Red Flag Warning issued for Bay Area – NBC Bay Area

Red Flag Warning issued for Bay Area – NBC Bay Area

The National Weather Service has issued a red flag warning for much of the Bay Area from Thursday night through Saturday evening because of dry and windy conditions that pose a risk of wildfires spreading quickly.

The weather service had previously issued a fire weather watch for later this week but upgraded it to the red flag warning, which will be in effect from 11 p.m. Thursday until 5 p.m. Saturday because of winds of 25-35 mph with isolated gusts of up to 65 mph in higher terrains.

Forecasters said the areas expected to have particularly windy conditions and low humidity include the North Bay interior mountains, the East Bay hills and Diablo Range, and the San Francisco Peninsula.

PG&E is planning possible Public Safety Power Shutoffs in parts of the Bay Area due to the fire weather conditions.

Before the dry and windy weather, the Bay Area could see a little moisture in the form of drizzle that is expected to move across the region Wednesday morning, though most places are not expected to see much precipitation.

Also, a beach hazards statement is in effect for San Francisco, the coastal North Bay including Point Reyes National Seashore, the San Francisco Peninsula coast, northern and southern Monterey Bay, and the Big Sur coast through 8 p.m. Wednesday.

Large waves could possibly sweep across the shores of the affected areas without warning, pulling people into the sea.


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Tropicana Las Vegas implosion clears way for planned Athletics stadium – NBC Bay Area

Tropicana Las Vegas implosion clears way for planned Athletics stadium – NBC Bay Area

The Las Vegas Strip officially said goodbye to an iconic casino.

The Tropicana Las Vegas fell early Wednesday morning as part of a grand implosion in Sin City.

The Vegas sky was illuminated by a dazzling drone and fireworks show before the two hotel towers came crashing down at around 2:30 a.m. local time.

You can watch the implosion, which took around 22 seconds, in the video player above.

The city’s first implosion of a Strip casino since 2016 was done in order to make way for a proposed $1.5 billion stadium for MLB’s relocating Oakland Athletics. The ballpark is slated to open in 2028.

A’s-related imagery was even featured in the drone and lights show.

A drone and fireworks display precedes the implosion of the 23-story Paradise and Club hotel towers of the Tropicana Las Vegas on Oct. 9, 2024, in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

“The demolition of the Tropicana is an important milestone in the process of bringing A’s baseball to the world-renowned Las Vegas Strip and the community of Southern Nevada,” said A’s owner John Fisher, via NBC KSNV in Las Vegas. “We hope that, in time, this site will become a place of unforgettable experiences for fans of the game.”

The Tropicana opened in 1957 and was the third-oldest casino on the Strip. The casino closed its doors for good this past April.


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Amid Verizon outage, Bay Area emergency services, business proceed as usual

Amid a nationwide Verizon outage that impacted phone service from coast to coast, business and emergency services in the Bay Area largely continued operations as usual on Monday.

More than 100,000 people across the country reported issues with their Verizon phone service Monday, with the peak of reports coming around between 8 and 9 a.m., according to Downdetector, a service that monitors technology outages. Verizon announced Monday afternoon that services were beginning to come back online, but the company did not confirm how many of its more than 110 million customers in the U.S. were affected.

“We live and die on our phones,” said Rob Enderle, a technology analyst. An outage “creates a fairly big drag.”

The San Jose Police Department received no reports that 911 calls were impacted by the outage, a spokesperson said. Both the Oakland Police Department and the San Francisco Police Department also both reported that there were no communication issues.

The San Jose Fire Department uses FirstNet for calls, which is supported by AT&T, so its communication system had “minimal impact,” said a representative from the department.

In addition to emergency call systems remaining active, even phones without service are able to make calls to emergency services.

“If you are a Verizon customer and are not able to make any calls, you should still be able to call 911 as long as your phone is able to connect to another carrier. Your phone might say ‘Emergency calls only’ or ‘SOS,’” said the San Francisco Department of Emergency Management.

If your phone still cannot make a call, the Department of Emergency Management recommended connecting to a Wi-Fi network to use Wi-Fi calling, use a landline or Internet-based phone or attempt to get ahold of a family member or friend with another phone carrier to make the call for you.

