The Bay - podcast cover

The Bay

Bay Area-raised host Ericka Cruz Guevarra talks with local journalists about what’s happening in the greatest region in the country. It’s the context and analysis you need to make sense of the news, with help from the people who know it best. New episodes drop Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings.
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Episodes

‘No Section 8’

Most landlords in San Jose don't take Section 8 housing vouchers. And housing advocates see the vouchers as a proxy for race, or keeping out people of color. As a possible remedy, the San Jose city council wants to tweak the law to encourage more landlords to take the vouchers. The proposal has some holes, though. Guest: Emily DeRuy, Mercury News reporter covering San Jose Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Dec 12, 201810 min

Waiting in Pinole: A Mother’s and Son’s Migrant Caravan Journey to the Bay Area

Veronica Aguilar crossed the U.S.-Mexico border seeking asylum from El Salvador earlier this year. She's staying with a host family in Pinole while she waits for an immigration court hearing. Today, one family's story of immigration. Guest: Farida Jhabvala Romero, KQED immigration and equity reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Dec 10, 201820 min

Homes on Top of Buses

Here’s a new one: stacking homes on top of a city bus yard. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency wants to build housing on top of its Potrero bus yard right across the street from KQED studios. Their idea is that the housing would help pay for upgrades to the facility. It's kind of a wild idea. Guest: Joe Fitzgerald Rodriguez, transportation reporter and columnist for the San Francisco Examiner Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Dec 07, 201811 min

SB 827 Revived: A Failed Housing Bill Gets a Second Try

We need homes near transit. But the first time state Sen. Scott Wiener introduced a bill, SB 827, that would have required cities to approve dense housing near transit corridors, it died a quick death. This week he announced a new version. The bill, SB 50, includes changes that are supposed to help poorer neighborhoods stay more in tact and force housing into places with more wealth. Guest: Dan Brekke, KQED Transportation Editor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Dec 05, 201813 min

A $220 Million Google ‘Village’ in the Bay Area’s Largest City

This isn't supposed to be your traditional tech campus. Google says it wants to build a village inside San Jose that will be open to the public, different from how most tech campuses operate. It's expected to have public parks, restaurants and other amenities. The plan, if approved, could more than double the population of San Jose’s downtown. The city council takes a big step Tuesday with a vote to sell off 21 acres for $220 million. Guest: Tonya Mosley, KQED Silicon Valley Senior Editor Learn ...

Dec 03, 201812 min

Homelessness in San Francisco: ‘It Doesn’t Take Miracles … It Takes Money’

San Francisco Mayor London Breed and Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff announced a $6 million donation he is making to subsidize five years of rent for formerly homeless residents who will move into a renovated apartment building in the Tenderloin next year. Benioff used the occasion to push other wealthy Bay residents to pitch in. Guest: Kevin Fagan, reporter at the San Francisco Chronicle Kevin has done a lot of reporting on homelessness in San Francisco. You can read his coverage as part of the SF ...

Nov 30, 201812 min

Homeless Oaklanders Take Over City-Owned Lot

The city of Oakland wasn't pleased when a group of homeless people moved to a vacant lot in East Oakland in October. After the city posted a notice to vacate, the homeless residents went to court to stop the eviction. Now a judge must decide if the group of mostly women can stay on city land. Guest: Sandhya Dirks, KQED reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 28, 201813 min

‘You Got To Give Them Hope,’ Harvey Milk’s Lasting Words, 40 Years Later

Harvey Milk and the city of San Francisco gives many people the "permission" they need to fight for gay rights in other places. The Castro became a symbol of this permission and Milk's legacy has since spread across the world. Today, a day before the 40th anniversary of his death, we look at Harvey Milk’s message of hope through the eyes of one man who watched, admired and acted on that message. Guest: Greg Carey, Chief of Patrol for Castro Community on Patrol Learn more about your ad choices. V...

