It’s almost the holidays, and that means Union Square will be busy with tree lightings and the likely inclusion of the annual Macy’s Holiday Windows featuring adoptable pets. One of the new kids on the block is the Nintendo San Francisco store, which will transform for the season.
The changeover begins mid-November, and it will introduce Nintendo’s Winter Collection. It features attire, accessories and more meant to go with the colder weather. Think of beanies, cardigans and blankets. For those who want to cook in style for Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner, the Nintendo store will also feature items such as oven mitts and recipe organizers. The offerings aren’t all Mario and Mushroom Kingdom-themed.
The store is also offering seasonal products tied to “Pikmin” such as hoodies and “Animal Crossing” loungewear. At the very least, the Nintendo San Francisco store will be the place for launches of upcoming titles such as “Kirby Air Riders,” coming out Nov. 20, and “Metroid Prime 4: Beyond,” launching Dec. 4.
For those shopping for Nintendo fans. It’s going to be the spot to pick up hard-to-find items that aren’t available anywhere else. In a news release, Nintendo said it would offer customers seasonal offers, including a free holiday-themed gift wrap with purchases of $50 or more from Dec. 6 to 7. Those who spend $100 or more will receive a Nintendo holiday ornament from Dec. 13 to 20. Visitors should also check out the in-store My Nintendo kiosk for Platinum Points and a giveaway item. Just remember to have your Nintendo Today! with your QR code in hand.
Lastly, the Nintendo San Francisco store will also be redone with holiday window displays and decor. It will likely be a popular spot when shopping in Union Square this season. For those not in the Bay Area, Nintendo is holding a sweepstakes that will offer fans a chance to visit Nintendo San Francisco with airfare and a two-night stay included.
Federal immigration agents are moving into the Bay Area, with more than a hundred headed to Coast Guard Base Alameda, marking a significant federal operation in the region. In an interview with Maria Bartiromo on “Fox News Sunday Morning Futures,” President Donald Trump said, “We’re going to go to San Francisco. The difference is, I think they want us in San Francisco.” This move comes as a precursor to Trump’s threat to deploy the National Guard to San Francisco. Coast Guard Base Alameda confirmed the federal operation, stating: “Coast Guard Base Alameda is preparing to support CBP agents beginning October 22 as a place of operations. This support of DHS agencies continues the Coast Guard’s operations to control, secure, and defend U.S. borders and maritime approaches.” This announcement follows similar operations in cities like Los Angeles and New York, with the spotlight now turning to the Bay Area.”As much as the state of California and its residents may not like it, federal authorities are allowed to enforce immigration law,” Local immigration attorney Hugo Vera of Vera & Vera PLC explained. Vera explained that the legal authority federal agencies have in sanctuary cities questions the 10th Amendment and the Posse Comitatus law, which requires separation between the federal government and the state government.Gov. Gavin Newsom responded on X, criticizing the federal actions as part of an “authoritarian playbook,” accusing the administration of lying about a city’s crime rate and creating stress with ICE and Border Patrol. Vera noted the proximity of the operation to the area. “I think on a national scale, Sacramento’s on the map, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the administration decides to highlight Sacramento is one of those cities that they will come after, quote unquote, like they’re doing in San Francisco and have done in the South,” said Vera.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
, Calif. —
Federal immigration agents are moving into the Bay Area, with more than a hundred headed to Coast Guard Base Alameda, marking a significant federal operation in the region. In an interview with Maria Bartiromo on “Fox News Sunday Morning Futures,” President Donald Trump said, “We’re going to go to San Francisco. The difference is, I think they want us in San Francisco.”
This move comes as a precursor to Trump’s threat to deploy the National Guard to San Francisco.
Coast Guard Base Alameda confirmed the federal operation, stating:
“Coast Guard Base Alameda is preparing to support CBP agents beginning October 22 as a place of operations. This support of DHS agencies continues the Coast Guard’s operations to control, secure, and defend U.S. borders and maritime approaches.”
This announcement follows similar operations in cities like Los Angeles and New York, with the spotlight now turning to the Bay Area.
“As much as the state of California and its residents may not like it, federal authorities are allowed to enforce immigration law,” Local immigration attorney Hugo Vera of Vera & Vera PLC explained.
Vera explained that the legal authority federal agencies have in sanctuary cities questions the 10th Amendment and the Posse Comitatus law, which requires separation between the federal government and the state government.
Gov. Gavin Newsom responded on X, criticizing the federal actions as part of an “authoritarian playbook,” accusing the administration of lying about a city’s crime rate and creating stress with ICE and Border Patrol.
Vera noted the proximity of the operation to the area.
“I think on a national scale, Sacramento’s on the map, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the administration decides to highlight Sacramento is one of those cities that they will come after, quote unquote, like they’re doing in San Francisco and have done in the South,” said Vera.
UNION CITY – An investigation is underway into the attempted kidnapping of an 11-year-old student in Union City, police said.
The incident happened around 8:15 a.m. Wednesday in the area of Dyer Street and Meteor Drive, according to the Union City Police Department.
Police said the student was riding her scooter to Itliong-Vera Cruz Middle School when the suspect approached her, grabbed the hood of her sweatshirt and tried to pull her.
The girl escaped uninjured and reported the incident to school employees, who in turn notified authorities.
The suspect is described as a tall, heavy-set male wearing a black hoodie with the hood pulled up and a mask covering his face, police said. He may be associated with a dark-colored car.
Police said officers are canvassing the area and reviewing potential surveillance footage.
Anyone with information related to the case can contact Detective D. Ayala at 510-675-5259.
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Jesse Tyler Ferguson, 50; Saffron Burrows, 53; Jeff Goldblum, 73; Christopher Lloyd, 87.
Happy Birthday: Put your energy where it counts. Focus on how you earn and manage your money to achieve your goals and help others. Opportunities will sprout from the connections you make and conversations you have this year. Forward thinking, along with innovative ideas and putting your imagination to good use, will yield results. Trust your instincts, not what others tell you. Verify information and only disclose what’s necessary. Financial gain looks promising. Your numbers are 3, 10, 21, 29, 34, 37, 45.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Place greater emphasis on partnerships, joint ventures and long-term commitments. Consider who and what brings you happiness, and make any necessary adjustments to ensure a favorable outcome. Reach out to institutions that can help you put together the framework for what you want to achieve. Lifelong plans will put your mind at ease. 3 stars
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be open to suggestions. Contact the people and go to the places that can help you learn what you need to know to make the most of opportunities that can add stability to your life. A change you initiate will impact your entire lifestyle. Consider the broader scope and overall outcome before you begin. 3 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Consider what you must learn to reach your objective. Sign up for a course, reach out to someone already doing what you want to pursue or start making the changes necessary to position yourself for success. Stop spinning your wheels and start putting your skills, experience and knowledge to the test. Personal growth is favored. 3 stars
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Share what you can do. Your suggestions and offers of assistance will lead to opportunities from those you encounter. Value and respect what you can do, and don’t sell yourself short just because someone doesn’t stroke your ego. Set a price and build a name for yourself. Get what you want in writing before you start new projects. 5 stars
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Learn as you go; listen and ask questions, but hold back from divulging too much about yourself or what you can do. Let your charm be your way of communicating and gaining trust, and you’ll have the upper hand if you decide to barter or negotiate. A joint venture appears difficult. Consider moving forward alone. 2 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Change may tempt you, but consider every aspect before you take a leap of faith. Evaluate the cost and the hours you’ll face if you move in one direction or another. Sitting still may not be your first choice, but if the numbers don’t jive or fulfill your needs, you’re best to search for better alternatives. 4 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Take the initiative and sprint forward with enthusiasm. Treat what you do, how you do it and what you accomplish with pride, and don’t underestimate yourself or your ability to make things happen. Your discipline and hard work will pay off, but your domestic situation will suffer if you don’t maintain a balance between your personal and professional life. 3 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Participation will pay off. Attend networking events, trade shows or a reunion that brings you in touch with old associates willing to share valuable information. Talks will lead to opportunities that spark your imagination and encourage you to contribute to something everyone wants to be a part of. Don’t sell yourself short. 3 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take care of yourself, your needs and your reputation. Focus on your health and financial well-being, and you’ll reduce stress. Keep your personal life and intentions to yourself to avoid interference or competitive action. Put your energy into building wealth, not spending it unnecessarily. Choose peace and personal growth over trying to buy love or attention. 3 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Check out what’s happening in your professional industry. Stay up to date with the latest news and be sure to connect with the movers and shakers. There is much to gain if you participate in functions that offer a platform to exploit your skills, assets and experience. An unexpected encounter will lead to an interesting proposition. 4 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Go over your personal papers, health records and long-term plans. It’s essential to observe the changes around you and adjust your plans accordingly. A lifestyle change that puts your mind at ease is in order. Consider reducing your overhead or adopting a different approach to balancing work and downtime. Choose peace over pressure. 2 stars
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): It’s time to wheel and deal. Get your priorities straight and set out to satisfy your needs. A heart-to-heart talk with someone special will help you put things in perspective and come up with a workable plan that will tick off most of the boxes on your want list. Positive change begins with you. 5 stars
Birthday Baby: You are secretive, loyal and intense. You are unique and imaginative.