Enderle added that an outage can be dangerous during this time of year when there are large weather events occurring at the same time.

An outage of this scale “can be incredibly damaging to government operations of everything from military to just making sure the police arrive on time to a bigger disaster,” he said.

The main impact of the outage would be from a commercial standpoint, said Tim Bajarin, a technology consultant, but that would mostly be a “nuisance” with potential workarounds.

“A lot of firms aren’t set up for that, so then you’re scrambling around trying to find alternative ways to make contact,” Enderle said.

Bajarin said that most businesses — even small ones — have Internet access, which provides a host of calling alternatives for those facing outages. The only business that would be significantly impacted would those that rely on transactions that take place somewhere without Wi-Fi, such as a farmer’s marker, he added.

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An earthquake shakes the Los Angeles area as wildfires rage nearby

LOS ANGELES (AP) — As wildfires raging in the mountains cast an orange glow behind the downtown Los Angeles skyline, Southern California residents were jolted awake Thursday by another reminder of Mother Nature’s might.

It was an all-too-familiar feeling for locals when a 4.7 magnitude earthquake rattled the Los Angeles area, unleashing boulders onto a Malibu road, shaking Santa Monica’s 1909 wooden pier and waking some people from bed. No injuries or damages were immediately reported.

The quake happened as the region has been dealing with three major wildfires burning east of Los Angeles that torched dozens of homes and forced thousands to evacuate. The blazes erupted during a blistering heat wave that has just subsided.

“It’s a garden-variety Southern California earthquake,” California Institute of Technology seismologist Lucy Jones said.

The U.S. Geological Survey said it was centered 4 miles (7 kilometers) north of Malibu and was about 7 miles (11 kilometers) below the surface. The jolt was felt as far as 45 miles (72 kilometers) away in Orange County, where people reported items moving in their homes. It was followed by several smaller aftershocks.

Officials around the region said authorities were surveying for damage, but had not found anything major.

Malibu Councilmember Bruce Silverstein said he has lived in the community for 13 years and this was the hardest quake yet, but nothing broke.

“Our house shook for about two or three seconds. I was concerned the windows were going to pop,” Silverstein said.

A camera at the 115-year-old Santa Monica Pier, about 12 miles (19 kilometers) from Malibu, showed several seconds of intense shaking during the quake. Several morning newscasts also captured the earthquake live as cameras shook in television studios.

A crew was working on clearing large boulders that rolled onto Malibu Canyon Road, near the epicenter, KTLA-TV reported

The earthquake occurred closest to the Malibu fault, but was also near the Anacapa fault, Jones said. Earthquakes below magnitude 5.0 are too small to be definitively associated with large faults that are mapped at the earth’s surface.

Rene Vasquez, manager at The Country Kitchen breakfast place in Malibu, said the shaking lasted a few seconds and kitchen staff ducked outside as a precaution.

“It wasn’t that bad,” Vasquez said. “Thank God nothing fell.”

At a Starbucks on the Malibu coast, surfer Albert Daniel was drinking coffee and wondered if the glass ceiling might come crashing onto him. Afterward, he was hoping for some big waves.

“It’s actually pretty calm,” Daniel said. “We did get a bunch of sets coming in but they were very small.”

Trudy Novicki, who was visiting from San Clemente, was about to meditate on the balcony of her hotel room when she felt the shake.

“I thought a truck had run into the building,” she said. Her daughter, who was visiting from Florida, said it was her first earthquake and thought it was a train.

People, including several celebrities, took to social media to post they were awakened by a jolt.

Hotel heiress and media personality Paris Hilton wrote on X, “That #Earthquake was scary.” Reality TV star Khloe Kardashian posted: “Damn that was a big one.”

Some residents said they were alerted by the state’s earthquake early warning system.

A number of quakes have been felt in the area in recent months, including a 4.4 magnitude earthquake in August that rattled nerves from the Los Angeles area to San Diego, swaying buildings, knocking items off shelves and setting off car alarms. The temblor caused a pipe to burst at the ornate 1927 Pasadena City Hall building.

In February, a magnitude 4.6 earthquake was felt in Malibu that occurred south of Thursday’s earthquake.

