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tv   CBS News Bay Area Evening Edition 11pm  CBS  May 24, 2025 11:00pm-11:36pm PDT

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>>now at 11, after waiting more than 80 years for the remains of their loved one to be returned, a bay area family received a cherished part of his legacy they thought was gone forever. plus, rescue crews pull a group of sailors off a sinking ship in the bay. why? the captain refused to be rescued. >>and could this be the last summer the tourists pour into alcatraz island, tags along with the family, who liked the idea of turning it into a prison. that is, until they
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actually saw alcatraz. but we begin with the latest recall effort underway in the bay. this one is not a pushback against liberal policies. instead, it's locals feeling their supervisor betrayed his neighborhood. >>instead of coming to us. he went for the whole city. but i think it really needs to start here. he's still not listening. he still doesn't get it. >>good evening. i'm brian hackney. >>and i'm andrea nakano. it's looking like a recall election for san francisco district four supervisor joel engardio will happen. all stemming from the closure of the great highway >>recall. organizers say that city officials have verified that more than 99% of signatures on the recall ballot are legit. amanda harris got the latest developments. >>recall engardio posters are
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popping up throughout the sunset, and residents selina chu agrees with it. she is one of the people calling for san francisco district four supervisor joel engardio to be voted out of his position. >>hold him accountable and ask, you know, where's our voice in this decision making? >>chu has lived in the sunset since 2011. she doesn't feel supervisor engardio is listening to his constituents. >>he was elected to be the district four supervisor. so instead of coming to us, he went for the whole city. but i think it really needs to start here. >>engardio angered many sunset residents, including chu, when he sponsored and voted for an initiative to close a two mile stretch of the upper great highway to cars and instead create a park. citywide. the initiative passed with more than 54% of the >>vote, >>but the majority of the sunset and richmond districts, the areas closest to it,
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opposed it. >>with the closure. you know, it does add, 15 30 minutes extra per morning, to my commute. some people on social media, they ask, why don't you just wake up earlier, like expecting me or assume accusing me of being lazy? you know, it's not a matter of that. >>this change impacts her everyday life and takes away something she can never get back. her time. she says. engardio didn't hold the town halls to hear from the community, but in a statement to cbs bay area, engardio says he's confident the majority of voters would oppose the recall and approve of the work he's doing. quote, i'm working with sfmta to further improve traffic flow and pedestrian safety. i'm fixing problems big and small, for residents, supporting merchants, and working with the mayor and my colleagues to pass legislation that addresses pressing issues on public safety, housing and our local economy. i'm continuing to do the job of supervisor, as i always have.
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so far, the department of elections has only done a random sample of signatures. they still have to verify every one of the nearly 11,000 signatures, and that could take weeks. chu was one of the people collecting signatures with the sunset united neighborhood group. she believes the recall will get on the ballot. >>we did our own validations prior to submitting. we double checked, triple checked, quadruple check to make sure we have good signatures prior to submission. >>engardio went on to say in a statement, quote, if there's a recall every time we disagree with one issue, we won't have a functioning government. but chu argues the recall is not about one issue, but how he handles the issues. >>that's his distraction from actually listening. he's still not listening. he still doesn't get it. it's not about the great highway. it's about how he works. we pay someone with our tax dollars having a representation for the sunset district, and that starts with
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townhall meeting. >>meantime, across town in hayes valley, supervisor bilal mahmood is pushing to have cars banned from a section of hay street as well to help create the city's newest entertainment zone. at the moment, the city has designated four entertainment zones located at coal valley thrive city near chase center, harlem place and mark lane and front street. these are special areas where local bars and restaurants can sell alcohol to go, and people are allowed to drink them openly on the street during big events. they've proven so successful that earlier this month, mayor daniel lurie approved another five of the locations, and supervisor mahmood wants to add a block of hay street between goff and octavia streets to that growing list, turning the restaurant heavy street into a community space. that section is already closed to cars on the weekend, much like the great highway used to be. but mahmood says he
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wants to explore more options, which may or may not mean a permanent ban on cars. >>well, let's take a live look outside, high above the cars. another busy day in the bay area tomorrow. lots of folks in town and they'll be out and about for that. we need an early forecast. and here's daryn. >>well, there's your first clue in that live shot, brian, that you were just showing the marine layer is already building back in tonight. and this is going to have an influence on tomorrow. we're looking at the city lights to the bay. this is the marine layer here which is already made its way over towards the east bay. let's walk this down the coastline, because normally it sits out here off the coast of san mateo county. that's where it starts. if that's where it is now, let me show you where it's going to advance. as we go through the remainder of tonight, we'll put the futurecast on here and you'll see the clouds advance to 7 a.m.. and by this point, now we're all waking up tomorrow morning to may. gray. it's not going to last long. and by the time we get towards late morning and early afternoon, in fact, most of us will be in sunshine except the immediate city, likely on the coast. take a look up here with me. let's get a forecast for your holiday. if that's a
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visual representation of what's going to happen if you are inland, the forecast for sunday and monday, even if you get some of that cloudiness in the morning, it's more sunshine than anything else through the day. you're going to be in the mid and upper 70s tomorrow for daytime highs. there's the carnival forecast. now here it's a different story. you're not getting out of the 50s like for a daytime high all day. and you'll certainly have a broken up marine layer pretty much throughout the parade tomorrow. breaks of blue sky, plenty of sunlight. in other words, it should be a gorgeous and very typical carnival. see what the rest of the forecast coming up in just a bit for now guys, back to you. >>it's that time of year again. musical artists from all over the world gathered in san francisco's mission district to celebrate the legacy of latin american, caribbean and african culture. at carnival, we spoke with one of the performers, maria, about how honored she felt to be on stage.