1 star: Avoid conflicts; work behind the scenes. 2 stars: You can accomplish, but don’t rely on others. 3 stars: Focus and you’ll reach your goals. 4 stars: Aim high; start new projects. 5 stars: Nothing can stop you; go for gold.
Visit Eugenialast.com, or join Eugenia on Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn.
As President Donald Trump’s renews his threats to send the National Guard to the Bay Area, Santa Clara County and San Jose are proposing “ICE-free zones” that would prohibit immigration enforcement activity to take place on county or city-owned property.
Since Trump took office in January, the county — and its largest city — have pledged to protect its immigrant communities, filing lawsuits against the federal government over its attempts to restrict funding to ‘sanctuary’ jurisdictions and spending on programs like “know your rights” trainings and immigration legal services. San Jose last month also instituted a policy that requires federal agents to remove face coverings while conducting immigration enforcement operations within the city.
The latest initiative, which stems from the “ICE-free zones” instituted earlier this month in Chicago, is being led by Supervisor Sylvia Arenas from the county and Councilmembers Peter Ortiz, Domingo Candelas and Rosemary Kamei from the city. Both the county and the city have long held non-cooperation policies that prevent officers from aiding federal agents in immigration enforcement efforts.
“This is really in the spirit of standing with our community and letting our community know that we want to make sure that we are not somehow inadvertently responsible in helping carry out some of the immigration enforcement activities,” Arenas said at the Board of Supervisors meeting on Tuesday afternoon.
The supervisor, whose district includes parts of San Jose, Morgan Hill and Gilroy, is asking officials to identify a list of county-owned or controlled properties that could “potentially be used for immigration enforcement staging, processing or surveillance.” The proposal, which was unanimously approved by the board, also wants signage posted on those properties that notifies the public that immigration enforcement activities are barred on the site.
The San Jose City Council’s rules committee is expected to vote on whether to move its own proposal forward on Wednesday afternoon.
Ortiz, who represents East San Jose on the City Council, said at a press conference on Tuesday that the effort started with a “simple but powerful idea: that city property, property built and maintained by the people, should only be used for city or county purposes.”
“When immigrant families see federal agents parked outside of our community centers, it doesn’t just create fear, it creates barriers to education, to healthcare, to housing assistance, to the very services that help families survive in this Valley,” he said. “That’s not who we are as a city, and that’s not what our public spaces have been created for.”
Similarly, the city proposal authored by Ortiz, Candelas and Kamei asks city officials to compile its own list of owned and operated properties “that are open space with publicly accessible parking lots that could be misused for non-city purposes.”
The proposals have already garnered support from immigrant rights advocates who maintain that the initiative will help protect the county’s diverse communities.
Jeremy Barousse, the director of policy at the nonprofit Amigos de Guadalupe, urged the board during the meeting “to pass a strong policy that excludes federal immigration enforcement from using county property to execute their harmful family separation agenda.”
“This is our community and we must not let malicious federal agents use local government property to violate the constitutional rights and safety of our people,” he said. “Our county is a beautiful place that thrives due to the vibrant contributions of our immigrant communities and we must protect this diversity and our community with a powerful unifying partnership across the county that asserts ‘hands off’ our communities.”
In the meantime, Santa Clara County is continuing its work to ensure it protects its immigrant communities in the event Trump sends the National Guard to the Bay Area like he recently did in Los Angeles. Deputy County Executive David Campos assured the board that “no one is more prepared” than Santa Clara County.
“As scary as it is, and we feel a lot of anxiety, we’re actually ahead of the curve in terms of where other Bay Area governments are, and as a region the Bay Area is certainly looking to be more prepared than LA County was,” Campos said. “My objective and the objective of the administration is to make sure we are as prepared as we can be.”
Phillips 66 and Kinder Morgan Inc. plan to build a new pipeline system and reverse the flow on some existing conduits to haul gasoline and other fuels to California, Arizona and Nevada.
As California’s in-state refining capacity dwindles, the regional market is becoming increasingly reliant on imported fuels, especially gasoline. The pipeline project hatched by Phillips 66 and Kinder will carry fuels from as far away as the Midwest to augment supplies sent by refiners in Washington State and Asia.
The project, slated for completion around 2029, would be the first pipeline system to deliver motor fuels into California, a state long considered an island disconnected from the major refining hubs of the Gulf Coast and Midwest.
The investment comes amid a wave of California refinery closures or conversions — including the imminent shutdown of Phillips 66’s Los Angeles-area plant — that threaten to squeeze motorists with shrinking fuel supplies and higher pump prices. Consumers in some neighboring states also are expected to feel the impacts.
Phillips 66 and Kinder announced Monday what is known as an open season on their proposed Western Gateway Pipeline, during which bids are solicited from shippers that would reserve space on the conduit for moving fuels. The bidding window will close on Dec. 19, Phillips 66 wrote in the statement.
The Western Gateway project would involve building a new line between Borger, Texas, where Phillips 66 operates a refinery, and Phoenix. Meanwhile, the flow on Kinder’s existing California-to-Arizona pipe known as SFPP will be reversed so more fuel can flow to the Golden State.
Phillips 66 also plans to reverse the flow on the Gold Pipeline that carries supplies from Texas to the St. Louis region so Midwest fuel can move west. The refiner operates fuel-making plants along the Gold Pipeline route including in Ponca City, Oklahoma, and the St. Louis suburb of Wood River, Illinois.
Kinder has eyed similar projects in the past, proposing in 2013 the Freedom Pipeline that would have carried oil from West Texas to California. But that proposal was ultimately shelved after receiving anemic interest from potential shippers.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
South Bay tech company Bill.com and East Bay energy giant Chevron have revealed plans for new rounds of job cuts that are poised to displace well over 100 workers in the Bay Area, filings with the state government show.
The layoffs are a reminder that job cuts in the tech industry have yet to run their course, as a wide range of tech companies continue to reveal their plans to trim staffing levels in the region.
Bill.com logo on the tech company’s office building at 6220 America Center Drive in north San Jose. (Google Maps)
Chevron, which has moved its headquarters from San Ramon to Houston in another example of the corporate exodus from California to Texas, revealed prior layoffs that erased 600 jobs in the Bay Area.
According to WARN notices the companies sent to the state Employment Development Department, the layoffs include:
— Bill is cutting 84 jobs in North San Jose at the company’s headquarters complex. These layoffs are expected to take effect on Dec. 15, the WARN letter to the EDD shows.
— Chevron is eliminating 100 jobs in San Ramon, an East Bay city where the energy giant had once based its headquarters, according to the WARN letter. These most recent cutbacks are due to occur on Oct. 23. Chevron is also cutting 75 jobs in the Kern County city of Bakersfield.
Bill and Chevron both stated that the layoffs would be permanent.
“We are providing severance pay, medical continuation coverage, access to education and training resources, and outplacement assistance,” Henry Perea, Chevron’s manager of state government affairs, wrote in the WARN letter to the EDD.
OAKLAND — Retired NFL star Doug Martin spent his final moments alive Saturday morning wandering in the dark through the backyards and banging on the front doors of his neighbors’ houses in the Oakland hills, sources told the Bay Area News Group.
Martin’s subsequent death — after what police described as a “brief struggle” with officers inside one of those homes — sent shockwaves through the city, stunning those who recalled the former All-Pro running back’s quick burst on the football turf and easygoing temperament off of it.
