
- Written by: Kacey Sycamore
By Erica Hellerstein, Mercury News
For the past few weeks, as coronavirus radically altered daily life, 79-year-old Diana Fernandes has been struggling quietly inside her San Francisco home, weathering a challenge from within.
Fernandes lives alone — her husband died in 2017 — and has been left to manage a painful foot injury and the threat of the virus on her own. As an asthmatic, she is already in a higher risk category so she has been avoiding contact with people. She hasn’t seen another person since March 14.
She misses watering her plants outside and shopping at Trader Joe’s for her favorite foods: apricots, figs, English muffins, mozzarella and sun-dried tomatoes. Now, she’s relying on regular deliveries from Meals on Wheels for food.
“I have to live with what I can,” said Fernandes over the phone from her home. “It would be nice to have someone to take care of me but it is expensive so not to worry. I do my best.”
Fernandes is among the millions of elderly Californians who live alone amid a strange new reality imposed by the coronavirus. Confined indoors, they are safer from the threat of the virus, but increasingly vulnerable to isolation, fear and anxiety as their connections to the outside world shut down. Friends and volunteers can’t visit, and most senior centers are closed.
(Image: Food bank volunteer Betty Kimmel wears a protective mask as she hands out oranges to seniors at Teamsters 315 Hall in Martinez on March 19, 2020. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters)
Already, social service providers are fielding heart-breaking calls from seniors, alone, hungry, some disabled and without the financial or community support needed to get through a lockdown with no end in sight.
“One elder called and said, ‘Am I going to die?’ That was how she opened her conversation with me,” said Cathy Michalec, executive director of Little Brothers-Friends of the Elderly San Francisco, a nonprofit aimed at reducing senior isolation that is sending care kits to elderly residents. “Seniors are isolated always. I think for some seniors really it just amplified the fact that they are alone.”
Experts say isolation can pose a significant risk to seniors. Statewide, there are about 5.7 million Californians over the age of 65, according to the California Department of Aging. Roughly one-fifth live alone.
“Nutrition and isolation are two of our top concerns right now,” said California Department of Aging director Kim McCoy Wade. “If I have one message, it’s for us all to be checking in on each other. Somebody you might not have called last week or two weeks ago, call them now.”
Sally, a San Francisco 80-year-old who asked to be identified by her first name only, spends so much time on the phone now she sometimes feels “like a teenager.” But the daily calls that have become a staple of her quarantine can’t replace the face-to-face interactions with friends that were part of her life before the virus swept through the Bay Area.
“I didn’t know what an extrovert I was,” she said. “I always thought I was an introvert. But I’m not. I really miss my friends. I had a really good life before, I didn’t realize it. Now I feel like I’m a prisoner.”
As she struggles to cope with the isolation imposed by the virus, she has a growing list of worries: running low on food and supplies: declining physical and mental health; missing out on exercise and walks that were a part of her routine; and of course, contracting the virus. She takes her temperature every morning.
Still, she has found some bright spots. She is a poet and recently hosted a reading over the phone for about 15 people — an event she said was a “big success.” She’s also making sure to catalog her experiences and hopes to submit them to a local library’s archive.
Social service agencies, nonprofits and volunteers who work with seniors are also scrambling to adapt as more older people seek food and emotional support. With tens of thousands of home-bound seniors across the Bay Area, local service providers are seeing two patterns play out at once. The first is a spike in need among seniors who may not have previously required help from food relief organizations. The second is a declining number of volunteers, particularly at local food banks and Meals on Wheels chapters, where a significant portion of the volunteer base is over 65.
On a typical day, Contra Costa County’s Meals on Wheels program serves about 2,300 meals to home-bound seniors and people in senior living centers. That’s already grown to 2,800 meals daily. Santa Clara County’s Health Trust Meals on Wheels program has more than doubled its weekly meal distribution, too, and seen a jump in the number of people calling for help, said director Teresa Johnson.
But even as the need for support rises, visitation and activity programs have been cut by shelter-in-place orders. Brendon Coates, 37, a volunteer with Little Brothers-Friends of the Elderly-San Francisco, can’t see the senior he has been visiting twice a month since 2018. Usually, when Coates stops by, they talk about old Hollywood movies and swap sugar-free chocolates. Coates has been calling regularly and checking in, but said he does sometimes worry about how his older friend is doing, isolated and with no family nearby.
Phone lines and DIY volunteer groups that have sprung up to help Bay Area seniors have also seen a flood of calls. Paige Wheeler Fleury, who helped found the volunteer-led Oakland at Risk website, which connects healthy young people in Alameda County with seniors and other-high risk community members who need help with groceries, supplies, or phone check-ins, described “heartbreaking” situations: a 94-year-old disabled woman with no friends or family members who doesn’t have money for food; a blind man in his late ‘70s who has no microwave, refrigerator, or stove and relied on a now-closed senior center for daily meals, with no money until April 1.
“He called us about three times and said, ‘I’m hungry and I have no one to help me.’ It was pretty emotional when I spoke to him,” she said. The group was able to send out an emergency delivery of food, but Wheeler Fleury said she is short on sign-ups for volunteers in his area — Oakland’s San Antonio neighborhood — who could continue to help get him groceries.
Dr. Patrick Arbore, an expert in elderly suicide prevention and isolation and founder of the San Francisco-based Friendship Line, a crisis intervention and support phone hotline for seniors and people with disabilities, said the line has seen an uptick in calls as seniors navigate theloneliness of coronavirus. He recommends people who live in buildings with seniors slip the 800 971-0016 phone number of the Friendship line — which serves people across California — under their doors.
“It can be a life-sustaining link for them,” he says. “It’s a very stressful time and when I talk to older people over a period of six hours as I did today and I hear them, I hear the fear. They will say, ‘I’m scared.’ And their routines are just totally altered. And that’s the thing that I can hear is that they’re alone.”
Erica Hellerstein is a reporter with the Mercury News. This article is part of The California Divide, a collaboration among newsrooms examining income inequity and economic survival in California.