Nov 26, 201813 min

Waiting in the Rain: What Paradise Fire Victims Need In Addition to Shelter

When rain begins to fall on Butte County this week, some will be sleeping on the streets. The Camp Fire displaced tens of thousands of people, many of whom are struggling to do basic things: find shelter, see a doctor, pay the bills. Today, we'll show you how picking up the pieces is about more than finding a new home. Guests: Raquel Maria Dillon and Peter Arcuni, KQED reporters Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 21, 201817 min

What Silicon Valley Could Lose If Trump Revokes H-1B Spousal Work Visas

A small number of people -- spouses of H1B visa holders -- were given the right to work under a special type of visa created under President Obama in 2015. Now President Trump wants to eliminate those spousal visas. How doing so threatens Silicon Valley's competitive edge, Bay Area diversity, and immigrant families. Guest: Rachael Myrow, KQED Silicon Valley reporter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 19, 201814 min

Trauma Before and After the Camp Fire

Paradise was a city where a lot of people already carried more than their share of trauma from childhood. Now, as many work to piece their lives back together they have the added weight of trauma from the Camp Fire. Our reporter was in Paradise this past summer and tells us about one woman who is now struggling with both kinds of trauma. Guest: Laura Klivans, KQED health reporter Tap here to see pictures of Sabrina and her daughter Aroara. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adc...

Nov 16, 201818 min

Paradise Prepared for Fire — But It Wasn’t Enough

After two fires burned right up to the edge of town in 2008, the town of Paradise made a plan. It divided itself into evacuation zones. It went so far as to hold a mock evacuation during morning rush hour. People knew what they were supposed to do if fire came back. And yet last week's Camp Fire was moving so fast that all the residents fled at once, exit routes clogged, and more people died than in any other fire in state history. Visit KQED.org or SacBee.com to see more wildfire reporting. Gue...

Nov 14, 201813 min

For Here or To Go? The Rise of Food Delivery Apps in SF

Caviar, Postmates, Uber Eats…the Bay Area’s tech family gave us food delivery apps. And there are plenty of gig workers willing to drive us this food. These delivery apps allow us to hole up in our office, work harder, faster and avoid human interaction. At least, that’s what one tech reporter fears. He says it’s not just consumers who are being conditioned by these apps. It’s the restaurants too. Guest: Sam Harnett, KQED Silicon Valley reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone....

Nov 12, 201813 min

Bay Curious: How Do You Define the “Bay Area?”

People from the Bay Area or those who live here are a proud bunch. But how do you define this magical place? Do you use geography to draw the boundaries? Maybe it’s about sports teams and their fan bases or where BART goes? The hosts of the Bay Curious podcast at KQED explore the many ways we define the Bay Area. Guest: Jessica Placzek, KQED Bay Curious reporter-producer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 09, 201811 min

Bay Voters Bring Outrage and Hope to Midterms

Resistance. That's been the call of many, including those in the Bay Area who have led the country in resisting President Trump’s attacks on marginalized people and the state’s liberal ideals. We'll hear from those who turned up at the polls, and others who didn't. Guest: Monica Samayoa and Guy Marzorati, KQED reporters See all election results from KQED News. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 07, 201814 min

Voters Love School Bonds. But Should They?

School bond measures almost always pass. More money for schools – and by extension, kids – seems like an obvious yes. But less attention is given to how that bond money gets spent and who is on the receiving end. One powerful lobbying group, nicknamed CASH, helps school districts get bonds passed. But critics say the arrangement is short-changing schools – and taxpayers. Guest: Brian Krans, Bay Area-based freelance investigative reporter Read Brian's full story: Cashing in on Education in the Ea...

Nov 05, 201815 min

Google Employees Say ‘Time’s Up’ for the Patriarchy

About 1,000 Google employees walked out of work Thursday and staged a rally on the company's main Mountain View campus. The impetus was a New York Times report published last week about dozens of sexual misconduct allegations and some very large exit packages for accused executives. At the rally, our reporter captured some of what was shared before being asked to leave. Guest: Sam Harnett, KQED Silicon Valley reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nov 02, 201811 min

Silicon Valley Is Trying To Prevent Hate Speech. Is It Working?

Gab.ai is like Twitter without any restrictions. Gab is also where a man named Robert Bowers posted comments before allegedly shooting and killing 11 people in a Pittsburgh synagogue. Today: what Silicon Valley is doing to prevent hate speech online. Guest: Rachael Myrow, KQED reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 31, 201815 min

How Much Do You Get Paid? *Crickets*

Are you embarrassed to share your salary? Yeah, a lot of us are. Software engineer Jackie Luo makes the case that we can’t improve the pay gap (for women or people of color) in industries like tech without being more transparent. So, she asked men in tech to share their salaries via Twitter. And thousands did. Guest: Jackie Luo, software engineer at Square Read Jackie's full story "I Know the Salaries of Thousands of Tech Employees" on Medium. And you can read her Tweet thread asking men to shar...

Oct 29, 201812 min

A Building Burns. Oakland Suspects Arson.

