and as much as the suspects drove directly into the officer head on, he was taken to the hospital as well. >> reporter: at one point police thought one of the suspects was hiding in a house. >> i think they were thinking they were in our backyard or in the field behind us. >> reporter: just before noon police caught one of the suspects. >> we did locate one subject hiding in an out building in an area where he was described to have fled. >> reporter: a rash of recent home invasions has neighbors here on edge. >> i think it is very scary especially when we have all these kids running around and playing and riding bikes. >> reporter: laura owns a daycare. >> came outside to see what was going on. and discovered all of this. >> did you send the kids home? >> no, but i have them locked up in my house and we keep coming out periodically to see what is going on. >> reporter: we are going to show you this surveillance video again. the neighbor didn't want to go on camera for obvious reasons because police are certainly looking at his videotape to try to catch these suspects. at this point right now two of the suspects are in custody. one of them is still at large. if you look at the videotape you can actually see the police car going down leeward street and then ramming into the jeep cherokee. the suspects getting out of the car and running down the street and the police giving chase. we are told that all of the suspects are african-american with dreadlocks. one of them still again at large and police have allowed the neighbors to go back into the vicinity. they believe this one suspect is probably way out of the area right now. >> they pulled out all the stops to try to catch these suspects. now, we could clearly see the vehicle's license plate number. are police willing to i.d. them at this point. >> reporter: dana, the reason why this person purchased all of this is because his car was broken into last week and his neighbor's house across the street was burglarized the week before. they will use this to try to catch the one suspect at large. >> that's better video than often what we get here in the studio. juliette goodrich, thank you. another probaseball player today testified he received performance enhancing drugs from greg anderson, barry bonds' trainer. he is the fourth witness to admit he got a substance in 2002 from anderson that he knew to be a steroid. his 16-year professional career included two years with the as. bonds is charged with lying to a grand jury that he never knowingly took steroids. prosecutors are bringing athletes to the stand to show anderson had access to steroids and that he informed the players about the drug and how to use them. before we ever saw a neighborhood in san bruno go up in flames, a solano county man was already conducting his own research about pipelines near his house. ann notarangelo on why he now says his area could see something just as bad as what happened on the peninsula. ann? >> reporter: he lives just off this path. yards from his home are two pg&e gas lines and then there is one jet fuel line that serves travis air force base. he got a federal government and today he talked about his findings. >> we want to see what condition these pipelines are. >> reporter: anthony wants assurances the pipelines that run by his house are safe. >> well, i live right next to it and i have seen that nobody seems to be concerned with these pipelines. and we sleep at night. if something happens i want to be sure it is not going to happen to me and if it is i'm going to move. >> reporter: in 2009 the retired lawrence lab worker got a grant to study the pipelines. the jet fuel pipeline follows the fence line and the pg&e lines run along the sidewalk. it all borders a number of neighborhoods. >> as far as we know we think that the pipelines are safe. they need to be inspected more. >> reporter: he says the lines were put in in 1959 and the newest one from 1968. he says a leak or explosion could be devastating along the lines of the san bruno explosion last year because one mishap could ignite the other pipelines. >> might say the same as like say san bruno. san bruno had more work done to it than ours have. these are older. and also they run at a higher pressure than san bruno. >> reporter: based on information he got from both pg&e and the military he says there is no guarantees these pipelines have been inspected thoroughly. >> they haven't been. we know they haven't been and it is actually older than san bruno. >> reporter: how do you know they haven't been inspected? >> because pg&e says they haven't been inspected. >> reporter: but pg&e says it does conduct regular inspections and stepped up its inspections since the san bruno blast. there are plans underway to relocate the jet fuel line across the street. anthony says is he not trying to pick a fight. >> we want cooperation and if the reports show something we will have it in there. if it shows nothing we will have it in there too. >> reporter: what else does he want? he wants the agency to to look at the report. he wants older pipelines replace. there might be some people who say you are just too close to the issue to be able to look objectively at it. >> if i was you would have to read my report and will you read i have been unbiased the whole times. we are not doing any gotchas on the military or pg&e. we are just showing the facts. >> reporter: he is applying for another grant so he can continue his work of studying the underground pipelines. two years ago when he first applied for a grant he was the other than personal applying for grant money to look at underground pipelines. now people are much more interested. there are 70 people applying for that money. >> get in line behind him. thank you, ann. there will be no ballot measure to extend temporary taxes in california. governor brown says no budget compromise is possible and he has broken off talks with republicans. so is there a plan b? phil matier went to sacramento to find out. phil? >> reporter: that's right, dana, no tax extensions, no special election in june and a looming deficit that just gets bigger by the day. the question is, what's next? >> that's a good question. >> where we go from here we should have done all along. >> reporter: the governor didn't make any public appearances today explaining what might be either he just issued a video that said. >> i will explore every possible avenue. there is more than one way to get to the goal and over the next several weeks and months i'm going to find a way to get our budget