Inman: The best and worst of 49ers training camp — beyond QB drama

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

Inman: The best and worst of 49ers training camp — beyond QB drama SANTA CLARA –Every snap by every quarterback was charted at 49ers training camp. Overkill? Not when reporting on a team that ran out of healthy quarterbacks, finished a win shy of the Super Bowl, and now has cast its 2021 first-round pick into limbo that is Garoppolo-esque.Quarterbacks shared the spotlight all through camp, leading into Friday’s preseason finale against the Los Angeles Chargers. And, to think, neither Brock Purdy nor his three (two?) backups had to elude a pass rush by Nick Bosa.If Trey Lance wants no further part of the 49ers’ quarterback carousel — and vice versa — it shouldn’t be a surprise, not after Purdy earned the starting role via last season’s heroics, and not after Sam Darnold beat out Lance for the No. 2 job.Another year, another quarterback in limbo, though Lance likely won’t reappear on a side field like Jimmy Garoppolo did last August. No NFL team can match the 49ers’ endless quarterback drama. This camp, at le...

Borenstein: Oakland election fiasco leaves uncertainty of who is in charge

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

Borenstein: Oakland election fiasco leaves uncertainty of who is in charge It seemed at the end of last week that Oakland’s latest election debacle, this one about the boundaries for an upcoming special school board election, had been resolved. It turns out that it hadn’t.The dispute finally reached a tenuous resolution Tuesday. The election to fill a key vacant seat representing District 5 on the evenly divided seven-member school board will go forward, as it should, using the correct pre-redistricting boundaries.But what has transpired since Friday raises troubling questions about why Oakland is refusing to oversee its municipal election. And it indicates that rather than own and correct her mistakes, Oakland City Clerk Asha Reed is trying to push responsibility onto others.This debacle came to light last week, after the candidate filing period ended for the Nov. 7 election, when I pointed out that Reed was using the wrong district boundaries.Reed was planning to use “new” boundaries that were created during the city’s 2021 redistricting. But, as a state...

Warriors’ G League coach Kerr reflects on his path, concerns over nepotism

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

Warriors’ G League coach Kerr reflects on his path, concerns over nepotism SAN FRANCISCO — Nicholas Kerr knows he didn’t get here all by himself.“I would never have gotten into the NBA without a family connection,” the recently promoted Santa Cruz Warriors head coach said during an hour-long conversation over lunch last week.That family connection, after all, is his nine-time NBA champion father Steve, who has won four titles as the Golden State Warriors’ head coach.The younger Kerr has always worried some about the outside perception that he may be a product of nepotism. It’s only gotten worse, he said, as he worked his way up from a video coordinator on his father’s staff to now. So much so that Kerr deleted the Twitter app off his phone before his recent promotion was announced earlier this month.“I don’t blame anyone for saying I have privilege, they’re right,” Kerr said as he leaned back in his chair at Gott’s Roadside. “… I had not even a crack in the door, I had the door wide op...

Simone Biles’ return to gymnastics could save the sport, but that’s not why she’s competing in San Jose this week

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

Simone Biles’ return to gymnastics could save the sport, but that’s not why she’s competing in San Jose this week SAN JOSE — First you’ll see the emotional support dog, Beacon, the fluffy golden retriever running around the SAP Center with his tongue out and heart open, ready to wag his tail and burrow his adorable snout into anybody who needs it.Then you’ll see the name behind every banner and piece of signage: USA Gymnastics, a name once synonymous with betrayal and trauma after the 2018 sexual abuse scandal that rocked the sport.Beacon will be in San Jose this week to help, his cheerful presence part of USA Gymnastics’ makeover from being an organization that let down an entire generation of little girls to one that is trying to once again become a safe place for elite competition.“It makes me a little emotional,” said Li Li Leung, who took over as president and CEO of USA Gymnastics in 2019. “In terms of the state of the sport, we have come a long way.”The headline of this week’s U.S. Gymnastics Championships at the SAP Center will undoubtedly be Simone Biles, the greatest...

Opinion: Alas, Donald Trump is still eligible to run for president

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

Opinion: Alas, Donald Trump is still eligible to run for president A law review article claiming that Donald Trump is automatically disqualified from holding elected office is getting attention in large part because it was written by two conservative, originalist law professors, William Baude and Michael Stokes Paulsen. Baude and Paulsen argue that Trump should be excluded from ballots for giving aid to an “insurrection or rebellion” in violation of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.There are two problems with the notion that Trump can and should be kept off the ballot by state election authorities.First, although Baude and Paulsen’s originalism is honest and conscientious, originalists outside of academia typically won’t apply their originalism if it leads to a result at odds with their conservatism. Second, there is precedent that contradicts their argument — precedent the scholars dismiss because they say it contradicts the original meaning of Section 3.To condense their main points, when the 14th Amendment was drafted after the Civil War, the ori...