A big construction site of new housing went up in flames early Tuesday morning, and people immediately suspected arson. Some Oaklanders say it's motivated by anger against gentrification. The five-alarm fire in West Oakland isn't the first time new construction has burned lately. Guest: Raquel Maria Dillon, KQED News reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 26, 201811 min

Priest Abuse and an Exorcism: One Santa Clara Woman’s Story

We don't often hear about priests abusing their adult parishioners. As advocates renew calls for accountability for priests accused of abusing children, we hear the story of a woman in Santa Clara who came to her priest for help overcoming sex addiction. She says he abused her and sent her to an exorcist. Guest: Matthias Gafni, Bay Area News Group investigative reporter Read the full story here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 24, 201812 min

Should S.F.’s Big Businesses Be Taxed to Pay for Homelessness?

A Twitter fight between two of San Francisco's biggest, and wealthiest, tech leaders says a lot about the city's problem with homelessness. Proposition C calls for taxing the city's most profitable companies to double the $300 million already spent on homelessness. You might be surprised by who supports and opposes it. Guest: Guy Marzorati, KQED politics and government reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 22, 201812 min

A Raised Arm and a Clenched Fist at the 1968 Olympics

John Carlos and Tommie Smith both won medals in the same track event at the 1968 Olympic games in Mexico City. On the medal stand, both raised clenched fists in a salute to Black power. The backlash that followed cost them the rest of their running careers and years of difficulty outside of sports. Fifty years later, the prevailing attitude toward their protest has changed, and the movement lives on with other athlete activists like Colin Kaepernick. Guest: Rachael Myrow, KQED Silicon Valley art...

Oct 19, 201813 min

Who Has Power and Who Doesn’t: Changes at PG&E

Power is important. Both the kind that lets us switch on the lights and the kind that gives people the ability to make decisions for us. Tens of thousands of Northern California residents lost power over the weekend after PG&E cut electricity for safety reasons. That comes one year after fires tore through the Northern California and PG&E was blamed -- in part for NOT cutting power. We discuss what's changed in the last year. Guest: Marisa Lagos, KQED politics and government reporter Lea...

Oct 17, 201810 min

Fighting Homelessness in Oakland, One Vacant Lot at a Time

Oakland sure has a lot of vacant properties, despite being in the middle of a housing crisis. In November, voters will decide whether the city should tax owners of those properties to help raise millions of dollars for homeless services. But how Measure W defines what 'vacant' means isn’t exactly clear. Guest: Farida Jhabvala Romero, KQED race and equity reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 15, 201813 min

Should We Rebuild Where Fire Could Happen Again?

New homes are popping up in Santa Rosa one year after the Northern California fires. Some are rebuilding in the exact same spots. Others are worried about losing everything again when the next fire comes, including firefighters who live there. They know more than anyone about these risks, so what would a firefighter who lost their home do? Guest: Lauren Sommer, KQED science reporter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 12, 201814 min

Struggling to Return Home After the Fire

Kayla Swaim's home was destroyed a year ago in the Tubbs Fire. She lost everything, including her sense of safety. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 10, 201812 min

Proposition 5: Extending Tax Breaks for Homeowners

Do you ever wish you had a coupon that would give you a discount on what you pay for your house? Proposition 13 is kind of like that. Now Proposition 5 would give homeowners over the age of 55, and a few others, the ability to take their lower property tax rates with them to a new house. It's effectively an extension of Proposition 13. But who pays for that discount? Californians will vote on the measure this November. We at The Bay along with KQED’s Bay Curious podcast explain Proposition 5. Gu...

Oct 08, 201813 min

Live Event: The Bay Interviews Pulitzer-Winning Fire Reporters

Most people run from a fire. Some journalists go toward it. Two reporters at the Santa Rosa Press Democrat, winner of a 2018 Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the North Bay fires, did just that. The Bay host Devin Katayama interviewed those reporters at the live show The Fire Tapes, a joint event with Snap Judgment. Guest: Julie Johnson and Martin Espinoza, Santa Rosa Press Democrat reporters and Pulitzer Prize winners Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Oct 05, 201818 min

One Crack Too Many for SF’s Salesforce Transit Center

First there was one crack. Then two. Now San Francisco's new $2.2 billion Salesforce Transit Center could be shut down for weeks. In an earlier episode, we covered the opening of the transit center (called by some the Grand Central Station of the West). Today, an update on the damage then the original episode about what people hope the transit hub can be. Guests: Chloe Veltman, KQED News reporter, and Dan Brekke, KQED transportation editor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adc...

Oct 03, 201815 min
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