- PG&E expects San Bruno fines to hit $200 million (SF Chronicle)
PG&E Corp. expects to pay at least $200 million in fines tied to the deadly 2010 San Bruno pipeline explosion, company executives said Thursday.
- Central Valley reps bill would upend water rights (SF Chronicle)
Representatives from the Central Valley pushed legislation through a House committee Thursday that would upend the state's system of water rights, deploying the federal government to extract water from Northern California farms, fisheries and cities to send to farmers in the valley.
- New medical marijuana dispensaries approved for Excelsior district (SF Examiner)
Three new medical cannabis facilities in the Excelsior district were approved by the Planning Commission on Thursday despite increasing interest from the federal government to shutter such businesses across California.
- Bill would let school districts deny charters (SF Chronicle)
...[A] measure proposed in Sacramento would make it easier for districts to say no to charters. It would change a provision in the law that dictates that charter school applications must be considered without regard to the strain it might put on a school district's finances. AB1172 would allow districts paying off a state loan or those with a negative budget balance to use that as a reason to reject a charter. That would include Oakland and dozens of other districts across the state.
- A Surge in Ridership and a Spate of Deadly Crashes (Bay Citizen)
...[A collision between a paratransit shuttle bus and a man with a cane is] the latest in a string of high-profile crashes involving the burgeoning fleet of private shuttles that zip around San Francisco ferrying tech workers to Silicon Valley companies like Google and Yahoo! and students to universities like the Academy of Art Institute and the University of California, San Francisco.
- Facebook CFO advises Menlo Park council not to push company away with unreasonable demands (Palo Alto Daily News)
When Menlo Park officials sit down with Facebook representatives in the coming weeks to negotiate an agreement that would allow the social networking company to expand, they'll likely try hard to avoid making their requests for community benefits sound like a Mafia shakedown. Although the company is not threatening to unfriend Menlo Park any time soon, Facebook Chief Financial Officer David Ebersman told the city council Tuesday night it may choose to eventually leave if the negotiations go nowhere.
- San Francisco DA surprised by Eliana Lopez's request for immunity (SF Examiner)
Following reports that Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi’s wife, Eliana Lopez, sought immunity from prosecution for her testimony in her husband’s domestic violence case, District Attorney George Gascón said Thursday he has no intention of charging her. “Quite frankly we’re really confused” as to why Lopez is requesting immunity, Gascón said.
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Jon Brooks is News Fix’s editor, host, chief blogger and Bay Area newshound, searching for what’s news in the region.
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