Two days later, questions mounted about the Oakland Police Department’s actions before dawn Saturday, along with the factors that appeared to lead Martin inside his neighbor’s home and the exact circumstances around his death in police custody.
“It’s tragic, it’s really tragic,” said his neighbor, Lynne Belmont, 74.
Multiple people called 911 around 4:15 a.m. Saturday, as Martin went door-to-door on the 11000 block of Ettrick Street, sources said. He had been staying in a longtime family home on that block, which sits atop an Oakland hills neighborhood near the Oakland Zoo.
Police initially received a call about a person breaking into a home on that street, which a source said had been occupied at the time. They “simultaneously” received notice that a person believed to be a burglar was having “a medical emergency,” according to a statement released Sunday by the Oakland Police Department.
A “brief struggle” ensued when officers contacted the suspected burglar inside a house and tried to detain him, police said. Martin then became unresponsive after being taken into custody, according to Oakland police.
Oakland police did not respond to multiple requests by this news organization for further details. City and police officials have yet to release police radio and dispatch recordings from the encounter, which were recently encrypted and shielded from the public’s ear.
The police department also has yet to announce how many officers have been placed on paid administrative leave, as is customary following an in-custody death.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Doug Martin (22) runs during the second half of an NFL football game against the New York Jets, in Tampa, Fla. Two-time Pro Bowl running back Doug Martin has been released by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2018, who may look for a replacement in free agency.(AP Photo/Jason Behnken, File)
In a statement issued Monday evening, Martin’s family said his parents “were actively seeking medical assistance for him and had contacted local authorities for support” before his encounter with police. They added that Martin “battled mental health challenges that profoundly impacted his personal and professional life,” and that he fled his home that night after “feeling overwhelmed and disoriented.”
“Ultimately, mental illness proved to be the one opponent from which Doug could not run,” said the family’s statement, which was released by Athletes First. The firm represented Martin when he was drafted by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2012.”
On Monday, Mayor Barbara Lee issued a statement mourning Martin’s death and noting she had reached out to Martin’s family. Lee hailed him as “an Oaklander who had a distinguished NFL career,” adding that “our condolences are with his family and loved ones.” The family has requested privacy.
Martin did not seem much involved in Oakland’s professional sports community, a tight-knit social circle that includes former big-league athletes and coaches. Several long-timers contacted for this story had not been aware that Martin had even resided in Oakland.
On his journey from high school stardom in Stockton to NFL fame, however, Martin was as memorable a running back as the coaches who crossed paths with him could remember.
“He was the kind of guy who really just absorbed everything you tried to teach him,” said Earnest Byner, a former NFL all-pro who was Martin’s running back coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. “He could do anything you asked him to do.”
It was the kind of inner confidence that made the relatively undersized, 5-foot 9-inch tall player — nicknamed “Muscle Hamster” — eager to take on more physically taxing assignments, such as blocking heftier linebackers.
But Martin truly shone with the ball in his hand, coaches said, zipping downfield with a springy first step. A decorated college career at Boise State — where he logged 3,400 yards and 43 touchdowns — led him to be the Buccaneers’ first-round draft selection in 2012.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Doug Martin (22) walks off the field after a staggeringly successful day against the Oakland Raiders in an NFL football game, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012 at O.co Coliseum in Oakland, Calif. Martin rushed for 251 yards and four touchdowns, as the Buccaneers won, 42-32. (D. Ross Cameron/Staff)
Martin had been known around the college campus for his bounding social energy. He rode a remote-controlled electric skateboard to classes, forged close locker-room friendships and even embraced the popularity of “Teach Me How to Dougie,” a hit song with a signature dance move that shared his name.
“He was just having fun playing ball,” said Keith Bhonapha, the college’s running-back coach at the time. “He really felt at home there.”
Martin’s NFL draft-day party at his relatives’ house in the Oakland hills was uniquely festive, recalled Tony Franks, his high school coach in Stockton. Television trucks lined the street and dozens of people cheered when the St. Mary’s High School star received a call from the Buccaneers at the end of the first round.
Martin’s running style was prototypical for the time — “powerful, compact, explosive,” he said, yet nimble enough to “change direction on a dime.”
“He had such natural strength, leg strength, body strength,” Franks said. “The force he could create by accelerating was just tremendous.”
In the NFL, though, Martin faced adversity. After a breakout rookie season, he suffered a torn labrum that sidelined him for much of his follow-up campaign. Still, he notched two All-Pro teams in a career that lasted seven seasons, rushing for over 5,300 yards and two touchdowns before retiring in 2018.
Martin was suspended four games in 2016 for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy after testing positive for a banned substance. In a statement at the time, Martin said he initially considered appealing the penalty but had decided instead to seek treatment.
“My shortcomings,” he said of his off-the-field life, “have taught me both that I cannot win these personal battles alone and that there is no shame in asking for help.”
Bhonapha, an Oakland native who played football at Skyline High School, visited Martin sometime during the Tampa Bay years. Over a steak dinner, the coach recalled, Martin spoke sentimentally about his Boise State years, reminiscing about the familiarity and friendships that came before the realities of adulthood.
“The amount of calls I’ve gotten from teammates since this weekend asking what happened … guys who were really close with him said they hadn’t talked to him in a couple years,” Bhonapha said.
But even amid the shock of Martin’s untimely passing, those who witnessed the Stockton kid’s rise to the sport’s top ranks recalled the determination that had brought him there.
“He had probably gone through being doubted because of his size at one point,” Byner said. “But he never doubted what he could do — and we didn’t, either.”
Jakob Rodgers is a senior breaking news reporter. Call, text or send him an encrypted message via Signal at 510-390-2351, or email him at jrodgers@bayareanewsgroup.com.
Shomik Mukherjee is a reporter covering Oakland. Call or text him at 510-905-5495 or email him at smukherjee@bayareanewsgroup.com.
About 260 sexual abuse lawsuits were paused when the Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa filed for bankruptcy in 2023. That has been a frustration for survivors who want the actions of their abusers, and the failings of the powerful institution that obscured the crimes, dragged into the daylight.
Now, it looks like a few of those survivors may have their days in court.
The judge in the bankruptcy, Charles Novack of the Northern District of California, recently put a small set of lawsuits on the path to trial, where they are expected to set a baseline for the diocese’s potential financial liability.
It’s an important step, those involved say, in pushing insurance companies to enter into a global settlement with the diocese and the dozens of people who say they were harmed by predatory church figures. And it could offer a rare chance for claimants to speak openly of their abuse in a courtroom, and to gather additional information through the legal discovery process.
When cases are “quieted” by bankruptcy, said Dan McNevin, who is on the board of directors of the advocacy group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, it means “the public won’t have a clear read on who enabled the abuse, who covered it up and whether those people are still in power and behaving in that fashion.”
When McNevin was molested in the Oakland Diocese, he said, the bishop there told him his abuser, the Rev. James Clark, had no prior record. After he sued, McNevin found out Clark had in fact been convicted of a sex crime before moving into his parish.
“His file was sanitized. There was no record of his probation,” McNevin said. “We got the information by deposing the former chancellor of the diocese. So discovery is really important.”
Little has been revealed publicly about the cases Novack is allowing to proceed.
Should any of the plaintiffs win those lawsuits, it’s likely funds recovered in judgment would be held in trust, said Jennifer Stein, an attorney with Jeff Anderson & Associates, a Los Angeles-based firm that has represented thousands of victims of predatory priests. That money would be distributed later among qualifying survivors.
The Santa Rosa Diocese, which oversees 42 parishes reaching from American Canyon in Napa County to Crescent City near the Oregon border, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March 2023. Like Catholic dioceses across the U.S., the local jurisdiction said it was facing an existential threat from a massive wave of sex abuse suits.
Bishop Robert Vasa of the Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa, Oct. 13, 2025. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat)
Christopher Chung/The Press Democrat
Mike Tarvid filed a lawsuit against the Santa Rosa Catholic Diocese after harboring a secret for nearly 50 years involving his abuse at the hands of North Coast priest Gary Timmons. Photo taken in Santa Rosa on Dec. 12, 2022. (Christopher Chung/The Press Democrat)
Kent Porter/The Press Democrat
Father John Crews, the former executive director of the Hanna Boys Center in Sonoma Valley, was among 39 names released in 2019 by the Santa Rosa Diocese, listing those who committed child sexual abuse or were credibly accused of such crimes. Hanna Boys Center is a co-defendant in dozens of lawsuits against the Santa Rosa Diocese. Crews resigned in 2013, when he was first accused of child sex abuse by the widow of a man who had been assaulted at a Sebastopol church. He was last known to be in South Carolina. (Kent Porter/The Press Democrat)
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Bishop Robert Vasa of the Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa, Oct. 13, 2025. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat)
By that time, the Santa Rosa Diocese had been served with about 160 claims of sexual abuse under a 2019 state law that opened a three-year window for survivors 40 and older to file personal injury cases for past child sex abuse cases.