- Written by: Adia White

- Written by: Kacey Sycamore
By Julie Cart, Elizabeth Aguilera and Ana B. Ibarra, CalMatters
As the number of people hospitalized in California with the coronavirus doubled in just four days, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday sent out an urgent call seeking help from the state’s 37,000 retired and part-time health care professionals.
Newsom issued an executive order that will temporarily allow retired doctors and nurses to return to work, broaden the duties that some nurses may perform and bring medical school and nursing students who are close to graduating into the workforce almost immediately.
Statewide, 1,432 people have been hospitalized with the virus, up from 746 four days earlier, Newsom said. Of those, 42% or 597 were in intensive care, compared with about 200 four days earlier.
(Image: Sailors assigned to the hospital ship USNS Mercy admit a patient in Los Angeles, March 29, 2020. Credit: US Nacy)
Newsom, making the announcement on National Doctors Day, said he hoped that his appeal for the new California Health Corps would generate “thousands and thousands” of additional medical workers to respond to the pandemic.
“We are very, very hopeful with this effort that we will see a surge of individuals,” he said, urging qualified people to sign up for the program at healthcorps.ca.gov.
Newsom’s order allows the state to waive licensing and certification requirements for certain medical professionals through June 30th.
It gives the state the flexibility to allow doctors and nurses who have retired in the last five years, students who have nearly graduated from medical and nursing schools and others who are in the process of obtaining a license or getting relicensed to treat patients. The new workers would be paid and covered by malpractice insurance.
Health care advocates and experts say the governor’s order is vague so they are eager for details about what exactly will be allowed under the executive order. They said while it admirably aims to expand the workforce, it simply authorizes state agencies and licensing boards to make the final decision on what licensing and scope of practice regulations will be relaxed or waived for the time being.
“It’s opaque,” said Joanne Spetz, associate director of research at the Healthforce Center at UCSF. “Most of us who have been watching this expected there to be more clarity today about what is going to be allowed.
“Until the agencies provide that specificity for the workforce it’s unclear what is going to be permitted,” Spetz said. “Workers are going to need that guidance from a practical standpoint.”
The executive order leaves a lot of questions unanswered, said Scott Casanover, vice president of government affairs for West Coast University, a private nursing school with three campuses in Southern California.
Nursing students have to complete a certain number of hands-on clinical hours with patients to graduate. All of those hours were cut short in the last month as host organizations like hospitals began shutting down their programs or the schools pulled their students after the sheltering in place orders were issued.
“I’m glad that the governor turned his attention to the issue but he really didn’t make any decision in today’s order,” Casanover said. “He repeatedly says every second counts, every minute counts, but here we have the governor kicking the can down the road to the state agencies.”
The California Medical Association, which represents more than 50,000 physicians, supports the move by the governor, said Anthony York, spokesman for the organization.
“We understand that we all have to get out of our bunkers a little bit,” York said.
Sandra Hernandez, president and CEO of the California Health Care Foundation, praised the order, calling it “a thoughtful step that the governor and his team is putting in place.”
“The point here is to mobilize all available workforce in California, and I fully expect these agencies are ready to act and take the appropriate steps to deploy as many of our workforce as possible,” Hernandez said. “I’ve got to believe that all agencies will be playing their part.”
Hernandez said calling on the mature health care workforce will garner a large response, and including young near-graduates is equally important.
“They are very freshly trained and this is a younger workforce. Their training has been the most immediate and I think it was wise to deploy that workforce quickly into their respective professions as possible,” Hernandez said.
Newsom said the groups involved “put aside their differences” to agree to the program.
The expansion of the role of nurses has been particularly controversial in California in recent years. Nurse practitioners have been fighting to persuade the California Legislature to permit them “full scope” authority, which would allow them to evaluate and treat patients independently without direct physician oversight.
Under current law a doctor can oversee four nurse practitioners. York said the Dept. of Consumer Affairs, which licenses professions, said on a conference call Monday that it will allow for a higher number per doctor as needed by hospitals and clinics, which will have to apply for the waiver.
However, the medical association, he said, is still opposed to legislation intended to give nurse practitioners the ability to practice independently.
California’s attention had been on stockpiling protective gear such as masks, gloves and ventilators, and greatly expanding the number of hospital beds for patients with the virus as well as other health problems.
The Naval hospital ship Mercy, moored at the Port of Los Angeles, has begun to care for patients who are not infected with the coronavirus, and numerous field hospitals are being erected in parking lots and sports arenas.
But now staffing the burgeoning medical facilities has taken primacy as the number of people hospitalized, particularly in intensive care units, has surged.
Newsom said the state would need to quickly increase its hospital capacity by two-thirds to handle the anticipated rush of cases.
While the rate of infections is rising, officials are more concerned at the much faster pace of patients requiring hospitalization.
Mark Ghaly, secretary of the state Health and Human Services Agency, said current models project the need for an additional 50,000 hospital beds by the middle of May. That’s in addition to California’s current inventory of 75,000 licensed beds.
“Who better than those folks who are really close to being done to bring into the workforce now to essentially continue their clinical training with the help of experienced nurses or other health professionals,” Ghaly said.
Building the workforce is critical, but so is their protection. As more workers are brought to the front line, the state has to ensure that they are provided adequate personal protective gear, which has been a struggle, said Stephanie Roberson, government relations director at California Nurses Association.
“We can’t talk about workforce and how we prepare for a surge if our nurses and other health care workers are not protected at the bedside,” said Roberson.
Calling for almost-ready student nurses can ease the burden at hospitals, Roberson said, as long as they work under the direct supervision of experienced registered nurses.
“We absolutely can use our student nurses judiciously in this situation,” she said. “And at the same time they can still gain the clinical experience they need for graduation, that can happen right now.”
Nurses have regularly protested outside hospitals demanding more N95 respirators and other gear. An increase of medical staff will require that much more supplies, which the state is still sourcing.
Newsom said the state had distributed 32.6 million N95 masks, part of an estimated 100 million gloves, gowns, and other pieces of protective equipment officials are trying to procure, including as many as 10,000 ventilators.