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>>it's honestly a dream. i grew up here in sf. i've come here a couple times with my family, so it was really cool. we got this opportunity and we're just really excited for everyone to see us perform. >>more than 500,000 people are expected to attend carnival celebrations this weekend, and we will bring you live coverage of the carnival parade starting tomorrow at 10:00 in the morning on our sister station, pix plus, and streaming on cbs news bay area. >>and meanwhile, up in napa valley, thousands were feeling the groove at day two of the bottlerock music festival. one couple telling us that even after all of these years, they're still finding reasons to return. >>it's kind of a retreat for us. kiddos are at home with grandma. we started coming in 2013 or 14, so we've used it as just kind of a place for us to go.
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>>the three day music festival wraps up tomorrow l memorial day weekend marks the unofficial beginning of summer and the beginning of a tourism boom. five years after covid, the bay area's tourism industry still has not fully rebounded. >>but some san francisco attractions are thriving, including alcatraz. dolphin hopped on the boat to the rock and found out that not everyone is on board with the plan of converting it back to a prison. >>alcatraz is a huge moneymaker for the feds, and there are so many people in town for the holiday weekend. all alcatraz tours are sold out until tuesday, so i asked people how they would feel if they turned this moneymaker back into a prison. the national park service reports roughly 1.6 million people visit alcatraz each year. >>we're just excited to see the
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history of the island. >>infamy, isolation and escape stories from one of america's most secure prisons have made alcatraz a tourist hotspot and a favorite hollywood backdrop. >>no one has ever escaped from alcatraz. >>now, a new plot twist president trump wants to turn it back into a federal prison. >>if it could be utilized again, it might be a good idea. maybe >>janet and her family from ohio made their first visit to the rock on saturday. >>it looks like where you get your stuff, you get like when you check in as an inmate. >>it didn't take long for them to see why many local and state officials are skeptical of the president's plan. >>now that you see this, there's no chance. i mean, it costs so much money. >>cost was exactly why the government shut down alcatraz in 1963. operating it was three times more expensive than a standard prison. >>i was like, oh, that's an interesting thought. sounds like the people are separated, keeps us safe, that piece. but when you kind of dig in and
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hear about the cost and see it. i wouldn't see the cost benefit. >>the national park service says alcatraz brings in around $60 million a year in tourism revenue. >>a bridge too far, perhaps a prison too far in time. in terms of trying to rebuild this, most of the structures seem to be affected by the salt water. >>those against the idea say it should remain an iconic landmark. >>i think it's a fear factor. it's something, you know, big and sensational. you can say on tv that people will cheer for because they know what alcatraz >>is. shannon's husband charlie, worries taking it away from tourists could also hurt the local economy. >>i thought it was sounded like a pretty, pretty neat idea. since being here, i don't know that it's feasible, but i kind of would still be for it just for the content of it, to be honest. like, i think it would be a great story. i think it'd be interesting to see how it all plays out. >>the family doesn't think it'll actually happen, but they're glad they saw it in person and form their own opinion. >>it makes more sense to make money than spend money on this, especially
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because you could do this somewhere >>else. no one knows exactly how much it would cost to turn this back into an operating prison, but safe to assume it would be tens of millions of dollars. prison officials say they do plan to return in the near future for another site visit. >>all right. thanks. still ahead. tonight at 11. why? the captain of the sailboat that capsized in the bay tried not to be rescued. >>and later, a family reunited with a cherished piece of their family's legacy. one they thought they would never see
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♪♪ that's convenience from chase. make more of what's yours. >>welcome back. a harrowing water rescue this afternoon when a ship capsized just offshore from the marina. green captain refused to leave his boat. you can see him hanging off the side of it there. >>yeah, this happened just before two this afternoon. nine people were on the ship when it began to take on water. san francisco fire and the coast guard arrived and rescued eight of the passengers. but the captain refused to leave his boat. >>his captain was really going to go down with the ship, and he didn't want to let go of it. i understand that it's his livelihood, and that's what he does for a living. at the same time, he was jeopardizing his own safety. >>well, the san francisco fire department stayed with the captain until the tow vessel came and uprighted the boat.
