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Local news summary for August 6-12, 2022

local news from august 6 to august 12, 2022
Photo: Manuel Ortiz. Peninsula 360 Press
Listen to Constanza Mazzotti's voice note

The news doesn't stop and this week these are some of the local news from August 6-12 that you need to know to stay up to date.

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A new report from the Bay Area Equity Atlas shows that several neighborhoods that remain highly segregated by race and wealth.

The report is based on an analysis of U.S. Census data down to the census tract level that compares population figures by race and income. Thus, five of the 1,572 census tracts in the Bay Area are identified in the report as "highly segregated" areas for low-income Latino households.

These neighborhoods were in Marin, Alameda, Contra Costa and San Mateo counties.

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Saturday was the day of the annual, and very popular, penguin walk on the San Francisco Zoo.

The Penguin Walk is one of the Zoo's most popular events. This morning, five adorable Magellanic penguin chicks, two females and three males that hatched between mid-April and May, performed their graduation walk, or duck walk, in front of hundreds of excited zoo visitors before taking their ceremonial first bath at their new home on Penguin Island.

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The Berkeley Fire Department is advising residents in the Berkeley Hills neighborhood to have a plan ready to evacuate and stay elsewhere in the event the department designates "extreme fire weather," which is more severe than a red flag warning.

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In partnership with California Attorney General Rob Bonta, the California Borrowers' Rights Campaign on Monday launched the "California Student Debt Challenge," a statewide informational campaign on student loan forgiveness.  

About 1 million Californians in public service are eligible for loan forgiveness, but only 10,000 have received it since 2007, according to state data. Local leaders want to make sure as many residents as possible receive the relief to which they are entitled.

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California is launching an unprecedented review of San Francisco's housing approval process, with the goal of analyzing and removing obstacles to the construction of new residential developments.

The state Department of Housing and Community Development said Tuesday it would focus on San Francisco in its first "review of housing policies and practices."

The process aims to analyze why the city has the longest timelines in the state for housing projects. It also receives most of the complaints to the state's Housing Accountability Unit, which was created last year to combat California's housing shortage by working with cities to make sure they comply with state law when permitting new space.

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Stanford University police are investigating after a woman reported she was raped Tuesday in a campus bathroom.

The Stanford Department of Public Safety sent out an alert about the sexual assault report Tuesday afternoon.

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Redwood City Mayor Giselle Hale announced through her social media that she will not seek re-election to take another City Council seat, because while she said it has been an honor to serve residents, she hopes for more "mommy nights" on behalf of her family.

"Dear Redwood City. With mixed feelings and after deliberation, I am announcing that I will not be running for re-election to the Redwood City Council," Hale said in a letter posted on his social media.

He noted that his family chose Redwood City to put down roots because of its diversity, inclusiveness and multigenerationality, and in that regard, he said his family is a priority.

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You may be interested in: Newsom nominates Latina to be California Supreme Court justice

Peninsula 360 Press
Peninsula 360 Presshttps://peninsula360press.com
Study of cross-cultural digital communication

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