Opinion: Child care is infrastructure and must work for everyone

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

Opinion: Child care is infrastructure and must work for everyone As the Bay Area struggles to get workers back to the office, too many business and political leaders continue to neglect a key piece of the puzzle – child care.Child care is infrastructure. If we don’t have child care, parents can’t work – especially women, and especially women of color. As importantly, child care supports human infrastructure – the crucial brain development in the early years, when children build skills and connections that help them thrive in school and beyond.However, a recent report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that most Californians can’t afford child care – and 15% of children up to age five live in families where someone had to quit a job to care for their child. Nationally, the report said our “lack of afford­able and acces­si­ble child care shortchanges chil­dren, costs the Amer­i­can econ­o­my bil­lions of dol­lars a year, stymies women pro­fes­sion­al­ly and is push­ing fam­i­lies to the break­ing point.”The lack of quality child care creates ...

2 children rescued in East Bay drownings

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

2 children rescued in East Bay drownings (KRON) -- Two children were rescued on Wednesday following two separate drowning incidents in the East Bay, according to officials. First DrowningIn Concord, a 20 month old girl was found unresponsive in a pool in the 3000 block of Chrisland Court. Officers performed CPR on the child until paramedics arrived, police said. Scientists solve deep-sea ‘Octopus Garden’ mystery off California coast She was taken to a local hospital and is currently receiving medical care.Second DrowningIn Pleasant Hill, the Contra Costa County Fire Protection District responded to a drowning incident involving a 3-year-old boy in the area of Golf Club Road. Just after 7 p.m., crews arrived and found the boy out of the pool. He was conscious and breathing, officials said. The updated status of the boy was not released.

City council takes control over Antioch police chief hiring

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

City council takes control over Antioch police chief hiring (KRON) -- The Antioch City Council has voted to take control of the hiring, firing and evaluation of the city's future police chiefs. The city manager will no longer be responsible for those tasks. Both positions of city manager and police chief are currently vacant in Antioch. This all comes as nine current and former police officers are facing federal charges after a raid last week by the FBI. Scientists solve deep-sea ‘Octopus Garden’ mystery off California coast The officers are accused of committing several crimes including coverups and multiple conspiracies. In an unsealed grand jury indictment, the officers are also accused of collecting “trophies” from crime scenes and displaying them on a mantle.The new order takes effect 90 days after the second reading of the new ordinance which presumably would happen at the next council meeting. This would give the city council time to hire an interim police chief.

Fewer Americans apply for jobless benefits as labor market keeps humming along

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

Fewer Americans apply for jobless benefits as labor market keeps humming along Applications for unemployment benefits fell again last week as America’s labor market continues to hum along despite attempts by the Federal Reserve to cool the economy and bring down inflation that’s still higher than optimal.The number of Americans applying for jobless benefits fell last week by 10,000, to 230,000 the week ending August 19, the Labor Department reported Thursday.The four-week moving average of claims, a less volatile measure, rose by 2,250 to 236,750.Jobless claim applications are seen as reflective of the number of layoffs in a given week.In an attempt to bring down four-decade high inflation, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates 11 times in the past year-and-a-half to the current 5.4%, a 22-year high.Part of the Fed’s reasoning was to cool the job market and bring down wages, which many economists believe suppresses price growth. Though inflation has come down significantly during that stretch, the job market has held up better than many anticip...

OSI: Fiscal Q4 Earnings Snapshot

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 20:30:25 GMT

OSI: Fiscal Q4 Earnings Snapshot HAWTHORNE, Calif. (AP) — HAWTHORNE, Calif. (AP) — OSI Systems Inc. (OSIS) on Thursday reported fiscal fourth-quarter profit of $42.4 million.On a per-share basis, the Hawthorne, California-based company said it had net income of $2.46. Earnings, adjusted for one-time gains and costs, were $2.66 per share.The results exceeded Wall Street expectations. The average estimate of three analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was for earnings of $2.54 per share.The airport security and full-body scanner manufacturer posted revenue of $411.9 million in the period, also exceeding Street forecasts. Three analysts surveyed by Zacks expected $384.5 million.For the year, the company reported profit of $91.8 million, or $5.34 per share. Revenue was reported as $1.28 billion._____This story was generated by Automated Insights (http://automatedinsights.com/ap) using data from Zacks Investment Research. Access a Zacks stock report on OSIS at https://www.zacks.com/ap/OSISSource