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the passengers were adult alumni. a sailing club for teen girls. san francisco fire department does not know what caused the boat to take on water. everyone was wearing their life jackets and no one was hurt. darren. >>well, coming up in this forecast at the end of it, the at the end of the seven day forecast, there is another bump in temperatures. and we're going to be doing some of those really big spreads and temperatures across the bay, some of those inland locations by thursday and friday. i know i'm going far down the road, but by thursday and friday we'll be back in the low to mid 90s. not today. these are today's numbers now. today we might not have been that warm, but we still saw a very familiar pattern. take a look at pacifica on here today. it didn't get out of the mid 50s all day at the beach. the city didn't get out of the upper 50s and oakland wasn't really all that much warmer than that. but just take one step over the east bay hills and then you're back into the mid 70s. and it was on the verge of going to 80 today in antioch. so this temperature spread can
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oftentimes be much bigger than that and will be by the time we get to the end of the week. but for right now, we're kind of getting the influence of stronger onshore flow. and certainly windy boy, the wind has really been something that we've probably noticed more than anything else. let me show you tomorrow. so we'll pick out the daytime highs on here and we'll get everybody in. we're not just going to pick out some of the representative spots for the extreme microclimates. so go ahead and pick out your part of the bay. and these numbers technically are a few degrees below where you were today. nothing drastic i don't think you'll notice much. and then monday we might warm up a little bit, but i don't think you'll notice that either. and there's one very important reason for that. all we have to do is take a look at what the windstream's are showing us is going on across the bay right now. it's going to get stronger on monday, so tomorrow will be just about as breezy as today was. so you notice a lot more here near the water. but on monday it's going to get a little stronger. and the reason for that is we've got a very weak cold front coming our way for the final day of this three
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day holiday. let me show you what that looks like when we go to the forecast imagery. here's today a little bit of marine layer out here off the coast. but as i advance into tomorrow night, you're going to see a very well-defined front that's a very weak but well-defined cold front. the rain totally disappears before it gets here, but you can clearly see the structure of a cold front here that is about to march across the entire bay area. but watch that line. it comes through in the morning on monday, so it passes through early. it disintegrates pretty much as it does it, and then you get more blue sky than anything else. that's your monday. you're actually going to have more blue sky, less marine layer less layer cake cloud on on monday. it's going to be one of the sunnier days, and the thermometer might be a little warmer. but because that was a cold front, the wind may pick up a little more, so that might cancel all of that out. let me show you what it looks like in a seven day forecast, because you kind of miss that detail. if you just looked at this in seven day forecast form, there's our sunday and monday. you're a little bit of a bump in the temperatures on monday, but maybe not really. now look
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back here thursday and friday. really the change from wednesday's mid 70s to thursday's mid 80s will be noticeable. and then we're going to keep going to the 90s on friday. that's the seven day for the inland microclimates. let's get everybody else in here. we'll take a look at this now for the bay where the temperatures are never quite as extreme. but you do see a similar pattern on there. all right, matt, over to >>you. okay. thanks, darren. coming up in sports. knock, knock. who's there? not the sound of the giants bats. nearly no hit in our nation's capital. how it all went wrong. however, everything is right for the gaels. after a 23 inning day. saint mary's - [announcer] our world is constantly changing, and every day stanford medicine advances our understanding. our world class school of medicine and adult and children's health systems work together,
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>>recently, it feels like the giants bats were made with a bad batch of lumber. the hits aren't coming. they hadn't scored over four runs in six straight games entering saturday. manager bob melvin certainly needing a lot more from matt chapman in the big offseason acquisition of willie adams. but at least he found a good spot start. kyle harrison taking over for justin verlander first start of the year. here was his lone mistake. two run blast from james wood in the first. those were the only earned runs he allowed over four innings. however, the offense couldn't deliver any run support runners on first and second here for matt chapman in a slump. and he hits into a double play. giants come up with nothing. strand two runners in scoring position here. not much offense generated after that. san francisco struck out eight times in this game. and then when they were down to their
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final out it was chapman up again. and give some credit out here to daylen lile. what a web jim puts this one away. three hits in the game for the giants. nationals win it three nothing now seven straight games with less than four runs. okay, let's go to saint mary's baseball looking for its second wcc championship in history on saturday. had two chances to beat san diego in the double elimination format in game one. didn't go as planned. the toreros walked it off in the bottom of the 14th to force another game. it was a thriller and they had their chances, so they had to regroup nine more innings less than an hour later and it once again went down to the wire. bottom eight ryan pierce into the gap. left fielder can't get it. it goes all the way to the wall, bases clearing triple. gaels went into the ninth up 9 to 5, but san diego just wouldn't go away. they had the tying run on third down to their last out. and john damiano strikes out. rex watson seals the win. oh
