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Next storm could bring ‘substantial’ rain and strong winds to Bay Area

March 23, 2023 by www.sfgate.com Leave a Comment

While the San Francisco Bay Area recovers from the winds and rains that soaked and battered the region Tuesday, local meteorologists are setting their sights on the next storm , which is expected to drench California yet again early next week.

It’s too early to nail down the details of the forecast, but the National Weather Service’s Monterey office said that weather models are in “remarkable agreement” that another storm will develop off the California coast on Monday and Tuesday — and “the cumulative precipitation could be substantial and accompanying winds strong and gusty.”

Tuesday’s storm was driven by an area of low pressure that deepened and intensified rapidly, kicking up exceptionally powerful winds as it moved directly over San Francisco. Dangerous gusts knocked over trees, killing five people in the Bay Area. There’s indication that this next system could also see rapid pressure drops.

“It’s looking like another heavy rain-wind producer for next week,” Rick Canepa, a forecaster with the weather service, told SFGATE on Thursday afternoon.

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While the models agree California will see another strong storm next week, they’re inconclusive on exactly where the storm will hit.

“The storm next week in some ways will look like what we had last week, but the location could be different,” local meteorologist Jan Null of Golden Gate Weather Services said. “Some models bring it closer to the North bay, other models bring it closer to Eureka. But we’re still five days out.”

As of Thursday afternoon, the weather service predicted that the first rains with this next system could arrive in the North Bay on Monday night, before spreading across the entire region and continuing into Tuesday, maybe Wednesday. The Bay Area could see anywhere from “a few to several inches of rain, especially in higher terrain,” forecasters said. These totals will be updated in coming days as weather models come into more agreement.

While the Bay Area waits for the next storm, the region is expected to see mostly dry weather and unseasonably cold temperatures. There’s a chance for very light rain as a cold front passes over the region Thursday night, but most areas likely won’t see any drops. Dry conditions are forecast for Friday and into the weekend.

Through the weekend, afternoon highs are expected to be in the 50s to low 60s. Overnight lows are forecast to be in the 30s in inland valleys and in the 40s along the coast; the weather service issued a frost advisory for Friday, Saturday and Sunday mornings for a large portion of inland areas.

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Photos: Marin County road destroyed by mudslide triggered by Bay Area storms

March 23, 2023 by www.sfchronicle.com Leave a Comment

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A mudslide triggered by recent storms that rocked the Bay Area this week caused some extreme warping and buckling to a major road in Novato, officials said.

The Olompali State Historic Park shared photos on their Facebook page showing portions of Redwood Boulevard, a popular bike route connecting Marin and Sonoma counties, cracked and lifted.

Park officials said access to the park through Redwood Boulevard would be “closed off for some time.”

Storms fueled by an atmospheric river brought yet another inundation of rain to an already-sodden Bay Area, raising the risks of mudslides throughout the region. The storm, which was responsible for at least five deaths across the Bay Area, also felled trees, toppled power lines and damaged major infrastructure.

Reach Jessica Flores: [email protected]; Twitter: @jesssmflores

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7 years ago, this Bay Area restaurant got rid of tips. Now, it’s bringing them back.

May 23, 2021 by www.sfgate.com Leave a Comment

Once on the vanguard of the tip-free movement, Comal is bringing back tipping.

The move wasn’t prompted by a failure of model, owner John Paluska told Eater SF . Instead, as Comal’s restaurant empire has grown to include three eateries in Berkeley and Oakland, the concept no longer made sense.

When Comal got rid of tipping in 2014, it was only operating one restaurant in Berkeley. The idea was to create more pay equity between front of house positions, like bartenders and servers, and workers who don’t directly interface with the public. Instead of asking diners for tips, Comal instituted a flat 20% service fee that was split between employees. But now, Comal has fast-casual restaurants in Berkeley and Oakland, and Paluska told Eater SF it no longer makes sense to add a service fee to those establishments.

“We don’t feel any better about tips,” Paluska told Eater. “We felt like our move to a service charge was successful. We aren’t moving away from that model because it’s broken. But … the landscape is different now, and we have to work within that.”

Recently, SFGATE reported San Francisco staple Zuni Cafe is testing out the tip-free model, making it one of the best-known Bay Area restaurants to do away with tipping.

“It’s really important that people are paid fair wages and that their work is valued properly,” Zuni chef Nate Norris said.

Like Comal once did, Zuni will add a mandatory 20% service charge for guests. That 20% charge will be allocated for payroll costs, primarily wages and increases in taxes, Norris said.

“A lot of my career, I would have viewed [the pay equality gap] through the lens of, kind of bitterness and unfairness, and it had some animosity towards the staff members who were better compensated than I was, because of structural inequities,” Norris told SFGATE. “So as I’ve grown and matured, the way I would articulate it right now is, I’m not mad that the servers have been making a good wage. I am upset that we don’t have a system that makes it easier for the back of the house employees to also have that good wage.”

Not everyone is happy about the change, though. Read more about Zuni’s transition to no tips here .

SFGATE food editor Dianne DeGuzman contributed to this report.

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Bay Area Home Depot worker found with $80K worth of stolen merchandise, CHP says

March 23, 2023 by www.sfchronicle.com Leave a Comment

A Home Depot employee was arrested in Hayward on Tuesday afternoon and accused of stealing $80,000 worth of merchandise, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Investigators were notified on March 1 by the store’s loss prevention investigators about an after-hours employee seen taking items which Home Depot valued at an estimated $300,000, authorities said, adding that store investigators provided video surveillance of the employee and the vehicle used during the incidents.

Officers executed a search warrant at the employee’s home in Patterson on Tuesday and found 600 stolen items valued at $80,000, along with $90,000 in cash, according to authorities.

The unidentified employee was arrested at the Hayward store and booked into Santa Rita Jail on charges of organized retail crime, grand theft, possession of stolen property and conspiracy to commit a crime, the CHP said.

The CHP’s investigations unit covers crimes including homicides, vehicle theft, retail theft, and even cargo theft throughout the state, according to the agency.

Reach Joel Umanzor: [email protected]

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Bay Area police shoot and kill man allegedly holding hostages, including 2 children

March 23, 2023 by www.sfgate.com Leave a Comment

San Jose police shot a man Wednesday night who was reportedly armed with a machete and barricaded himself and other people, including two children, in a home, officials said . The suspect died at a local hospital Thursday morning, the San Jose Police Department said.

Officers first responded to a report of the hostage situation at about 8:30 p.m. on the 900 block of Boynton Avenue in San Jose’s Blackford neighborhood, the department said on Twitter. At the scene, they found the man had barricaded himself and the others into the residence, police said. Special operations officers were called onto the scene.

At 11:10 p.m., the police department posted on Twitter that police had shot the suspect and he was taken to a local hospital.

At 1:18 a.m. Thursday, police announced the suspect was dead and said that “the hostages, including two children, were safely removed from the residence.”

Police did not share information on the suspect’s relationship with the hostages.

The shooting is under investigation, and police said additional information will be released in the future.

The San Jose Police Department did not respond to a request for more information on the shooting.

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