He said the statewide social distancing edict has been successful, but when asked if the mandate that Caliornians stay at home was working to “flatten the curve” — epidemiologists’ holy grail of decreasing the rate of infections — he demurred.
The policy alone may not end the epidemic, Newsom said, “But we know what does work, and that’s physical distancing.”
Newsom would not specify the cost of the program, but said some if it would be borne by the federal government.
Some other states have already allowed for retirees and students to begin treating patients and allowed some nurses to perform tasks usually reserved for physicians.
At least 33 states have amended licensing requirements for health care workers, according to the National Council of State Legislatures.
For instance, Washington has allowed volunteer doctors and practitioners from other states to practice as long as they are in good standing in their home state. Florida is allowing licensed health care workers from elsewhere to temporarily provide care without a state license. Iowa is allowing doctors, nurses and physician assistants with inactive or lapsed licenses to practice.
CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.
As the number of people hospitalized in California with the coronavirus doubled in just four days, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday sent out an urgent call seeking help from the state’s 37,000 retired and part-time health care professionals.
Newsom issued an executive order that will temporarily allow retired doctors and nurses to return to work, broaden the duties that some nurses may perform and bring medical school and nursing students who are close to graduating into the workforce almost immediately.
Statewide, 1,432 people have been hospitalized with the virus, up from 746 four days earlier, Newsom said. Of those, 42% or 597 were in intensive care, compared with about 200 four days earlier.
Newsom, making the announcement on National Doctors Day, said he hoped that his appeal for the new California Health Corps would generate “thousands and thousands” of additional medical workers to respond to the pandemic.
“We are very, very hopeful with this effort that we will see a surge of individuals,” he said, urging qualified people to sign up for the program at healthcorps.ca.gov.
Newsom’s order allows the state to waive licensing and certification requirements for certain medical professionals through June 30th.
It gives the state the flexibility to allow doctors and nurses who have retired in the last five years, students who have nearly graduated from medical and nursing schools and others who are in the process of obtaining a license or getting relicensed to treat patients. The new workers would be paid and covered by malpractice insurance.
Health care advocates and experts say the governor’s order is vague so they are eager for details about what exactly will be allowed under the executive order. They said while it admirably aims to expand the workforce, it simply authorizes state agencies and licensing boards to make the final decision on what licensing and scope of practice regulations will be relaxed or waived for the time being.
“It’s opaque,” said Joanne Spetz, associate director of research at the Healthforce Center at UCSF. “Most of us who have been watching this expected there to be more clarity today about what is going to be allowed.
“Until the agencies provide that specificity for the workforce it’s unclear what is going to be permitted,” Spetz said. “Workers are going to need that guidance from a practical standpoint.”
The executive order leaves a lot of questions unanswered, said Scott Casanover, vice president of government affairs for West Coast University, a private nursing school with three campuses in Southern California.
Nursing students have to complete a certain number of hands-on clinical hours with patients to graduate. All of those hours were cut short in the last month as host organizations like hospitals began shutting down their programs or the schools pulled their students after the sheltering in place orders were issued.
“I’m glad that the governor turned his attention to the issue but he really didn’t make any decision in today’s order,” Casanover said. “He repeatedly says every second counts, every minute counts, but here we have the governor kicking the can down the road to the state agencies.”
The California Medical Association, which represents more than 50,000 physicians, supports the move by the governor, said Anthony York, spokesman for the organization.
“We understand that we all have to get out of our bunkers a little bit,” York said.
Sandra Hernandez, president and CEO of the California Health Care Foundation, praised the order, calling it “a thoughtful step that the governor and his team is putting in place.”
“The point here is to mobilize all available workforce in California, and I fully expect these agencies are ready to act and take the appropriate steps to deploy as many of our workforce as possible,” Hernandez said. “I’ve got to believe that all agencies will be playing their part.”
Hernandez said calling on the mature health care workforce will garner a large response, and including young near-graduates is equally important.
“They are very freshly trained and this is a younger workforce. Their training has been the most immediate and I think it was wise to deploy that workforce quickly into their respective professions as possible,” Hernandez said.
Newsom said the groups involved “put aside their differences” to agree to the program.
The expansion of the role of nurses has been particularly controversial in California in recent years. Nurse practitioners have been fighting to persuade the California Legislature to permit them “full scope” authority, which would allow them to evaluate and treat patients independently without direct physician oversight.
Under current law a doctor can oversee four nurse practitioners. York said the Dept. of Consumer Affairs, which licenses professions, said on a conference call Monday that it will allow for a higher number per doctor as needed by hospitals and clinics, which will have to apply for the waiver.
However, the medical association, he said, is still opposed to legislation intended to give nurse practitioners the ability to practice independently.
California’s attention had been on stockpiling protective gear such as masks, gloves and ventilators, and greatly expanding the number of hospital beds for patients with the virus as well as other health problems.
The Naval hospital ship Mercy, moored at the Port of Los Angeles, has begun to care for patients who are not infected with the coronavirus, and numerous field hospitals are being erected in parking lots and sports arenas.
But now staffing the burgeoning medical facilities has taken primacy as the number of people hospitalized, particularly in intensive care units, has surged.
Newsom said the state would need to quickly increase its hospital capacity by two-thirds to handle the anticipated rush of cases.
While the rate of infections is rising, officials are more concerned at the much faster pace of patients requiring hospitalization.
Mark Ghaly, secretary of the state Health and Human Services Agency, said current models project the need for an additional 50,000 hospital beds by the middle of May. That’s in addition to California’s current inventory of 75,000 licensed beds.
“Who better than those folks who are really close to being done to bring into the workforce now to essentially continue their clinical training with the help of experienced nurses or other health professionals,” Ghaly said.
Building the workforce is critical, but so is their protection. As more workers are brought to the front line, the state has to ensure that they are provided adequate personal protective gear, which has been a struggle, said Stephanie Roberson, government relations director at California Nurses Association.
