Progress. We are getting word there is a downed power line in the area. Christien kafton is at the scene checking it out. He will give us a live report in a few minutes. It is wednesday, july 30th im Claudine Wong in for pam cook. Good to see you. Good to see you too. The day is starting really busy. Im dave clark. Lets talk about weather and traffic. Steve, you let claudine come back . Any time. We have a lot of cloud cover over us. The low clouds are not going anywhere. A few showers up in Mendocino County and a few tropical clouds toward central california. Some of these may lift toward us. There are a couple of lightning strikes earlier. It looks like those have fizzled out. A thunderstorm in fresno. That does not happen this time of morning. It stretches all the way up to mammoth. There is a little westerly breeze at concord. Northwest napa and northwest oakland. It lookalikes it will stay it likes like it will stay mainly south of us. Without the cloud cover temperatures 90s to 1
Pickleball supplies pilfered from courts at Booker T. Anderson Park
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Powering Richmond with clean energy | Richmond Standard
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By Kathy Chouteau
Did you know Tupac Shakur recorded music at Richmond’s Starlight Recording Studio early in his career? Or how about that Henry J. Kaiser offered healthcare to his workers on the Richmond Home Front during WWII before it was a thing? These revelations and more about Richmond’s history can be seen in a captivating new educational film series recently launched by the Richmond Museum of History and Culture.
Produced by Doug Harris and funded through the Economic and Community Investment Agreement (ECIA) grant between Chevron Richmond and the City, the museum’s five films pack a ton of hyper-local history into a very short timeframe on average, five minutes each. The films, which include commentary from local historians, include the following topics: Rancho San Pablo, the Spanish Flu in Richmond, the SS Red Oak Victory (WWII in Richmond), the Richmond Black Panthers and Starlight Recording Studio.