Thursday’s event was the 14th earthquake sequence of magnitude 4.0 in Southern California this year. While this is above the average of eight to 10 per year in the past few decades, it’s too soon to tell whether the increased activity is statistically significant, said Jones, the Caltech seismologist. The previous highest number was 13 earthquakes of this size in 1988.

The recent bout of quakes does not indicate whether a larger, more destructive earthquake is arriving soon, but residents should be prepared for more aftershocks. There is a 1 in 20 chance that another earthquake of 4.7 magnitude or higher will occur, U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist Morgan Page told the Los Angeles Times.

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Taxin reported from Orange County. Associated Press writer Olga R. Rodriguez in San Francisco also contributed.


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Oakland’s 911 answer times remain worst in California – NBC Bay Area

Exactly one year after Oakland leaders announced a $2.5 million investment to save the city’s failing 911 Emergency Call Center, average answer times remain the worst in California by a wide margin.

State data shows, with an average answer time of 50 seconds, Oakland PD is more than triple the state standard of 15 seconds.

But city leaders point out that’s progress.

Exactly one year after Oakland leaders announced a $2.5 million investment to save the city’s failing 911 Emergency Call Center, average answer times remain the worst in California by a wide margin. Raj Mathai spoke with Investigative reporter Candice Nguyen to understand the latest details.

Last summer, it was answering 36% of its 911 calls within the 15 seconds standard. This month, that increased to 51%. Oakland needs to be at 90%, according to the California Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES).

The agency first sent the city a notice of non-compliance in mid-2023, weeks after the NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit broke the story of Oakland having the worst 911 response out of any city in the state.

The $2.5 million investment announced in September 2023 was slated to stretch over two years. The city’s spending plan shows about half of the money is earmarked for more dispatchers and additional staff, including a 911 supervisor and therapists. Some of the other targets include modernizing their 911 dispatch technology, hiring more operators to field non-emergency calls, hiring a consultant and hosting job fairs.

At a recent press conference, Mayor Thao highlighted the city’s efforts.

“We’re doing ongoing hiring and ongoing testing. That was not happening previously. We are providing more mental health support for dispatchers. That wasn’t happening previously,” she said.

But dramatic and much-needed improvements to emergency call answer times could still be another year away.

Mayor Thao laid out a ten to 12 month timeline for new operators to get trained. She said the program ties a seasoned operator to a new one, causing a temporary slowdown in the call center’s efficiency because both of those operators are focusing on a single call. As those operators become fully trained, both the trainer and the trainee are then able to field more emergency calls.

As the city works to meet state guidelines for answering times, CalOES recently increased monitoring of the call center with monthly meetings. The change came weeks after Oakland missed the state’s deadline to answer 90% of calls within 15 seconds.

Oakland’s deputy director of services told NBC Bay Area that 911 answer times should be in compliance by the end of next year.

Still hanging on the line

For victims of crime in Oakland who have faced extended wait times as they seek aid in an emergency, long training timelines can be a point of frustration.

“Does it really need to take 10 months to train a 911 responder,” Oakland resident Jennifer Pahlka said.

Surveillance video from July shows a man breaking into her Oakland house. Pahlka said she was upstairs in a virtual meeting as he took her car and house keys and helped himself to food in the refrigerator.

“When I got off my call, I went into my bedroom and found a man standing there going through my things,” Pahlka said. 

She said she struggled to get through to the emergency line as she sought help on the ground.

“I ran out of my house and ran to my neighbor’s house. I dialed 911 that time. But I was on hold — and then I wasn’t. So I called again, and I think the third time I called, they did eventually pick up,” she said.

After she finally got through, she said it still took the police two days to show up. They only responded when neighbors called, saying the intruder came back and returned her car keys. Court documents show he has been charged with first degree burglary. 

Pahlka, who served as U.S. Deputy Chief Technology Officer for the Obama Administration, now believes the man was mentally unwell and did not mean to harm her. But in the moment, there was no way of knowing.

“I think I just really needed to connect with someone. I felt very alone,” she said.

She chose to share her experience on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. Her post was viewed more than two million times. 