“We can’t talk about workforce and how we prepare for a surge if our nurses and other health care workers are not protected at the bedside,” said Roberson.
Calling for almost-ready student nurses can ease the burden at hospitals, Roberson said, as long as they work under the direct supervision of experienced registered nurses.
“We absolutely can use our student nurses judiciously in this situation,” she said. “And at the same time they can still gain the clinical experience they need for graduation, that can happen right now.”
Nurses have regularly protested outside hospitals demanding more N95 respirators and other gear. An increase of medical staff will require that much more supplies, which the state is still sourcing.
Newsom said the state had distributed 32.6 million N95 masks, part of an estimated 100 million gloves, gowns, and other pieces of protective equipment officials are trying to procure, including as many as 10,000 ventilators.
He said the statewide social distancing edict has been successful, but when asked if the mandate that Caliornians stay at home was working to “flatten the curve” — epidemiologists’ holy grail of decreasing the rate of infections — he demurred.
The policy alone may not end the epidemic, Newsom said, “But we know what does work, and that’s physical distancing.”
Newsom would not specify the cost of the program, but said some if it would be borne by the federal government.
Some other states have already allowed for retirees and students to begin treating patients and allowed some nurses to perform tasks usually reserved for physicians.
At least 33 states have amended licensing requirements for health care workers, according to the National Council of State Legislatures.
For instance, Washington has allowed volunteer doctors and practitioners from other states to practice as long as they are in good standing in their home state. Florida is allowing licensed health care workers from elsewhere to temporarily provide care without a state license. Iowa is allowing doctors, nurses and physician assistants with inactive or lapsed licenses to practice.
CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.
- Written by: Kacey Sycamore
A new model from the University of Washington projects that coronavirus deaths in California will peak in late April, with a total of 5,086 deaths predicted in the state through Aug. 4.
The study from the university’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, which aims to “determine the extent and timing of deaths and excess demand for hospital services due to COVID-19 in the U.S.,” assumes the continuation of strong social distancing measures and other protective measures. It was published March 26 and updated on March 31.
The forecast shows that California should have enough hospital beds to meet demand throughout the course of the pandemic. It predicts that daily fatalities will peak April 27 with 122 deaths.
(Image: A screenshot of the California projections from the IHME study.)
The U.S. as a whole will see peak deaths on April 15, according to the study, with a total of 83,967 deaths predicted through Aug. 4.
“In addition to a large number of deaths from COVID-19, the epidemic in the US will place a load well beyond the current capacity of hospitals to manage, especially for ICU care,” writes IHME director Christopher J.L. Murray, one of the study’s authors, in the publication’s conclusion.
- Santa Rosa Police Department Mourns Loss of Detective
- What is an Equitable Response to COVID-19: Interview With Ana Lugo
- California Ramps Up Output of Ventilators As COVID-19 Cases Grow
- COVID-19: Financial Resources for Sonoma County Residents
- Santa Rosa Outlines COVID-19 Support for Homeless
- Los Angeles Will Mirror New York As Coronavirus Surges, Newsom and Garcetti Warn
- COVID-19: Sonoma County Resources for Seniors and Vulnerable Populations
- Here’s What Happens to Science When California’s Researchers Shelter in Place
- COVID-19: Sonoma County Mental Health Resources
- Sonoma County Office of Education Recommends Schools Extend On-Campus Closures
- Undocumented Workers Struggle as Economy Grinds to a Halt
- All Parks Closed in Sonoma County
- Live Virtual Town Hall - Coronavirus: What You Need to Know – Tuesday at 7pm
- Sonoma County Sup. Susan Gorin Coronavirus Update 3-23-20
- SMART Makes Additional Schedule Changes Amid Statewide Shelter-in-Place Orders
- How Overwhelmed is California’s Health Care System About to Be?
- Shelters Work to Prevent Spread of Coronavirus Among Residents
- Newsom: Coronavirus Likely To Close California Schools for Rest of the Year
- Meals on Wheels Offers Free Food Delivery to Qualifying Seniors
- More Than 22 Million Californians Could Contract Coronavirus Without Mitigation, According To Gov. Newsom
- California and Coronavirus Testing Right Now: 3/18/20
- SMART Cancels Selected Weekday Service Because of Shelter-in-Place Orders
- Sonoma County Health Officer Issues Shelter in Place Orders
- SCOE Announcement: All Sonoma County School Districts Have Announced Suspension of In-Person Classes
- Mayor Joe Callinan's Statement on Coronavirus in Rohnert Park
- Nine Active Coronavirus Cases Reported in Sonoma County
- Santa Rosa City School Classes Suspended Through April 5; Students to Complete Assignments at Home
- County Moves From Advisory to Order on Event Cancellations
- Video Discusses California Response to COVID-19
- Demonstrators Demand More Protections For Undocumented Community
- As Coronavirus Toll Rises Statewide, So Does Health Care Workers’ Alarm
- Listen Live: Special Statewide Coronavirus Special – Friday at 2pm
- Coronavirus Special & Resources
- Sonoma County Health Officer Advises Canceling Large Indoor Events
- Sonoma County Point-in-Time Count Aims to Tally The Homeless Population
- For Gig Workers and Hourly Earners Coronavirus Is a Test
- Coronavirus - Listen Live Wednesday at 7pm
- “Your Bills Don’t Get Sick”: Workers Say Coronavirus Prevention Isn’t Easy
- 30 Healthcare Workers at Local Hospital Directed to Self-Quarantine, According to Their Union
- Coronavirus: U.S. Death Toll Now At 14; New Cases In Maryland, Colorado, Pennsylvania
- California Schools Brace for a Coronavirus Disruption
- March 2020 Vote: Election Results
- County Health Officials Work to Track Down Contacts of Local Coronavirus Patient
- 2nd Sonoma County Resident Diagnosed With Novel Coronavirus After Returning From Cruise
- AB5 Sparks Controversy Among California's Independent Contractors
- The Developer Bonus Tucked Into the School Bond on Your Ballot
- Annual Pliny the Younger Beer Release Boosts Tourism in Sonoma County
- California Pushes For More Coronavirus Testing After First Case Of Community Transmission
- Proposition 13 Seeks $15 Billion for California's Schools
- New Coronavirus Affects Tourism in San Francisco's Chinatown
- David Cook Challenges Gorin For First District Seat
- Gorin Runs for a Third Term on the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors
- Former Mayor Chris Coursey Challenges Zane for District 3 Seat
- Shirlee Zane Defends Her Seat on the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors
- Lynda Hopkins Makes Her Case for a Second Term as Supervisor
- Mike Hilber Challenges Lynda Hopkins for District 5 Seat
- Interview: Reporter Will Houston Lays Out the Pros and Cons of Measure I
- Local Activist Speaks Out on Missed Opportunity in Cancelled "American Dirt" Talk
- California Lawmakers Have Refused to Restrict Flavored Vaping —Is That About to Change?