By August 2023, the diocese had paid out at least $35 million in settlements, dating back to the 1990s, at the onset of a painful worldwide reckoning with sexual abuse by clergy within the Catholic church.
In January 2019, the diocese released a list of 39 of its priests and bishops who committed sexual abuse and misconduct, or had been credibly accused of doing so, between the 1960s and the 2010s.
The efforts of survivors are now moving along two tracks. There is Novack’s courtroom, the setting for one of 17 bankruptcy cases nationwide involving Catholic dioceses, including six in California — Oakland, San Francisco and Sacramento among them. Another 20 dioceses have emerged from bankruptcy since 2005.
And there’s Judicial Council Coordinated Proceeding 5108, or JCCP 5108, which consolidates hundreds of lawsuits against multiple Catholic dioceses in Northern California. That proceeding is being administered in Alameda County Superior Court.
The decision by religious leaders to file for bankruptcy demonstrates the strength of the abuse cases, according to Stein. “They would not be taking such expensive, egregious measures if there weren’t fear of liability,” she said.
Bishop Robert F. Vasa of Santa Rosa, leader of the diocese since 2011, acknowledges the gravity of the threat.
“It’s absolutely no secret that sexual abuse lawsuits, even in the secular world, bring huge judgments in a court of law,” Vasa said. “So there’s no doubt in the case of the church they be equally large if not larger. But it’s beyond our scope to generate the money to pay for those. Regardless of whether it’s a $1 million judgment or a $2 million judgment, we don’t have the resources in a million years is to pay for those.”
Long list of co-defendants
A bankruptcy court exhibit filed in April offers detail on sites connected to the alleged abuse in the Santa Rosa Diocese.
The largest share of complaints, 60 in all, name Hanna Boys Center, the 80-year-old residential school and service campus for at-risk youth that has sought to remake itself with a retooled mission even as new suits piled up alleging long-ago abuse.
But the list of diocesan sites is long and varied.
Camp St. Michael, an outdoor ministry in Mendocino County that ceased operation in 2011, is named in 25 claims. The diocesan cathedral, St. Eugene’s in Santa Rosa, is named in 13. Nine are tied to St. Bernard’s Catholic Church in Eureka, nine to St. Rose of Lima church in Santa Rosa, seven to St. Apollinaris in Napa and six to Cardinal Newman High School in Santa Rosa.
In all, 27 diocese sites are represented.
The exhibit laying out that information pertains to a subset of 207 cases that include co-defendants. The state court is currently weighing a request to allow those suits to proceed against the co-defendants, even if they are paused against the diocese. The church is fighting the effort, arguing that because co-defendants such as Hanna Boys Center and Cardinal Newman are covered by the same insurance policies as the diocese, any legal fees or settlements they end up paying will only further deplete the money potentially available for the wider pool of survivors.
The Santa Rosa Diocese estimates the sexual abuse cases levied against it would average $2 million each in monetary demands — liability that could surpass half a billion dollars if the church were to lose all the cases. In its bankruptcy petition, the diocese reported unidentified assets valued between $10 million and $50 million.
To get a more accurate read on liability, it is common in litigation spanning multiple districts for the court to select one or more cases to proceed to trial. Novack signaled his approval in the bankruptcy, and the diocese worked with a committee of unsecured creditors in the case — made up of sex abuse survivors — to identify a handful of representative cases.
“The committee wanted several cases released for trial to kind of set a benchmark — what are these cases worth in a real trial?” Vasa said. “Just to say to the insurers, ‘If these go to trial, there may be a huge judgment.’”
Insurers called out
Insurance companies are a major player in these bankruptcy proceedings. Some of the other parties believe they are an impediment.
The insurers have been “woefully deficient in fulfilling contractual promises” to pay claims, said attorney Rick Simons, who serves as a liaison for the hundreds of sex abuse cases that make up JCCP 5108, the consolidated civil action.
“They sold these policies in the ’70s, the ’80s, the ’60s, some into the 2000s, for $25,000, $35,000 and $55,000 apiece,” Simons said of the insurers. “Now they owe, nationally, billions and billions of dollars in claims. They don’t care about rules and laws. They just want to keep saying no so they can negotiate a lump sum that’s like 8 cents on the dollar.”
Just over a year ago, the creditors committee petitioned for a two-hour court conference allowing survivors to read personal statements. “This proceeding is likely the only opportunity that Survivors in Santa Rosa will have to seek acknowledgement and justice for the decades of isolation and pain they endured,” the committee argued.
The church supported the motion. At least five insurance companies opposed it — Lloyd’s of London, Pacific Indemnity, Pacific Employers Insurance, Century Indemnity and Westchester Fire Insurance, the latter four all under the umbrella of Pacific. Novack granted the petition over their objections, and survivors were allowed to read statements during a private conference on Feb. 6.
Meanwhile, committee members have joined the diocese and its insurers in several rounds of court-approved mediation. Vasa insists all parties, including the church, are working hard to reach an agreement everyone can live with.
“It’s kind of a dance,” the bishop said. “What is a reasonable number that the committee will accept, so that survivors will see they’ve done their due diligence? We can never compensate for all the harm done. But we can manifest care and concern, and demonstrate that we are not trying to stand in the way of what is just.”
You can reach Phil Barber at 707-521-5263 or phil.barber@pressdemocrat.com. On X (Twitter) @Skinny_Post.
The San Francisco 49ers Sunday night 20-10 win over the Atlanta Falcons delivered a much-needed morale boost.
While Christian McCaffrey supplied two rushing touchdowns and 201 yards from scrimmage, it was the 49ers’ defense that proved surprisingly stout, a week after losing Warner to a dislocated and fractured ankle.
McCaffrey ran for over 100 yards for the first time since 2023 (24 carries, 129 yards) and also delivered 72 receiving yards as quarterback Mac Jones made his third straight start and fifth this season in place of an injured Brock Purdy.
The 49ers (5-2) have yet to lose back-to-back games this season, keeping them tied atop the NFC West with the Los Angeles Rams (5-2).
Next up, the 49ers return to the road for a Sunday visit to the Houston Texans, who take a two-game win streak and a 2-3 record into Monday night’s game at Seattle (4-2).
San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) runs against the Atlanta Falcons in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers starting quarterback Mac Jones (10) throws against the Atlanta Falcons in the first quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) is congratulated by teammates, including San Francisco 49ers’ Colton McKivitz (68), after scoring a touchdown against the Atlanta Falcons in the second quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) is stopped short of the goal line by Atlanta Falcons’ Dee Alford (20) and Atlanta Falcons’ Xavier Watts (31) in the second quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) Atlanta Falcons starting quarterback Michael Penix Jr. (9) throws against the San Francisco 49ers in the first quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) is congratulated on his touchdown by San Francisco 49ers’ George Kittle (85) against the Atlanta Falcons in the second quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Connor Colby (75) catches the ball on a fumble against the Atlanta Falcons in the second quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) celebrates his touchdown against the Atlanta Falcons in the second quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Jordan Elliott (92) pressures Atlanta Falcons starting quarterback Michael Penix Jr. (9) in the first quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Renardo Green (0) tackles Atlanta Falcons’ Kyle Pitts Sr. (8) after a catch in the first quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Jauan Jennings (15) runs after a catch against Atlanta Falcons’ Dee Alford (20) in the second quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) celebrates his touchdown against the Atlanta Falcons in the second quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers starting quarterback Mac Jones (10) dives for yards against Atlanta Falcons’ Jessie Bates III (3) in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) The San Francisco 49ers defense celebrates a fourth down stop against the Atlanta Falcons in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers starting quarterback Mac Jones (10) scrambles against the Atlanta Falcons in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Tatum Bethune (48) tackles Atlanta Falcons’ Bijan Robinson (7) in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News GroupSan Francisco 49ers fans celebrate a play against the Atlanta Falcons in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) runs against the Atlanta Falcons defense in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Demarcus Robinson (5) can’t make a catch against Atlanta Falcons’ Mike Hughes (21) in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers starting quarterback Mac Jones (10) throws the ball against the Atlanta Falcons in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Brian Robinson Jr. (3) runs with the ball against the Atlanta Falcons in the fourth quarter at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) San Francisco 49ers’ Tatum Bethune (48) leaves the field after their 20-10 win over the Atlanta Falcons at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group.San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey (23) walks on the field after their 20-10 win over the Atlanta Falcons at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
SAN JOSE – Macklin Celebrini stood inside the San Jose Sharks dressing room and seemed to be in disbelief that he and his teammates were going through this again. Outside the room, coach Ryan Warsofsky, who has now been through four straight agonizingly slow starts with the team, facetiously said he’d give up one of his two young children for a win right now.