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what elation. saint mary's wins the west coast conference for just the second time in program history, and the gaels are headed back to the ncaa tournament for the first time since 2016. anthony edwards in minnesota hosting the thunder in a must win game three of the western conference finals, and the timberwolves set the tone early. edwards fast break off the loose ball. let out some frustration from the games in okc with the slam. look at him go. minnesota led by 31 at the half. and it was that kind of night for the home team edwards. another one from deep. he finished with 30 t-wolves blow out the thunder 143 101. they got a chance to tie up the series in game four on monday. the valkyries are already turning some heads with a fast two one start to their season. they head to new york to take on the liberty next week, but they're probably enjoying the flight out after the friday win at los angeles. valkyries were without star tiffany hayes against the sparks, but they
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got some help from the bench. kate martin a pair of triples in her ten minutes on the court and carla late scored a team high 19 off the bench. volks won 8273, and head coach natalie nakase really likes what she's seeing so far from the french rookie. >>might be a blessing that i can't communicate communicate with her right away. so it might might be a blessing that she's kind of just playing herself and playing free. i think that's when players play their best, you know? and just credit to our whole bench. like our whole bench. carla, kiki, stephanie, kate. like they stepped up. their plus minus was huge. so yeah, they they really stepped up and impacted the game tonight. >>former warrior kevin durant got a front row seat to watch that valkyries win. and a special moment for julie van loo after the game. got to meet k.d., her basketball idol. she credits durant with the reason that she wears number 35. even made her first start for the valkyries in front of him. let's go to soccer bay fc and houston taking on the dash went to halftime down one nil, but found a spark coming out of the
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locker room. penelope hawking tied it up in the 53rd minute, then minutes later they took the lead with a go ahead goal from rachel hill. bay fc took that lead to the final minutes, but messiah bright spoiled the party. equalizer in the 88th. tied the game for good. bay fc leaves the lone star state with a22 draw. quakes in action hosting houston at paypal park. similar opponent to bay fc and similar results. 76 minute match tied at two. what a finish off the header from daniel muni. quakes scored three goals in a matter of ten minutes take over this game and they almost held on to the comeback. but in extra time, griffin dorsey puts the equalizer before time expires. this match ends in a draw. quakes unbeaten streak extended to six matches. they'll play at the la galaxy on wednesday. all right, here's something that you don't see every day at the ballpark. impressive lead off homer from jarren duran. but the reaction much more impressive. this fan, unfazed by the rain and the full bottle of milk he had. he just poured
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it all over himself. he went for it. bad choice for milk, not for him. maybe it's a nod to the indy 500, which is going down on sunday. otherwise, maybe the red sox just have a new home run tradition. i say when we have a good show. >>to do. >>milk. last block. yeah, yeah, i'll do the honors. >>we'll watch you, matt. >>you'll watch with distance. >>yes. all right, >>all right. thank you. matt. coming up, a bay area family waiting decades for answers about their relative who went missing during world war two. finally
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>>more than 81 years after his plane was shot down and proclaimed lost forever, the remains of livermore native second lieutenant thomas kelly are now home. >>and now, another cherished part of his legacy believed lost forever. tonight is back in the hands of his extended family. watch. >>everything is all grown together. >>second lieutenant thomas kelly, after his plane was shot
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down off the coast of new guinea during world war two. his parents received a letter from the u.s. army air corps. >>the words of a commanding officer cannot restore a son lost in action, nor help very much in tempering your great sorrow. >>then, all those years ago, at the family home in livermore, his father did something remarkable to honor his lost son. >>he put a flagpole out in the front yard, and he raised a flag every day and took it down every night. >>the u.s. military sent the kelly's an american flag in 1944. it only had 48 stars. and then time passed. the father died. the house was sold twice. the flag disappeared, believed lost. but it wasn't. >>it's 48 stars. it's all sewn now. i think they just are printed. >>saturday afternoon. the current owner of the home returned the flag to the
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members of the extended family. she never even knew lieutenant kelly's name until now. this memorial day weekend. >>the real flag is a tattered flag. 48 stars. and we we get to have it. it has a lot of meaning for our family. >>lieutenant kelly fought and died for this flag. and once more, the flag is back home with his family. >>isn't >>that >>incredible? and on memorial day weekend. and then some. thanks for watching our next loca newscast.
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dr. charles: and the son of god, jesus the lord, said, "i am the way, the truth, and the life. no one comes to the father but by me. therefore, go into all the world, teaching and preaching the gospel to every single person, at the remotest parts of the earth." male announcer: in touch, the teaching ministry of dr. charles stanley.

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