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KQED Radio News | Fri, November 20, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
California's new jobless numbers came out today, and the state has once again set a dismal record. At 12.5 percent unemployment, it's the highest rate since the Depression. But there is a glimmer of good news as well -- 25,000 new jobs were created in the state last month. We sort out the numbers.
KQED Radio News | Thu, November 19, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
University of California students will get a much larger tuition bill next year. The UC Board of Regents met today at UCLA and approved a $2,500 increase in undergraduate fees, bumping the annual cost of tuition to more than $10,000. The regents' vote came despite protests by hundreds of students and the takeover of a building on UCLA's campus. Rob Schmitz reports on the protests and the regents' vote.
KQED Radio News | Wed, November 18, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
California will face a budget gap of nearly $21 billion over the next year and a half. That's the word today from the state legislative analyst, who pinned the blame for the problem on the recession -- and on poor decisions this past year by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and state lawmakers.
KQED Radio News | Tue, November 17, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
Anthony Batts is Oakland's new police chief -- so new that his office walls are bare and his desk empty. But Batts won't have much time to decorate. He's taking over a city with lots of crime, and residents who often don't trust police to do their jobs right. Chief Batts faced similar issues in Long Beach, where he served on the force for 30 years, the last seven as chief. We talk with Chief Batts about what he learned in Long Beach that he can apply to his new home city.
KQED Radio News | Mon, November 16, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
The turkey doesn't rule the holiday table alone in Northern California. It shares the honors with local crab, and the season officially started Sunday on the Central Coast with crabs hitting markets Monday. The harvest is notoriously cyclical, and expectations for this year are not high. We check in with a long-time fisherman for a quick forecast on the crab season to come.
KQED Radio News | Fri, November 13, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
Scientists at NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View announced today they've found water on the moon -- a lot of water. The discovery was made by the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, known as LCROSS, which was intentionally crashed into a crater near the moon's south pole last month. LCROSS researchers say the lunar water could prove to be an important aid to future expeditions to the moon -- and that it could unlock many secrets about the history of the solar system.
KQED Radio News | Thu, November 12, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
The California Highway Patrol has stepped up its enforcement of speed limits on the Bay Bridge in response to a series of accidents on the section called the S-curve, including a fatal crash on Monday. The speed limit drops to 35mph for trucks and 40mph for cars -- but many drivers are asking whether the S-curve is safe at any speed.
KQED Radio News | Wed, November 11, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
At Courthouse Square in Redwood City today, six veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces became U.S. citizens. We spoke with former Irishman John Mullen, a Vietnam veteran.
KQED Radio News | Tue, November 10, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
California State University Chancellor Charles Reed announced today that the system will cut enrollment by up to 40,000 students by 2011. That's almost 10 percent of the current enrollment. Reed said the decision is the worst thing he could do. But he says California's continuing budget crisis leaves him no choice. We talk to two high school counselors -- one in Sacramento, the other in Oakland -- about the how the CSU cuts affect students there.
KQED Radio News | Mon, November 09, 2009 -- 5:30 PM
Governor Schwarzenegger was in Fresno County today to sign and praise an $11 billion water bond which will appear on the ballot next November. But the bond package has left a bad taste in the mouths of some lawmakers, both Republican and Democratic. Many think the bill was too full of special projects paid for by state residents, but benefitting only private or local interests.