“Trust me, it sucks,” Warsofsky said Saturday night. “I keep telling myself, there’s a reason why this keeps happening.”
A Sharks season that was hoped to be a little bit better than the previous few has so far turned out to be anything but, as San Jose enters a challenging four-game road trip this week as the NHL’s last remaining winless team.
The Sharks fell to 0-3-2 with a 3-0 loss to Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins on Saturday night at SAP Center. Responding after poor performances against the Carolina Hurricanes and Utah Mammoth earlier in the week, the Sharks were the better team for the final two periods as they established a forecheck, outchanced the Penguins, and kept Pittsburgh’s shots on goal to a minimum.
Still, the Sharks were unable to beat Penguins goalie Tristan Jarry, who made 31 saves, as they were shut out for the first time this season. Sharks goalie Alex Nedeljkovic made 18 saves in a frenetic first period, but Crosby scored a second-period goal on a tipped shot, and Anthony Mantha and Evgeni Malkin both scored in the third, with Malkin’s being an empty-netter, to hand San Jose its third straight regulation-time loss.
“The only way we’re going to get those bounces is if we keep working for them. They’re not just going to happen,” Nedeljkovic said. “We have to earn those bounces. And if we play like we did tonight, more times than not, coming up, we’ll start getting some.”
While the goaltending took a step forward Saturday, the Sharks have still managed just two even-strength goals in their last three games.
“I think we have a really tight group, and it’s just hard,” Celebrini said, “especially when you play some good games, do some good things, and it just feels like it hasn’t really kind of connected yet.”
The Sharks begin a four-game road trip on Tuesday against Matthew Schaefer, the No. 1 overall pick in June’s NHL Draft, and the New York Islanders. That’s followed by games against the New York Rangers on Thursday, the New Jersey Devils on Friday, and the Minnesota Wild on Sunday.
The Sharks were 0-5-0 to begin the 2022-23 season, started 0-10-1 in 2023-24, and 0-7-2 last year. Warsofsky has unfortunately been a part of every dismal start, as he was an assistant under David Quinn from 2022 to 2024 before he was named the Sharks’ head coach.
This year’s team is believed to be better than any of the previous three. Now’s the time to show proof.
“We’re not going to quit,” Warsofsky said. “We’re five games into this thing. What’s happened has happened, and we’ve got to work. I’ve got to get this team to improve and individuals to improve. It’s on me.”
CAGNONI RECALLED
The Sharks on Sunday placed Shakir Mukhamadullin (upper body) on injured reserve and recalled fellow defenseman Luca Cagnoni from the Barracuda. Mukhamadullin, 23, has missed the previous two games after he was injured during practice last week, and it’s unclear when he might be able to return.
The 20-year-old Cagnoni, a second-year pro, had an impressive camp with the Sharks and scored in the Barracuda’s season-opening game against Bakersfield on Oct. 11. Cagnoni had 52 points in 64 games with the Barracuda last season and two assists in six games with the Sharks.
Warsofsky said Saturday that injured defensemen Timothy Liljegren (upper body) and John Klingberg (lower body) would be on Sunday’s flight to New York. However, it was unclear when either would be healthy enough to play. Both were injured in the Sharks’ Oct. 14 game against Carolina. Liljegren is on IR and is eligible to return for Thursday’s game.
“We have to live with it forever, so I felt like maybe we should give input on what we like and do not like. Maybe the wolf will pull off her head and it will actually be grandma. That’s not going to happen, but I like to grab onto some optimism.”
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San Mateo’s Jovani Hernandez Cruz (10) runs for yardage against King’s Academy in the second quarter of their game at King’s Academy High School in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) San Mateo quarterback Lukas Fitzgerald (9) is tackled by King’s Academy’s Justin Turner (0) in the fourth quarter of their game at King’s Academy High School in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. King’s Academy defeated San Mateo 28-14. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) San Mateo’s Roman Toki (11) and Antony Navarro (12) tackle King’s Academy’s Adrian Barnett (2) while running for yardage in the fourth quarter of their game at King’s Academy High School in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. King’s Academy defeated San Mateo 28-14. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) King’s Academy’s Justin Turner (0) pressures San Mateo quarterback Lukas Fitzgerald (9) in the first quarter of their game at King’s Academy High School in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) King’s Academy’s Jaiden Flores (4) leaps to catch a pass over San Mateo’s Antony Navarro (12) in the fourth quarter of their game at King’s Academy High School in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. Flores would run the ball in for a touchdown. King’s Academy defeated San Mateo 28-14. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) King’s Academy’s Drew Martinez (24) crashes into an official while being tackled by San Mateo’s Antony Navarro (12) in the first quarter of their game at King’s Academy High School in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
Acalanes 48 vs Campolindo 28
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Acalanes’ Bryce Birdsong (84) celebrates defeated Campolindo during their game at Acalanes High School in Lafayette, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Acalanes defeated Campolindo 45-28. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Acalanes’ Finley Rivera (13) scores a touchdown in front of Campolindo’s Sean Parker (7) in the second quarter of their game at Acalanes High School in Lafayette, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Acalanes quarterback Tyler Winkles (6) runs into the end zone for a touchdown against Campolindo in the third quarter of their game at Acalanes High School in Lafayette, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Acalanes defeated Campolindo 45-28. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Campolindo head coach Kevin Macy yells at his offense while playing against Acalanes in the second quarter of their game at Acalanes High School in Lafayette, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Acalanes’ Deonte Littlejohn (0) tosses the football to an official after scoring a touchdown against Campolindo in the second quarter of their game at Acalanes High School in Lafayette, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Acalanes players surround the helmet of former teammate Amin Noroozi (51) during a moment of remembrance after defeating Campolindo at Acalanes High School in Lafayette, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Noroozi died on April 17th after sustaining an injury while swimming at Stinson Beach. Acalanes defeated Campolindo 45-28. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
Los Gatos 35 vs Wilcox 21
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Los Gatos High celebrates winning their football game 35-21 against Wilcox High School in Santa Clara, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) Los Gatos High’s Grayson Doslak (2) runs for a first down before being tackled by Wilcox High’s Kyree Brown (4) in the third quarter of their football game in Santa Clara, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) Wilcox High quarterback Kai Imahara (11) celebrates a touchdown with Wilcox High’s Martin Arreguin (57) in the first quarter of their football game against Los Gatos High in Santa Clara, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) Los Gatos High’s Max Thomas (0) makes a reception for a touchdown in the third quarter of their football game against Wilcox High in Santa Clara, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) Los Gatos High quarterback Callum Schweitzer (7) runs for a first down in the second quarter of their football game against Wilcox High in Santa Clara, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group)
Half Moon 14 Bay at Woodside 28
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Woodside High School’s Charlie Dalrymple (5) adjusts his chin strap during a game against Half Moon Bay at Woodside High School in Woodside, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) Woodside High School’s Manuel Navarro (77) punts the ball against Half Moon Bay at Woodside High School in Woodside, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) Woodside High School’s Charlie Dalrymple (5) hands the ball to Woodside High School’s Alex Valencia (20) against Half Moon Bay in the third quarter at Woodside High School in Woodside, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) Woodside High School’s Alex Valencia (20) runs with the ball against Half Moon Bay in the third quarter at Woodside High School in Woodside, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) Half Moon Bay’s Vince Parmann (42) catches the ball against Woodside High School’s Grady Furtado (9) in the third quarter at Woodside High School in Woodside, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group)
California vs San Ramon Valley
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Laura A. Oda, Jose Carlos Fajardo, Shae Hammond, Doug Duran
OAKLAND — Burning Man Decompression 2025 is a celebration of the arts, bringing elements of Black Rock City to the local Bay Area community. Burning Man art installations, mutant vehicles and performances will grace the streets of Oakland in an event that is meant to help participants transition back to daily life and share the spirit of self-expression and community found at the Burn. The celebration will start at 2 p.m. with family-friendly programs and continue into the evening with more performances, maker and technology demos, speakers, workshops, a mini film-festival, food and drinks, and much more. The festival goes till midnight with bonus indoor festivities till 3:00 a.m.