balanced. >> reporter: in other words we are back to square one with a long, long way to go. california will have to cut another $16 billion out of the budget. that's on top of the $11 billion they already cut for what could be a total whopping number of $27 billion in cuts. as for what will get hit -- >> there are few options. >> reporter: democrats predict even more cuts to already hard hit programs in health and welfare. plus, this time cuts to public safety. and education as well. with more teacher layoffs, bigger classroom sizes and maybe even a shorter school year. >> maybe by a week, maybe by a month. >> how many weeks do you think? >> i'm not here to tell you i know but there will be an impact. >> it is easy to give some wild scenario that the world is going to come to an end if we live within our means. i just don't buy that. >> reporter: translation. governor jerry brown and democrats will have to take another look at their plan. they are going to probably have to do more surgical cuts. they are going to have to promise more reforms and they are going to have to try to get it done by june because that's when the fiscal year ends and that's when the budget is due and the only hope they will have of getting the voters getting it back in front of them before the end of the year is to still try to convince republicans that not now but later they have some plan that they can buy. >> the governor said this is going to hurt and it truly is. phil matier in sacramento. thank you. for weeks now it simply did not stop snowing and now we have the totals to prove it. what the monster snow cap means officially for that long- standing california drought. the rains have passed and the sun is shining but the threat of landslides is still very much with us. just ahead what is happening underground right now to keep that threat level high. rates? and with all this water and the problems that come with it, why is one bay area utility raising rates? ,,,,,, never in my lifetime did i think i could walk 60 miles in 3 days. 60 miles compared to what a cancer patient goes through is a walk in the park. from the moment i registered, people started immediately supporting me and asking me how they could help. you meet the most wonderful, inspiring people. when you accomplish those 60 miles, it's truly life-changing. (man) register today for the... and receive $25 off your registration fee. because everyone deserves a lifetime. mmm. ahh. yeah. bacon. come celebrate baconalia! only at denny's. america's diner is always open. nearby homes. authorities a county's rising water levels on the san joaquin river are threatening nearby homes. authorities are asking 125 residents of four r.v. parks in newman to evacuate voluntaryly but most are refusing to go. a shelter was set up in patterson but last night it was empty. the rain plus snow runoff is keeping the river high and it is expected to stay that way for at least five more days. another big danger lingering from the recent storms. landslides, several slides in recent weeks have already forced people out of their homes. len ramirez on why one expert says more may be on their way. len? >> reporter: well, ken, the landslides are popping up all over the bay area right now including this one behind me here. just off sierra road in the east foothills of san jose. now, fortunately this slide which you can see here the earth just broke away and is going downhill in several spots there. this slide is in an area that is unpopulated but that is not the case with another slide in the almadden valley. the sun is out, clouds are gone and it has been days since the last rainfall but that doesn't mean the threat is gone. >> i don't know if it is safe to be in this house. >> reporter: she is talking about living on a landslide. slow moving but active enough to topple trees that fell on a roof. >> i just stayed in a hotel last night. i had an electrical fire two nights ago. pole sunk and started a fire in my house. i have been evacuated four times for gas leaks. >> reporter: the private roadway is crackling and crumbling. you can see where the earth is splitting apart. neighbors say it is an old slide reactivated by the rain. >> it gushes out on the road and makes it worse. >> reporter: nice homes built on shaky ground. >> you find out your house is pretty much worthless at this point and everything you invested in a house is unknown. i mean, who would buy a house now on a landslide or whatever this is. >> much of the development in our bay area has occurred on ground not previously recognized to have potential for landsliding. >> reporter: what concerns engineering geologist peter anderson of morgan hill is not the water you can still see trickling out of the hillside but the water seeping through the lower ground. >> it takes awhile for the water to get to those zones but when it gets there they tend to act as an antigravity mechanism so that it is more prone then for slides to begin their initiation. >> reporter: that's what may be happening on this hillside in hercules where an entire neighborhood is threatened by a landslide. neighbors say a once flat vacant lot has been transformed into a mound since the slide became apparent. >> we should be vigilent with our hillsides. there are more landslides possibly still to come. >> reporter: and the reason for that is that the surface water is starting to dry out with all the sunshine that we are having but that water that is seeping underground, ken, there is nowhere for it to go. it just goes into the layers, finds those dangerous spots, can pool up and can cause these landslides. they say the threat could be with us for a couple weeks based on all the rain we had. >> we got a lot. yes, it is soaking right into the ground. len ramirez, thank you for that. california's drought is officially over. governor jerry brown said so said after getting the latest snow totals from the sierra. water content in the snowpack is 165% of normal. >> it is certainly rather phenomenal year actually when you consider that it is technically a weak elnina. >> that combined with rainfall totals was enough to break the three-year drought that began in june of 2008. how is this for ironic? that's one word you could use for it. in some areas water rates are actually rising despite the fact that the reservoirs are full. simon perez is in marin county. simon. >> reporter: the laws of economics, dana, say usually when the supply goes up the price goes down but that law does not apply in marin county. the reservoirs nearly full as you