In an interview with the NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit, Pahlka said there are a lot of things about Oakland’s 911 failure that are outrageous, but she’s done with outrage.  “If our only response is outrage, and not a kind of deeper inquiry that we’ve been able to engage in in the past, we’re not moving forward,” Pahlka said. “The lack of willingness to get into the weeds of how our government  operates is part of that holding us back. And I think that that really isn’t just on our elected leaders. It’s on all of us.”


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Los Gatos law enforcement activity – NBC Bay Area

A man died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in Los Gatos Wednesday as authorities were attempting to serve an eviction notice, the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office said.

The sheriff’s office said a deputy went to deliver the eviction notice at an apartment in a complex on the 100 block of Towne Terrace.

After knocking on the door, the deputy heard what he believed was the sound of a single gunshot come from inside the apartment, the sheriff’s office said.

Deputies ordered a shelter in place for the neighborhood and attempted to contact the person in the home. That process went on for hours until deputies determined the man in the apartment died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Sylvia Carrillo said the man was her neighbor for the past 18 years and worked from home.

“He was very private, super private,” she said. “I’m just sorry that everything happened this way.”




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Carlos Alcaraz naufraga en la 2da ronda del US Open al caer sets corridos ante van de Zandschulp – Telemundo Area de la Bahía 48

NUEVA YORK (AP) — La racha de 15 victorias de Carlos Alcaraz en los Grand Slams quedó desbaratada la noche del jueves con una deslucida derrota 6-1, 7-5, 6-4 ante Botic van de Zandschulp, el número 74 del mundo, en la segunda ronda del Abierto de Estados Unidos.

El verano de Alcaraz había sido fulgurante: consagraciones en el Abierto de Francia y luego Wimbledon en julio, más una medalla de plata en los Juegos Olímpicos de París.

Con 21 años, el español ya había acumulado cuatro títulos de las grandes citas. Tras haberse coronado en Nueva York en 2022, era el gran favorito para añadir otro trofeo a su colección.

Pero no nunca pudo carburar ante van de Zandschulp, un neerlandés de 28 años.

“Ha sido una gran noche para mí”, dijo van de Zandschulp. “He defendido bien… si quieres ganar a uno de estos jugadores, tienes que mantener la calma”.

Alcaraz estuvo años luz de su mejor versión, cometiendo errores de todo tipo.

Después de una doble falta para quedar dos sets abajo, un déficit que nunca ha podido revertir, el tercer cabeza de serie cargó su raquetero y se encaminó al vestuario confundido ante la situación.


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Los Angeles area hit by 4.4 magnitude earthquake

A powerful earthquake struck near Los Angeles, California on Monday afternoon, shaking homes and startling residents for miles.

The 4.4 magnitude quake’s epicentre hit near Highland Park, a neighbourhood in Los Angeles County not far from the famous Hollywood sign and the Griffith Observatory, at around 12:20 PDT (20:20 BST), according to the US Geological Survey.

It was felt in nearby cities Pasadena and Glendale, and all the way to the coastline in areas like Manhattan Beach and El Segundo.

There was no tsunami warning from the quake, the USGS said.

Officials across the state were monitoring for damage or injuries but nothing major was reported.

The Los Angeles Fire Department said crews from the city’s 106 fire stations were doing a complete survey of the Greater Los Angeles area for structural damage or other issues.

The agency said later that no damage was found and injuries were reported.

Local media reported a water main broke in the nearby city of South Pasadena and officials said the earthquake may have been to blame.

The quake hit during live broadcasts on television and radio that showcased the jarring ground movement. ESPN’s Malika Andrews was interviewing basketball analyst Rebecca Lobo live on-air when the quake struck.

“We have a bit of an earthquake here in Los Angeles,” Ms Andrews said as the camera swerved back and forth with the rattling.

She made sure everyone was OK and told viewers they were going to ensure the studio’s equipment and lights were secured so the crew remained safe. “Everything is shaking,” she remarked.

Another livestream, on ESPN’s podcast Travis and Sliwa Show, showed one member of the team ducking under a table as the earthquake hit. “Woah, woah. That is a real one,” host Travis Rodgers amid the shaking.

The earthquake was first estimated as a 4.7 magnitude, but was later downgraded to a 4.4 magnitude by the US Geological Survey.

The area has seen several magnitude 4 and 5 earthquakes in recent weeks, including in Grapevine and Bakersfield, California last week.


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