A person walks past ‘NewClear Neural,’ an art project by artist Gazelle Dasti, featured as one of the installations for the Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) Artists unload a segment of a steel and stained glass sculpture ‘Orbs’ as one of the installation projects for the Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) ‘NewClear Neural,’ an art project by artist Gazelle Dasti, featured as one of the installations for the Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) A person walks past “Un Nuevo Camino,” an art project by Mark Rivera, featured as one of the installations for Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) Artist David Oliver, of Ventura, works on his steel and stained glass sculpture ‘Orbs’ as one of the installation projects for the Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) ‘Missing Link,’ a collaboration of 10 local artists, is set up in the installation for the Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) Sculptures by artist Gaele Warner are displayed for the Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) ‘Whispers of Waste’ sculpture by artist Zulu Heru is displayed for the Burning Man’s Decompression event at Embarcadero Cove in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. Thousands of artists, performers, and community members are expected to attend the event on Saturday, which has moved from San Francisco to Oakland for the first time since the late 1990s. Interactive art, live performances, music stages, and community installations will be on display during this one-day civic celebration. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
Records: Stanford (2-4, 1-2 ACC); Florida State (3-3, 0-3 ACC)
Kickoff: 7:30 p.m. at Stanford Stadium.
TV: ESPN
Radio: KNBR 1050 AM
Series history: First meeting. The only program Stanford has played from the state of Florida is UCF, with meetings in 2015 (31-7 win) and 2019 (45-27 loss).
Stanford storylines: After its fourth road loss (all in different time zones), the Cardinal returns home to Stanford Stadium, where it is 2-0 with wins over Boston College and San Jose State. It hasn’t started 3-0 since 2018 – the last time it made a bowl game. … With games still to come against Miami and Notre Dame, a loss Saturday would all but guarantee there won’t be another bowl game this season. … After getting carved up by SMU’s Kevin Jennings last week, the Stanford defense must do a better job against another dual-threat QB in Tommy Castellanos.
Florida State storylines: The Seminoles started the season with a top-10 win over Alabama, but they fell from No. 7 to out of the AP Top 25 after starting ACC play with losses to Virginia, Miami and Pitt. … They still have one of the top offenses in the nation, ranking third in yardage (536.5 per game) and fifth in scoring (44.2). .. Their 21 rushing touchdowns this season are tied for third in the FBS, while Stanford has allowed just five rushing touchdowns this season (tied for 22nd).
Stats that matter: FSU has lost eight straight ACC games dating back to last year’s win at Cal. … Over the last three weeks, Stanford senior CJ Williams is second in the Power 4 in receptions and second in the ACC in receiving yards. … FSU QB Tommy Castellanos leads the nation with an average of 15.87 yards per completion. … Stanford QB Ben Gulbranson has completed 64.6% of his passes for 630 yards and three touchdowns in the two home wins. … The 10:30 p.m. ET kickoff will tie the latest scheduled start for FSU, matching games at San Diego State in 1973 and 1977.
The writer seems to think that Donald Trump isn’t up to the task of dealing with the problems in the Middle East because he went to business school, not the School of Foreign Service. Well, all of those people who went to the right schools don’t seem to have done very well in the Middle East.
On the face of it, things haven’t changed that much, but it’s apparent that significant change is now possible. In league with Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump has quieted the Iran threat for now. Trump then talked Netanyahu into stopping the firing of further missiles into Iran unnecessarily. Then Trump persuaded Netanyahu to publicly apologize to the leader of Qatar.
Any progress could disappear as quickly as another Oct. 7 event takes place, but at least this is a promising step in the right direction.
Daniel Mauthe Livermore
U.S. should help the poor, not the 1%
How do we justify pulling support from life-saving measures in order to save billionaires money?
Certain members of Congress support our president in punishing poor people in our country and around the world, because they were not lucky enough to have a father who could give his son a real estate empire.
Donald Trump has taken SNAP (food vouchers) and Medicaid from working families, and also fired people who work for the government. He destroyed foreign aid that supports worthwhile programs like the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, which have saved over 70 million lives and billions of dollars of medical care since its inception.
I believe we should help the poor people in the U.S. and the world, not the richest people who could not have made their fortunes without healthy, educated workers who make a living wage.
Bill Nicholson Martinez
Prop. 50 a childish ploy for dominance
How do you tell the difference between people acting like mature adults or like overgrown children? Mature adults accept that things don’t always go the way we want them to go and that other people have the right to have things the way they want them, at times, even when it’s not the way we like them.
When President Biden took office, there were Democrats who proclaimed that “the adults were back in charge,” but I see plenty of Democrats acting childishly these days, with Proposition 50 being a prime example. Most Democrats today seem to think that “preserving democracy” equals dominance by Democrats on all levels. (And, yes, many Republicans wrongly seek GOP dominance.) But either would actually be the destruction of democracy. And many seem to think that even the courts should always rule the way they think they should rule. Sorry, people, but that is childishness.
Christopher Andrus Dublin
Climate change won’t wait for solutions
Climate change threatens our planet through extreme weather, melting ice and rising sea levels, all stemming from excessive greenhouse gases.
This environmental degradation endangers resources, with rising temperatures leading to droughts that harm crops and water supplies. NASA reports a 1-degree Celsius temperature increase since the late 19th century, causing significant impacts. Climate change also intensifies extreme weather events, displacing communities and causing economic damage.
The direct cause is burning fossil fuels, while deforestation and unsustainable farming practices indirectly contribute. A key solution involves investing in renewable energy, such as solar and wind power. Governments, businesses and individuals must act to promote clean energy policies and reduce carbon footprints.
I urge support for climate-change solutions to protect our planet for future generations.
The Medicaid cuts in President Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” will squeeze Santa Clara County health care funding. But raising local taxes is not the solution.
Instead, county supervisors should stem their rapidly escalating spending, which has doubled in the past eight years and ranks highest per capita by far of the 10 largest California counties.
And voters should reject Measure A, the five-year sales tax increase on the Nov. 4 special election ballot that has been in the planning stages since long before Trump won reelection.
The measure would add another five-eighths of a cent to each dollar of taxable goods, pushing the total rate to 10% or more in most of the county.
State data indicates that the average person in the county currently pays at least $1,700 a year in sales tax, which is distributed between state and local governments. Measure A would increase that by at least $113 annually.
Raising taxes before imposing long-overdue fiscal discipline puts the cart before the horse. While Measure A would expire in 2031, we expect it would be permanently built into the county budget by then and county officials would be begging for an extension to avoid cuts.
Soaring spending
There’s no question that the county will take a hit from the Trump Medicaid cuts. And there’s no denying the importance of county health services, which treat 40% of county residents and deliver 80% of trauma care. But it’s important to put county spending, the federal funding reductions and Measure A in context.
County spending has increased from $6.4 billion in the 2017-18 fiscal year to $13 billion in 2025-26. The biggest cause of that increase has been health care, which includes public health, mental health and, most significantly, Santa Clara Valley Healthcare’s network of hospitals and clinics.
The county, which already ran Santa Clara Valley Medical Center in San Jose, rescued O’Connor Hospital in San Jose and Saint Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy from bankruptcy in 2019, and purchased Regional Medical Center in San Jose in 2025. The county now operates a much larger health care system per-capita than any other California county, says County Executive James Williams.
Suddenly running four hospitals instead of one, the county found losses for its hospitals and clinics increased from about $97 million in 2017-18 to $532 million expected in the current fiscal year. That forecast was before Trump’s budget bill exacerbated the shortfall.
While we supported the 2019 hospital purchases, we never intended that to be a blank check. Clearly a major reorganization to cut costs and find savings through economies of scale has been needed for years. Instead, the county has increased fourfold the subsidies from the general fund — from money that would otherwise go to other county services.