- Lisa See, Author of "The Island of Sea Women," Speaks at Sonoma Valley Regional Library
- In California, Not Every Kid Has a Fair Chance at Success
- California Students Missing School Due to Wildfires and Other Disasters
- Educators Release Plan for Expanding the Arts in Schools
- Sonoma County Plans to Clear Joe Rodota Trail By Friday
- Podcast: Activist homeless moms score an Oakland win
- Doctors Fail to Help Patients Stop Smoking, Says Report
- Rodota Trail Situation Delays Homeless Count for a Month
- Former Director of IOLERO Works to Pass Initiative to Strengthen the Office
- Sonoma County Prepares to Evict Campers Along the Joe Rodota Trail
- Sanctioned Homeless Camp at Los Guilicos Scheduled to Open Sunday
- Sonoma County Libraries Host Tamale Making Workshops
- Meet Leah Gold, Healdsburg's New Mayor for 2020
- Around 1,000 People Attend Santa Rosa Women's March
- Contractors Begin to Set Up Sanctioned Encampment Near Oakmont
- Supervisors Pick Sonoma Valley for Temporary Homeless Shelter
- Next Stop for Free College: Cal State University?
- WATCH LIVE: Managers Read Impeachment Articles, Senators Sworn In Ahead Of Trial – Thursday at 7am
- Sonoma County Women’s March to Take Place Saturday
- Cities Should Act on Homelessness or Face Lawsuits, Newsom Task Force Says
- Do You Know What Should Go in Your Emergency Kit?
- Sonoma County Library Hosts Disaster Preparedness Classes
- Should California Restrict Building in High-Risk Fire Areas?
- Santa Rosa Junior College Receives $7 Million for Disaster Recovery Workforce Training
- Anniversary Gives Rialto Cinemas Founder Chance to Reflect
- Sonoma West Publishers Plans Big Changes for 2020
- New Book Offers Background on Ukraine's People and Culture
- Author Ibram X. Kendi Says "Not Racist" is Not Enough
- Schools Can Hire Teachers of Color, but Will They Stay?
- Diversifying the Ranks of Teachers. Race and Gender Matter
- Sonoma County Releases Resident Health Report Card
- Emerald Cup Cannabis Festival Attracts Visitors From Across the Country
- Santa Rosa City Council Votes To Terminate Rental Price Gouging Ordinance
- Death of Petaluma Man Calls Use of Carotid Hold Into Question
- Santa Rosa Police Department Finishes Community Listening Sessions
- PG&E Announces $13.5 Billion Settlement With Victims Of Northern California Wildfires
- Can California Reduce Homelessness Through Better Prevention?
- Organization Works to Improve First Responder Mental Health
- Local Non-Profits Running Out of Funding for Fire Aid
- On Thanksgiving, Remembering an Anniversary
- California Burning, Episode 4: The Wildland/Urban Interface – Sunday at 10am
- Sonoma County EDB Opens Disaster Loan Outreach Center for Kincade Fire Victims
- Journalist Lowell Bergman Shares Tales of a Storied Career – Sunday at 4pm
- California Burning Podcast: The Science of Fire Behavior
- New Documentary Celebrates First LGBTQ+ Native Powwow
- Impacts Expected on Russian River After Kincade Fire
- Healdsburg Residents Undeterred by Kincade Fire
- A Year After the Camp Fire, Survivors Share Stories of Loss and Healing
- Building Resilience After Tragedy
- KBBF Radio Santa Rosa Updates Community During Kincade Fire
- 2017 Lessons Saved Lives and Property During Kincade Fire
- 'Halloween Do-Over' Brings Joy to Healdsburg After Fire
- Documentary "Men Caring" Honors Those Who Support Adults With Disabilities
- Local Assistance Center Will Open Today Through Wednesday in Healdsburg
- Code Blue Advisory Especially Concerning for Those Living Outside
- For Many Survivors, Kincade Fire Brings Back Trauma
- PG&E Expects Third Severe Wind Event 10-29 and 10-30
- The Current PG&E Power Shutoff – Emergency Information
- How to Prepare for Fires, Power Outages and Other Emergencies
- California Burning Podcast: Using Fire to Protect Forests
- Kincade Fire Update: Kincade Fire Fully Contained
- PG&E Initiates Second Public Safety Power Shut Off in October - What You Need to Know
- School Closure Announcements for the Week of Monday, November 4
- Survivors of Camp Fire and Tubbs Fire Look Back and Ahead
- Power Shut Off Prompts Modified Hours, Closures for Some Santa Rosa Schools
- Santa Rosa Middle Schoolers Talk to an Astronaut Aboard the ISS
- One Injured in Shooting Near Ridgway High School Campus; School Lockdowns Lifted
- Find Out if Your Service May Be Impacted by a Public Safety Power Shut Off event
- 26 Insurance Companies to Continue Paying Survivors' Rent
- New Documentary Addresses Gaps in Health Insurance Access
- Sonoma County Needs Your Help to Create a Power Outage Economic Impact Report
