Bay Area All Local Audacy
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- 新聞
A daily dive into the top headlines in the Bay Area, delivering the news you need in 10 minutes or less from KCBS Radio.
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UC Berkeley: Pro-Palestine activists react to Biden's statement on peaceful protests
pro-Palestinian protesters at UC Berkeley react to President Biden's support to peaceful protests at American universities. Oakland's crime stats are down so far this year. Some California homeowners are finding the promise of home hardening isn’t translating to a better chance at affordable insurance.
For all this and more, KCBS Radio's Bret Burkhart and Patti Reising guide you through this afternoon's edition of the KCBS All Local Podcast. -
Richmond divests from Israel; EPA sues SF over sewage; SF tourism rebounds
Another Bay Area city is divesting from Israel as a result of the war in Gaza.
All female prisoners have been transferred out of the Dublin Federal Correctional Institute. The last transfers happened yesterday.
A new lawsuit is taking aim at San Francisco for dumping what it contends is nearly 2-billion gallons of sewage into the Bay and the Pacific Ocean.
It's been a little over a month since the minimum wage for fast food workers was upped to $20 an hour.
KCBS's Kris Ankarlo reports that even as the fast food industry adjusts, there are groups campaigning to make that wage hike standard in all industries.
For all this and more, KCBS Radio's Holly Quan guides you through this afternoon's edition of the All Local Podcast. -
May Day and pro-Palestine protesters join forces in downtown Oakland
This year's traditional May Day celebrations are converging with ongoing Gaza protests. The city of San Jose is breaking ground on a new interim housing community.
In the one-year since several agencies teamed up with the goal of getting Fentanyl off of San Francisco’s streets, almost 700 pounds of the drug have been confiscated.
For all this and more, KCBS Radio's Bret Burkhart and Patti Reising guide you through this afternoon's edition of the All Local Podcast. -
May Day brings protests across the Bay; CA-16 recount nears end
Today is May Day, and it will be a day of protests across the Bay Area as labor and those calling for a ceasefire in Gaza join forces to demonstrate.
With a little more than a dozen challenged ballots to count, we may finally learn the second place finisher in a tight race for a South Bay congressional seat.
Golden Gate ferry Service has been restored between Sausalito and San Francisco as of this morning, now that work to repair a damaged steel pier is complete.
When COVID-19 hit, San Francisco’s nightlife ground to a screeching halt. Some industry insiders say now that the pandemic is over, the scene is rebounding, but some argue it’s already back where it used to be.
All this and more on this morning's edition of the All Local, hosted by KCBS Radio news anchors Eric Thomas and Margie Shafer. -
Program would give SF families 1K per month; Berkeley demonstrators double
A new effort in San Francisco aims to keep families off the street, by providing a monthly 1-thousand-dollar income to cover basic needs.
The number of tents at the pro-Palestinian encampment at UC Berkeley has now more than doubled, raising the stakes in a growing stand-off between students and university administrators.
The plan to build a new city in Solano County has hit a big milestone.
Tesla car charging locations will be available to owners of other electric cars and trucks. That was the message from Governor Newsom this week.
Community leaders in the South Bay and beyond are letting California's Attorney General know what kind of help they need in tackling gun violence.
All this and more on this afternoon's edition of the All Local, hosted by KCBS Radio news anchors Patti Reising and Bret Burkhart . -
BART hosts event for small businesses seeking government contracts
Landing a government contract can sustain a small business during this unique moment in the Bay Area economy. BART held a networking event yesterday for small business owners to learn about qualifying for government contracts. KCBS Radio reporter Raquel Maria Dillon went to get an earful from Bay Area small business owners.
San Francisco's mayor is proposing a sweeping $360 million dollar bond package aimed at improving some of the city's ailing infrastructure, among other goals. KCBS Radio'sMike DeWald reports some critics worry the effort may be too broad.
San Francisco is still finding its post-pandemic footing. In part two of our "State of San Francisco" series, KCBS Radio reporter Kris Ankarlo looks at ways to measure the city's economic recovery.
Get these stories and more in this morning's edition of the KCBS All Local podcast, anchored by Nikki Medoro.