The greatest concern from the federal budget is the cut to Medicaid, known as Medi-Cal in California, which serves primarily low-income and disabled residents. Forty-six percent of patients in the county’s health care system are covered by Medi-Cal, which accounts for about half of the revenue.
Santa Clara County officials forecast the cuts in Trump’s bill will cost the county $223 million in the current fiscal year, escalating to $1.3 billion by 2029-30. That’s significant pain.
But what’s important here is that the proposed sales tax increase would only solve a fraction of the problem. Measure A is expected to raise $330 million annually. There is no plan for how the county would address the rest of the shortfall over the next five years.
Regressive tax
While the ballot wording of Measure A says it could be used for a variety of purposes — to “support critical local services such as trauma, emergency room, mental health, and public safety” — Williams says the money would be used solely to shore up the health care system.
Measure A is a “general” tax, meaning that county supervisors have the discretion to spend the money on any legally permissible county services — and that the measure only requires majority approval. Had county supervisors instead sought a “special” tax, restricting the use of the money to a specific purpose, the measure would have required two-thirds approval.
Sales taxes are regressive, meaning they disproportionately impact those who can afford it least. In Santa Clara County, the levy on taxable goods, which excludes prescription medications and most groceries, would increase to at least 9.75%, with higher rates in Los Gatos (9.875%), San Jose (10%), Milpitas (10%) and Campbell (10.5%).
For example, in San Jose, home to about half the county’s residents, the sales tax is currently 9.375%, meaning a consumer pays an additional $9.38 on a $100 purchase. If Measure A passes, the tax would add another 62 cents, making the total sales tax $10 for that same $100 purchase.
For homeowners in the county, that would come on top of property tax levies that are based on assessed value. For example, for a home assessed at $1.5 million, the county collects $2,700 annually as its share of the 1% base tax, plus special levies for county employee pensions ($570) and to pay off voter-approved county bonds for affordable housing ($84) and hospital seismic improvements ($78).
Tax history
The only reason Santa Clara County leaders were able so quickly to place the sales tax measure on the same ballot as Proposition 50, the statewide redistricting measure, is that they had been working on the tax increase for two years, long before Trump’s return to office.
In 2023, at the urging of county officials, Sen. Dave Cortese, D-San Jose, pushed through state legislation enabling Santa Clara County supervisors to seek voter approval for the sales tax increase. At the time, Cortese argued the tax was needed to address significant and growing budget challenges.
The legislation limited the increase to five-eighths of a cent. If not for that limit, Williams told us, he would have recommended the board place a larger sales tax increase on the ballot.
Which is exactly the sort of thinking that concerns us. In 2023, according to data from the state Controller’s Office, Santa Clara County spent $5,046 per resident, at least 19% more than any of the nine other California counties with at least 1 million residents, and more than double San Diego, Orange, Alameda and Fresno counties.
Before asking residents for more tax money, county officials should find a way to spend what they have more efficiently.
The city appeared to have reached the final stage of awarding a three-year, $27 million deal to a new security company on several occasions this year. But the deliberations have gone nowhere, and now Oakland is starting over from scratch.
It may take three months or longer for a new contract to be prepared, officials estimated, leaving the city to continue paying the incumbent company, ABC Security, on a month-to-month basis.
The current arrangement has now persisted for over a year, and in total the company has been paid over $30 million since it first signed with Oakland in 2018, including several contract extensions and pay increases during the COVID-19 pandemic.
It is a reflection of the city’s struggles to leave behind the remnants of last year’s corruption scandal, laying bare the messy politics around city contracts and the millions of public dollars given to private vendors that win them.
On two occasions in recent months, the Oakland City Council has had the opportunity to leave ABC behind and award the contract to Allied Universal, the world’s largest private security provider.
Both times, it has stopped short. Elected leaders have openly advocated for an immigrant-owned local business, Marina Security Services, to receive the contract instead — despite Marina finishing behind Allied in the city’s bidding process.
“The council typically tries to be friendly to local vendors, while staff tends to look at it in more of a dispassionate way,” said Dan Lindheim, a former Oakland city administrator. “The sets of criteria they are using is different; sometimes they’re contradictory.”
ABC Security Service guard Sabira Hussein screens visitors at City Hall in downtown Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, July 16, 2025. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
ABC Security, the existing contract holder, is not mentioned in the federal criminal indictments filed by prosecutors this year against ex-Mayor Sheng Thao, her romantic partner Andre Jones and the father-and-son business duo of David and Andy Duong, whose family has the city’s recycling contract.
But the company’s owner, Ana Chretien, is a close ally and business associate of Mario Juarez, who this news organization has previously reported to be a co-conspirator in an alleged scheme to bribe the former mayor.
ABC received its latest contract extension in September 2024, a decision that nearly required then-Mayor Thao to cast a tie-breaking vote, though the council ultimately reached a unanimous decision to stick with the company. According to The Oaklandside, Juarez and another person named in federal subpoenas had lobbied on behalf of ABC Security when it seemed the company might not get its contract renewed in 2022.
Juarez, who was never charged by the feds, has long been a fierce advocate for Chretien’s company. Last month, he distributed notices to local news media on behalf of the Oakland Latino Business Association and Committee. These notices cite lawsuits alleging unfair labor practices that have been filed against the companies that finished first and second place in Oakland’s most recent contract bid process: Allied Universal and Marina Security Services.
Chretien did not respond to questions about her current association with Juarez, with whom she swapped ownership of several commercial properties when the two represented the same real-estate company
At least on the legal front, the notices are on to something: workers have filed in court for unpaid wages against both Allied, and Marina, whose owner is politically-connected.
But to the extent that there’s negativity at City Hall around the two companies, it hardly needs to be generated by outside critics.
At a meeting last month, Councilmember Ken Houston, a vocal fan of Marina, alluded to a report by The Oaklandside that a subsidiary of Allied was contracted to provide transportation to armed detention officers with the Department of Homeland Security.
Oakland city council member district seven Ken Houston speaks during the 2025 Inauguration Ceremony held at Oakland City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, Jan. 6, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
This would seem to run afoul of a 2019 city policy that forbids public deals with companies contracted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement for services at “detention facilities.”
The council had already rejected Allied once before, months earlier, over settlements — including back wages — that the company has had to pay out to current and former employees. Allied officials did not respond to an interview request.
City staff, including Transportation Director Josh Rowan, made clear at the time that their own process found Allied as the strongest bidder. But the new ICE question appeared to lead officials to relent — and now Oakland will start from scratch.
Marina, meanwhile, has its own share of ups and downs. Its owner, Sam Tadesse, has repeatedly alleged bias by city staff who ranked the company second place in its bid process.
He similarly raised issues with the Peralta Community College District’s own search this year for a security contractor, which ended with the school system ditching Marina for another provider after Tadesse’s company placed third in that bidding process.
Tadesse, a prolific donor in local political races, said Thursday he will wait to see the city’s next request-for-proposals before deciding whether to pursue the contract once more.
“We are confident that we can once again demonstrate we are deserving and capable of exceeding the City’s security needs,” he said in a statement to this news organization, adding that he is “hopeful” the city runs a “fair and effective process.”
Welcome the Hotline’s weekly picks against the point spread, published Thursdays throughout the regular season with a focus on the top games nationally and the most intriguing matchups across the West. Last week, we were 5-5. Lines are courtesy of vegasinsider.com. Picks are for entertainment purposes only … unless they aren’t.
The third Saturday in October is typically a tad early for tipping-point games, but that’s exactly the situation, for better or worse, for Arizona and Arizona State.
Both teams are fresh off defeats that were stark contrasts in margin but comparable in the predicaments they created.
Arizona’s come-from-ahead loss to BYU in overtime, combined with developments across the Big 12, seemingly have thrust the visit to Houston into must-win territory — or whatever is a half step from that terrain.
What of Arizona State? Playing without quarterback Sam Leavitt (and their entire defense, apparently), the Sun Devils were blasted off the line of scrimmage and out of Rice-Eccles Stadium. The lopsided loss to Utah left coach Kenny Dillingham and Co. with no margin for error entering the back half of their midseason double-whammy.
Next comes Texas Tech, with its $30 million roster (roughly), undefeated record, No. 7 ranking and designs on dethroning Arizona State as Big 12 champions.