- Great Shakeout Earthquake Drills Planned for Thursday
- 100th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage Comes with Complexity
- Local Author Writes a Guidebook for Immigrant Parents
- Fire Survivors React to Power Shut-off
- Residents Observe Anniversary of the Sonoma Complex Fires
- Sonoma County Ridesharing Service Aims to Help Women Feel Safer
- Fire Survivors Demand Insurance Companies Continue to Cover Rent
- City of Santa Rosa Unveils New Emergency Warning Sirens
- Smokey the Bear Has Affected Forest Management for Decades
- Julián Castro Addresses Top Issues Facing Californians
- Behind the Scenes at one of the Nation’s Largest Cannabis Companies
- Rohnert Park Opens Emergency Cooling Centers
- Santa Rosa Will Open Cooling Centers Tuesday and Wednesday
- Group Asks Santa Rosa Businesses to Hasten $15 Minimum Wage
- PG&E Announces Planned Public Safety Power Shut Offs for This Week
- West County High School District Negotiates with Teachers
- West Sonoma County Teachers May Strike Over Salaries
- President & CEO Nancy Dobbs to Retire
- Roseland Mural Welcomed into the Community
- Trauma Threatens To Impact School Attendance In Paradise
- Paradise School Counselors Address High Rates of PTSD Among Students
- Educators Use Poetry to Help Kids Talk About Trauma
- Forum Celebrates Women Leaders at NASA Ames Research Center
- Sonoma County Leaders Discuss Sexism in Politics During Panel
- Study Shows Climate Change Could Threaten Oyster Habitat
- Director Ann Shin Examines Intelligence Industry in New Film
- Local Jewish Leader Questions Trump's 'Disloyalty' Claim
- Housing Insecurity Is Taking a Toll on Youth’s Health
- Three Years In, Legal Cannabis Still Causing Fights
- Controlled Burns Could Help Prevent California's Megafires
- Rainer Navarro Becomes New Police Chief of Santa Rosa
- Changes in Math Education Cause Anxiety Among Parents
- October 2017 Wildfires Are Affecting Crucial Health Programs
- Protesters Urge Sonoma County to Divest from Private Prisons
- Portraits of Unhoused Neighbors Emphasize Humanity
- Annual Mochilada Backpack Giveaway Kicks off the School Year
- Schulz Museum Celebrates Woodstock Festival on its 50th Anniversary
- Rep. Huffman Talks Local Issues and Trump at Point Reyes
- Local Priest Reacts to National Cathedral Statement on Trump
- Agencies Face Stricter Guidelines When Evicting the Homeless
- Santa Rosa Holds Public Hearing on PG&E Rate Hike
- Bohemian Club Provides Talent for Monte Rio Variety Show
- Bohemian Grove Annual Encampment Ends for the Summer
- Residents Celebrate Agricultural Roots at Sonoma County Fair
- Families Celebrate Sonoma County Fair Despite Increased Security
- Officials Address Safety Along SMART Train Corridor
- Supervisor Zane Cites Progress, Concerns in Kaiser Talks
- Grand Jury Commends Sonoma County Jail Mental Health Program
- Grand Jury Finds Problems Within Behavioral Health Division
- Santa Rosa Symphony Performs Free Concert
- Mendocino Winemakers Consider Plan to Boost Tourism and Sales
- Santa Rosa Priest Accused of Stealing over $95,000 from Parish
- Nine Barlow Businesses Sue Over Flood Damages
- Food for Thought to Close Forestville Store but Retain Focus
- Sonoma County Library Eliminates Overdue Fines
- Museum of Sonoma County Opens Exhibition on History of Cannabis
- Santa Rosa Residents Protest Detention of Migrant Children
- California HOPE Crisis Counseling Ends
- Local Group Shares Hotline to Protect Undocumented Immigrants
- Sonoma County Inspects Rural Properties for Fire Safety
- Host of KPCC's The Big One Podcast Shares Earthquake Tips
- 'Hairspray': The Perfect Musical for this Moment
- Roseland Residents Give Input on 2050 General Plan
- Book Tells Stories of Refugees Exiled 'Home' to Cambodia
- California on Independence Day in 1776
- Sonoma County Struggles With Property Tax Loss from 2017 Fires
- State Bill to Boost Housing Density Stalls in the Legislature
- Teenage Vaping on the Rise in Sonoma County
- Sonoma County Interfaith Council Denounces Hate
- Experts Showcase Fire Resistant Building Materials
- Stacey Abrams in Conversation with NorCal Public Media
- KRCB Wins Three Awards from the Public Radio Journalists Association
- Low-Income Students Face Food Insecurity During Summer Break
- PG&E Agrees to $415 Million Settlement for North Bay Fires
- Civilians Who Tested Agent Orange Now Sick, Dying: Podcast
- Sonoma County Board of Supervisors Finalizes Budget
- Firing Forests to Save Them: Could Native Traditions Save Lives?