said but this summer customers might have to pay more. >> ironic? life is ironic. >> reporter: and today's installment of irony is brought to you by marin county where despite all the water that is pouring down the mountainsides, the county's water district still says it needs to raise rates. >> worst timing to announce rates going up when the governor is saying the droughts over? >> well, the drought doesn't really have much to do with it. >> reporter: the marin municipal water district sent out a dear customer letter giving notice of a proposed increase of 4%. that if approved it would begin may 1st. they have an abundance of water. as a matter of fact, they have will have water for the next two years even if it doesn't rain, you know. but they still raise the rates. i have no answer for that. >> rates are going up because our costs are going up and our revenues have actually been declining a little bit. >> reporter: reservoirs are full but the district needs money to keep the district running no matter how much water there is. >> we had a pipeline rupture that was from 1883. so we have lots of pipe in the ground that needs to be replaced. >> reporter: and the cost of doing business for the district is on the rise. >> what about this idea that health insurance costs more, electricity costs more, chemicals cost more. >> tell me it. >> reporter: marin isn't alone. take look at these hikes proposed or adopted this year. some are approaching nearly 50%. >> i think that the water company just needs to cover themselves. >> first they told us to save and conserve because we conserve because they are not making enough money. we didn't get any pay increases. >> of course revenues are going down. how can you use a rationale for raising rates because you asked us to save to start with. >> we have cut costs. we cut $17 million out of our budget this year and our budget is about a $60 million operating budget. so we have saved money where we can. we have used reserves. >> reporter: he says marin's water supply is pretty sensitive to the boom and bust cycles of lots of rain and then drought. he says the county, if it stopped raining tomorrow, would have about two years' worth of water, but compare that to san francisco which he says has four years' full of supply. >> nobody said life was fair. darn it. thank you, simon. all right. we are going to check in with roberta for the latest and find out if we have got more rain coming? >> first, can i tell you something? i just learned this. fire station 10, fire station 18 in oakland. huge ken bastida and huge dana king fans. i want to let all those ladies and gentlemen that know that today in oakland, you experienced a record high temperature of 83 degrees shattering the old record of 79 set back in 2008 and, yes, tomorrow will be yet another record breaking day. in fact, let's take a look at those temperatures across the bay area. today we had 6 official record breaking records. napa 86 degrees. four degrees off 90. 82 degrees in san rafael. mountainview had a record high of 79 degrees to round up the pack at 6. now, out and about this evening it is extremely mild. go ahead and get outdoors. in fact, i think i can smell a couple of barbecues right now. overnight tonight, with the clear skies, temperatures into the 40s and 50s. it looks like we have high pressure and it is strengthening producing an offshore flow which will result this one more day of near or record temperatures. 86 degrees. santa rosa. warmer in oakland at 85. san jose should shatter an old record set back in 1942 as well. we will pinpoint your neighborhood and we will have sunshine. and offshore wind 10 to 15 miles an hour. 80 at the coast in pacifica to 86 degrees in concord. 85 fremont. 87 degrees in brentwood. ken was alluding to the possibility of rain. we have got that back in the forecast on saturday. but meanwhile, dana and ken, we will talk about the pollen report and how it affects all of us coming up next time around. >> thank you, roberta. do you really know what is in your food? what one bay area family learned after just a few days of changing their diets. that's coming up in 2 minutes. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, expose you and your loved ones to a controversial chemical. dr. kim mulvihill shows us how one ea family got in how your food is prepared and packaged may expose you and your loved ones to a controversial chemical. dr. kim mulvihill has the story. >> reporter: they changed how they ate all in the name of science. >> i found this research project on craigslist. >> how it involved our family was really to bring in a different way of cooking food and foods. >> we stopped using plastic bottles. >> it was about bpa and if it was in our body. >> reporter: bpa, an industrial chemical found in both cans and plastic packaged foods. some lab studies have linked bpa to serious health problems including breast cancer. the family along with four other bay areas agreed to have researchers measure the chemical in their bodies. >> they found that our levels of bpa before the study were higher than the national average which was shocking. >> reporter: the families were then put on a special diet. researchers dr. connie engel is with the breast cancer fund. >> we brought them three days worth of freshly prepared foods that we had been really careful to store in glass containers and to avoid contact with packaging and food preparation items likely to contain those chemicals. >> reporter: after three days of eating a bpa free diet the families were tested again. >> what we found was a pretty dramatic drop. >> reporter: a 60% drop in the levels of bpa and 50% drop in a second chemical. dehp which is also found in some plastic food packaging. the results have changed how the family buy and prepare food. they seek out bpa free products. >> we have stopped using water bottles completely and gone to the stainless steel. >> reporter: in a statement the findings say they are no cause for concern. the substances don't stay in the body. the group says consumers should feel confident in eating canned or packaged foods. as for this family they would rather be safe than sorry. >> it is healthier and better to use glass containers or metal containers to eat your food in. >> the researchers say there are some canned foods that are especially high in bpa. those are foods that are acidic, salty or fatty such as coconut milk. the researchers also recommend not micro waving in plastic. >> we were just talking about canned tomatoes. you can now get them.