Because the Sun Devils (4-2, 2-1 Big 12) also lost at Mississippi State, a defeat Saturday would knock them from at-large contention for the College Football Playoff — they aren’t getting in with three losses — and eliminate any cushion in their pursuit of the conference title.
They would have to win out and hope the Big 12 tiebreaker (with other teams at 7-2) propels them into the championship game as the No. 2 seed.
Put another way: The Sun Devils would be in a more precarious position in the middle of October than they were at any point last season during their stunning run to the CFP.
But if the Devils rise up and take down the Red Raiders, everything changes. They would be vastly better positioned for a spot in the Big 12 championship, thanks in part to the tiebreaker advantage over Texas Tech.
Arizona’s goals were not as lofty when the season began, then ticked up after the Wildcats rolled to a 3-0 start.
At the midpoint of coach Brent Brennan’s season, it’s clear from the lopsided defeat at Iowa State and the overtime loss to BYU that the Wildcats aren’t ready to contend for the title. But their victories over Kansas State and Oklahoma State are proof of substantial year-over-year improvement.
Exactly where Arizona (4-2, 1-2) falls in the Big 12 hierarchy will become clear Saturday — as will its prospects for a postseason bid.
The Wildcats must win two of their final six games to become bowl-eligible. That task is more difficult than it appears, given the recent performance of several looming opponents.
The visit to Houston is a toss-up game according to the oddsmakers and any rational assessment of the competing personnel.
Then comes a trip to Boulder, where Colorado showed life last week in a victory over Iowa State.
Then comes a home date with Kansas, which is 0-3 against ranked teams but 4-0 otherwise.
From there, the Wildcats make the long trip to No. 24 Cincinnati, which has far exceeded expectations and could be this year’s version of Arizona State.
The home schedule concludes with Baylor, which is three points away from being tied atop the Big 12 standings.
The Wildcats wrap up Brennan’s second season with the Territorial Cup and all the challenges ASU brings.
All in all, Arizona’s final six opponents have a combined record of 25-13.
Four of the games are on the road.
Can the Wildcats win two of the six? Absolutely. But a loss at Houston, which is hardly the most difficult assignment, would suggest zero guarantees ahead for the Wildcats.
The Big 12 has three bottom feeders: UCF, West Virginia and Oklahoma State. The Wildcats have already beaten OSU and don’t play the other two.
From here, nothing is easy.
If the Wildcats lose Saturday, the path into the postseason becomes vastly more treacherous.
To the picks …
Season record: 36-36-1 Five-star special: 3-4
(All times Pacific)
North Carolina (+10) at Cal Kickoff: Friday at 7:30 p.m. on ESPN Comment: Generally, we avoid picking Cal as a home favorite, especially as a double-digit home favorite. (Under Justin Wilcox, the Bears have repeatedly played down to the level of their competition.) But the Tar Heels are dreadful, their chemistry is poor and their head coach has checked out. If the Bears don’t cover, there’s a problem. Pick: Cal
Washington (+5.5) at Michigan Kickoff: 9 a.m. on Fox Comment: Ohio State’s defense is beyond elite, so UW’s 24-6 loss a few weeks ago should carry limited weight when assessing the Huskies. And after watching Michigan’s lopsided loss at USC, we’re starting to seriously consider the possibility that the Wolverines are no better than mediocre. Feels like an upset. Pick: Washington
Arizona (-1.5) at Houston Kickoff: 9 a.m. on FS1 Comment: Arizona’s performance in the Red Zone has been substandard, and nothing turns a winnable game into a gut-punch loss like settling for three points instead of securing seven. With the early kickoff, the Wildcats can’t afford a sluggish start. Pick: Houston
UNLV (+11.5) at Boise State Kickoff: 12:30 p.m. on FS1 Comment: The Rebels are undefeated (6-0) but have played one of the softest schedules in captivity and just gave up 48 points to an opponent (Air Force) that has one win. But we have little faith in this edition of Boise State, which has handled Mountain West showdowns impressively in the past. Pick: UNLV
Texas Tech (-9.5) at ASU Kickoff: 1 p.m. on Fox Comment: We’re assuming both quarterbacks will play, although ASU’s Sam Leavitt could be healthier — and hence more effective — than Texas Tech’s Behren Morton. How will the Sun Devils hold up at the line of scrimmage? They were just overrun by an opponent (Utah) that the Red Raiders manhandled a few weeks ago. Pick: ASU
Washington State (+17.5) at Virginia Kickoff: 3:30 p.m. on The CW Comment: The Cougars mustered a terrific performance last weekend at Mississippi and were within range of a major upset. But this assignment is far more difficult, partly because of the logistics (another distant road game) and partly because Virginia won’t take the Cougars lightly after the scare they gave the Rebels. Pick: Virginia
Oregon (-17) at Rutgers Kickoff: 3:30 p.m. on Big Ten Network Comment: A long trip awaits the Ducks after a demoralizing loss (to Indiana), but there’s no better formula for getting back on track than a mediocre opponent with a turnstile defense: Rutgers is No. 135 nationally (out of 136 teams) in yards-per-play allowed. The Ducks should be sitting on 40 when the fourth quarter begins. Pick: Oregon
Maryland (+3.5) at UCLA Kickoff: 4 p.m. on FS1 Comment: The Terps are coming off back-to-back home losses (to Washington and Nebraska) and now must make the long trip to face a hot opponent. The Bruin Bounce, as the post-DeShaun Foster upturn is known on the Hotline, will end soon. But not this weekend. Pick: UCLA
Tennessee (+8.5) at Alabama Kickoff: 4:30 p.m. on ABC Comment: Kalen DeBoer’s wardrobe selection Saturday evening (i.e., the Black Hoodie of Death) matters far less to us than the game location: The Crimson Tide have been unbeatable in Tuscaloosa under DeBoer. This should be close for three quarters, but Tennessee doesn’t have the defense to withstand the final onslaught. Pick: Alabama
USC (+9.5) at Notre Dame Kickoff: 4:30 p.m. on NBC Comment: Notre Dame’s losses have come by three points to No. 2 Miami and by one point to No. 4 Texas A&M — we think the Irish are even better than their No. 13 ranking. Are the Trojans capable of making the cross-country trip in the middle of Big Ten play and holding their ground for 60 minutes in what’s tantamount to a playoff-elimination game? Nope, but they should hold up for 58 minutes. Pick: USC
Utah (-3.5) at BYU Kickoff: 5 p.m. on Fox Comment: The prime time slot on Fox is the broadcast window this rivalry deserves and heaps attention on a critical game for Utah coach Kyle Whittingham’s legacy. The winner becomes a frontrunner to reach the Big 12 championship while the loser has a steep climb. With plenty of focus on quarterback Devon Dampier and Utah’s offense against BYU’s granite defense, we suspect the outcome hinges on BYU freshman quarterback Bear Bachmeier’s success — or lack thereof. Pick: Utah
Five-star special: Oregon. Dan Lanning will have the Ducks ready for an impressive bounce-back performance against an opponent that can offer little in the way of resistance.
SANTA CRUZ – Move over Otter 841, a new marauding sea mammal is up to mischief.
On Wednesday, an otter snagged a board from a surfer at Steamer Lane in Santa Cruz, the Santa Cruz Fire Department Marine Division said in a statement to this news organization.
The incident recalled the antics of Otter 841, who was photographed stealing a surfboard and even riding a wave in summer 2023. A spokesperson for the fire department said the otter involved in Wednesday’s incident was not identified as 841.
Around 5:06 p.m., emergency responders were dispatched for a report of a surfer who was possibly bitten by an otter.
Lifeguards arrived to find a group of surfers surrounding another surfer in the water, as well as “an otter who appeared to be sitting on the victim’s board,” the fire department said.
The surfer was pulled from the water and evaluated by medical personnel. The fire department said she was not injured or bitten by the otter.
Lifeguards retrieved and returned the board to the surfer.
“Once the equipment was given back to the owner, units were cleared from the incident,” the fire department said.
The city plans to notify the California Department of Fish and Wildlife about the incident.
Otter 841, meanwhile, remains on the lam.
Born at a UC Santa Cruz research center and raised by her mother at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, the creature successfully evaded federal and state wildlife authorities who, concerned by her aggressive behavior, tried to catch her using boats, nets, cages and scuba divers.