- A Statewide Flex Alert Calls for Energy Conservation on Tuesday, June 11
- Petaluma Business Leaders Work to Prevent Opioid Deaths
- Report Warns 2020 Census Could Undercount Millions
- Yolo County's Sand Fire Forces Evacuations Near Guinda
- Against All Odds, Paradise Students Graduate on Home Campus
- Grist Finds Link Between Pollution and Infant Death in San Bernardino
- Santa Rosa High School Lockdown Lifted, Suspect in Custody
- Citizen Input Sought for Santa Rosa's Future
- Reveal Finds Rampant Wage Theft in the Caregiving Industry
- KRCB TV Highlights the Wine Industry’s Unsung Heroes
- Local Activists Bring Green New Deal Principles to Sonoma
- Capital Public Radio Announces Move to Downtown Sacramento
- Activist Group Sues County Over Andy Lopez Records
- Hope for Sonoma's Coast; Other Calif. Areas Under Siege
- Sonoma County Activists Address Climate Change at Town Hall
- Mormon Temple in Oakland Open to Public for Limited Time
- Israel's Consul General in S.F. Condemns Anti-Semitism
- Kaiser CEO Tyson Meets with Families on Mental Health
- Prepare for Disasters by Getting to Know Your Neighbors
- Pulitzer Prize-winning Poet: 'I Love Petaluma'
- New Health Officer Tackles Measles and Other Top Concerns
- FEMA Hosts Disaster Preparedness Symposium in Santa Rosa
- Political Cartoonist Speaks on the Importance of Satire
- Sonoma County Sheriff Releases Andy Lopez Case Files
- Alegría De La Cruz, Newest Schools Trustee, Aims at Equity
- More Coffey Park Residents Begin to Return Home
- Family Turns Grief to Activism After Daughter's Suicide
- News: Connect the Bay Follow Up -Your Housing Questions Answered
- Fishermen Cautiously Optimistic About Salmon Season Forecast
- Meet the New Director of Sonoma County's Watchdog Office
- Crab Season Ends Early to Protect Whales
- YWCA Educates Public on Domestic Abuse After Recent Tragedies
- Santa Rosa City Council Skeptical of Regional Housing Plan
- Guerneville Residents Work to Repair Their Homes, Lives
- Guerneville Businesses Work to Reopen A Month After Flood
- Barlow Tenants Question Why Flood Plan Didn’t Work
- Miss Sonoma County 2019 Breaks Down Barriers
- Garden Society Presents Pot Podcast and Products for Women
- City of Healdsburg Tables Renter Protection Ordinance
- Landslide Threatens Several Homes in Forestville
- Counties: No Criminal Charges Against PG&E in 2017 Wildfires
- Greg Sarris: Author, Professor, Chairman of Local Tribe
- Sonoma County Emergency Manager Speaks on Flood Recovery
- Sonoma County Residents Search for Flood Recovery Assistance
- Rep. Huffman Tours Barlow in Sebastopol Following Flood
- Russian River Flood Recovery Resource Page
- Santa Rosa Declares Local Emergency; No Worry Yet on Water
- Sebastopol Voters Debate Leasing Local Hospital
- New SSU Exec Commits to Diversity, First Generation Students
- Healdsburg Mayor David Hagele Defends Housing Budget
- Northern Elephant Seals Take Over Drake's Beach at Point Reyes
- Legal Marijuana Makes Talking About Safety Harder for Some Parents
- Petaluma Mayor Teresa Barrett Hopes to Tackle Housing Shortage
- Windsor Mayor Foppoli: No Use Fighting District Elections
- David Rabbitt Steps in as Chair of the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors
- California Senator Dodd Reacts to State of the State Address
- Gov. Newsom State of the State: Housing, Health, PG&E, Trump
- North Bay Celebrates Annual Pliny the Younger Release
- Scientists Release Scale Ranking Atmospheric River Intensity
- Local Agencies Address Flood Control on Russian River
- French WW II Spy Brings Story of Courage to Petaluma
- Mayor Amy Harrington Talks About Upcoming Changes for 2019
- Informe: County Sheriff Plans Better Community Relations
- Informe: Essick, Sonoma County Sheriff Plans Prison Reform
- Informe: Santa Rosa Mayor Questions Need for Translations
- Informe: Santa Rosa's Mayor on the City's Homeless Crisis
- Informe: Santa Rosa Mayor Schwedhelm Lays Out Priorities
- Informe: Tom Schwedhelm Becomes Santa Rosa Mayor
- Santa Rosa Mayor Talks About his Priorities for 2019
- Volunteers Help Sonoma County Track Homelessness
- Santa Rosa Women’s March Spurs Excitement for 2020 Elections
- PG&E Bankruptcy Imminent; Banks Offer Billions in Financing
- Political Forum Blue-Green Eggs and Ham Draws Over 400
- 'Zero Waste' on KRCB TV in the North Bay - Jan 22; We Revisit Radio Report
- Council Member Victoria Fleming Talks About Goals for 2019
- Santa Rosa Diocese Releases List of Clergy Members Accused of Abuse
- Fear of Gangs Driving Central Americans North: Podcast
- New Sonoma County Sheriff Hopes to Improve Community Relations
- Report Highlights Sonoma County Employment Trends
- Rep. Jackie Speier Suggests Border Compromise via DACA
- Snoopy's Home Ice to Celebrate 50th Anniversary in 2019
- Living with Lead: 'Like Crabs in a Barrel'
- Living Downstream Preview: Tour Uncovers Richmond Poisons
- Native Fire Practices Can Make Communities Safer
- Community Health Workers Help Gain Environmental Justice
- Woodstock and Red-Haired Girl Get Their Day in 2019
- County Agrees to $3 Million Lopez Settlement
- Emerald Cup Draws Cannabis Experts, Entrepreneurs and Fans
- Emerald Cup Prize to Willie Nelson, Others Enjoy Legal Smoke
- Sonoma Residents Work to Reduce Health Disparities
- Journalist Tess Vigeland Leads Camp Fire Reporting Effort
- Sexual Assault Prevention Educator Opposes Title IX Changes
- Coffey Strong Heads to Butte County to Share Advice
- Immigration Tied to Benefits? County Schools Head Says No
- North Bay Residents Offer Hope, Aid to Camp Fire Evacuees
- Sonoma County to Create New Emergency Management Department
- Community Members Debate How to Best Spend Homelessness Aid Grant
- Santa Rosa Official Offers Advice to Camp Fire Survivors
- Santa Rosa City Council Votes to Extend Renter Protections
- California Seeks Input on Housing Recovery Funds
- Dogs Compete in Sheep Herding at Hopland Research Center
- Santa Rosa Hosts 2018 California Economic Summit
- In Short Time, Conductor Lecce-Chong Puts Stamp on Symphony
- Music Inspires Climate Activists at Global Summit
- Climate Summit Contest: Unlikely Company Wins Funding
- Displaced Camp Fire Evacuees Consider What Comes Next
- Camp Fire Evacuees Sleep in Cars, Tents in Chico Parking Lot
- Poor Air Quality Poses Health Hazard for Workers
- Commentary: One Year On, Cannabis Legalization Mostly On Track
- KRCB's Steve Mencher and Adia White Discuss the Midterm Election
- Equity a Key Topic at 26th Annual Latino Health Forum
- Shomrei Torah Hosts Service for Tree of Life Shooting Victims
- The Difficult Birth of the Graton Resort and Casino
- Santa Rosa Voters Deliberate Affordable Housing Measure
- Sonoma County Works to Finalize Disaster Recovery Plan
- As City Builds New Park in Roseland, Whose Voices Are Heard?
- Sebastopol Building First in the Region to Use Hempcrete
- $12 Million in State Funds to Aid the Homeless in Sonoma Co.
- 'Pictures of a Gone City' Presents Bay Area, Warts and All
- Sonoma Co. Releases Results of Emergency Alert Tests
- Huffman Opponent Dale Mensing Supports Trump and DACA
- Rep. Jared Huffman Running on Accomplishments and Opposition to Trump
- One Year After the Oct. Wildfires, Many Families Are Still Uprooted
- Coffey Park Resident Shares her Experience a Year after the Fires
- More Counseling Services Needed for Spanish Speakers
- On Fire Anniversary, Recalling 'Battle to Save Jack London's Mountain'
- Cannabis Commentary: Return to Pot Prohibition Impossible
- Emergency Alert Test Lacks Spanish Translation for Broadcast
- Creative Sonoma Art Program Helps Students Cope With Trauma
- Organizations Work to Remove Language Barriers in Disasters
- Grape Stomping Ushers in the Harvest Season
- Grape Harvest Underway Across the North Bay
- Kavanaugh-Ford Testify Before Senate Judiciary – Watch Live Beginning at 7 am
- After a Month in Palestine, Empathy for Plight of Refugees
- Violence Prevention Partnership Keeps Kids out of Gangs
- Santa Rosa Hosts Gang Prevention Training for Parents
- Sonoma Co. Seeks Funds for Homelessness, Mental Health
- Sebastopol Peace Wall Adds Ellsberg, Huerta, and Two Locals
- North Bay Farm Shows Some Agriculture Can Help the Earth
- Mendocino Company Uses Goats to Reduce Wildfire Risk
- "Reflections After the Fire" Aims to Ease Trauma Through Art
- Gov. Jerry Brown Blasts Trump on Climate Change at SF Summit
- Global Climate Summit Update: Protecting Forests, People
- Meet Our New Cannabis Commentator, David Downs
- Sonoma County Tests Wireless Emergency Alerts
- Mendocino Company Markets Wild Seaweed as a Healthy Snack
- Climate Summit Takes Over San Francisco
- North Bay Residents March for Climate, Jobs and Justice
- Grand Jury Details Upgrades for Sonoma Emergency Response
- Sonoma County Civil Grand Jury Faults Emergency Response
- Spanish Speakers Question Officials at Fire Recovery Event
- Monarchs and Milkweed: Giving Butterflies a Boost
- Cannabis Expert David Downs: Market in Flux, Changes Certain
- Charles M. Schulz Museum to Host Auction for Wildfire Relief
- Expanded Life Jacket Program Saves Lives on Russian River
- Homeless Series Continues: Meet Chris and Cheri
- Firefighters Make Progress on Largest California Wildfires
- Mendocino County Farm Saved from Ranch Fire by Quick Action
- Sonoma County Provides Resources for Businesses Recovering from October Wildfires
- Wildfire Season Prompts Another Look at Emergency Warnings in California
- Cannabis Growers and Sellers in Sonoma County Confront Angry Neighbors
- Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria Donate $280,000; Fully Fund Rohnert Park Food Needs
- Hopland Research Center in Mendocino Uses Fire as Learning Experience
- Congratulations to Best Radio DJ in the North Bay, Brian Griffith
- After Wildfire Devastation Comes New Life; 'Gold Spot' Film on KRCB Aug. 7
- Mendocino Fires Continue Burning; We Talk with Cal Fire for the Latest
- Final Multi-Agency Active Shooter Training Exercise is Scheduled for Friday
- New Evacuation Orders in Mendocino Complex Fires
- A Red Flag Warning Will Be In Effect Through 11:00 pm Saturday
- Santa Rosa Rent Control Initiative Short of Needed Signatures; Advocates Will Regroup
- Temporary Outage of KRCB FM 91.1 Signal
- Speakers at 'Just Recovery' Meeting Emphasize Workforce Issues and 'WUI'
- A Second Multi-Agency Active Shooter Training Exercise is Scheduled for Tuesday, July 31
- Meet KRCB Reporter Adia White; She'll Cover Fire Season and Everything Else
- Conversation with Director of Fred Rogers Biopic: 'Won't You Be My Neighbor?'
- Homeless Portraits: Mendocino County
- Supreme Court Won’t Take Up Lopez Case. Parents' Case Against County Can Continue
- Every Glass of Wine Tells a Story, According to Savvy Marketers
- Happy First Day of Summer, Said the Mosquito
- 'What a Chicken!!' -- Name of Petaluma Restaurant Says It All
- Press Democrat Columnist on Pulitzer Prize and Future of Newspapers in a Digital World
- Pilot Program Seeks to Demonstrate that Food Can Be Medicine
- New Learning Center Brings Tech, Interactivity to Wine Business Learning at SSU
- Free Program Offers 'HOPE' to Fire Survivors and Community as Healing Continues
- Free Program Offers 'HOPE' to Fire Survivors and Community as Healing Continues - Part 2
- Free Counseling for Fire Survivors, Community Members Impacted by October's Wildfires
- Sonoma County Failed Spanish-Speaking Residents During Fires, Says Group
- Black Women March for Rights in Sacramento
- KRCB Emmy Nominations 2018
- As First Rebuilt Coffey Park Home Is Occupied, Others Face 'Bumps' but Persevere
- Andy's Unity Park Opens with Doves, Anger, Sorrow for Lopez Family
- City, County and Nonprofits Work to Place Homeless as Rodota Trail Is Cleared
- Unity Park, Supreme Court Case, Film, Shine Spotlight on Andy Lopez Case