San Francisco, CA
Community, teachers react to possible San Francisco school closures
Parents, teachers and students are reacting after the San Francisco Unified School District announced nearly a dozen schools are at risk of being closed next fall.
On Wednesday, dozens of parents and students at Harvey Milk Civil Rights Academy joined forces to protest the possible closure of their school after 30 years. SFUSD identified the elementary school as one that may be forced to close next year.
San Francisco resident Courtney Gordon said both her son and daughter both attend the school.
“I think I am just saddened, nervous and scared,” she said. “My kids really love it here. So, there is an overwhelming sense of sadness and worry.”
Students marched with their parents on Castro Street.
The district has identified for 11 schools for possible closure including eight elementary schools, one K-8 school and two high schools.
“We want to make sure maintain local control and make sure we have a balance budget and are not continuing to deficit spend,” said SFUSD Superintendent Matt Wayne. SFUSD said that closing the 11 schools could save the cash strapped district more than $20 million.
In a statement, San Francisco Mayor London Breed said that “What matters most for our city’s kids and families is for SFUSD to balance its budget so that it can maintain local control, a state takeover could be a disaster for our students and our families.”
The final list of recommended school closures is expected to be presented to the board of education in November and the board is slated to vote on the final closures on Dec. 10.
San Francisco, CA
Here’s what Kittle’s possible yearlong recovery from torn Achilles could look like: UCSF doctor
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — The San Francisco 49ers are advancing to the NFC divisional, but without tight end George Kittle who suffered a torn Achilles during Sunday’s game against the Eagles.
The injury ended Kittle’s season. The recovery will be painful and extensive, something that, according to medical experts, could take anywhere between nine to 12 months before Kittle gets back on the field.
On the field, fans knew something was wrong, and medical experts watched and feared it was his Achilles.
“When you see that they slow-mo on his leg and you see his calf muscle go up and he grabs his leg and see him hit the ground – a lot of the time players know what that is,” said Dr. Nirav Pandya, UCSF Orthopedic surgeon.
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Dr. Pandya specializes in sports medicine. He broke down what Kittle’s medical team is gearing him up for.
“It’s a very painful surgery early on – you are basically going on your ankle, you are sewing these tendons together, immobilizing them, and then you are working through this period of getting that mobility back,” said Dr. Pandya.
According to Nature Review’s research, 30% of sports injuries are Achilles tendon injuries. Dr. Pandya said recovery could be impacted by techniques.
“There are some newer techniques that players like Aaron Rogers who got back in six months, and what is happening in these surgeries is that you are using stronger devices, you are allowing rehab a lot earlier. So, a lot of it will be based on what the surgeon does that he goes, and sees and sometimes you can push that timeline a little bit earlier but for players like him who plays tight end, and sometimes wide receiver, it may take longer because he is stressing that repair a lot more than let’s say a quarterback,” said Dr. Pandya.
Immediately after surgery, Dr. Pandya said patients like Kittle will be placed into physical therapy.
“They will be doing a lot of manual work early on to facilitate the recovering of the tissues and then loading him in the gym,” said Julian Cisneros, physical therapist and owner of Peak Physio.
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Cisneros treats these types of injuries and said it will be almost a year of PT and will happen in phases, with the first one being light resistance.
“It would be light resistance, just trying to go through a full range of motion nice and controlled, slow and steady, making sure his Achilles tolerate that,” said Cisneros.
“Standing under his own body weight on a flat-level surface and raising up those heels nice and high. This would be more load, and once he completes that, we would start elevating him so he can really lengthen that Achilles again and we will give him weights to hold,” said Cisneros. “And then we can start incorporating more plyometric movements with balancing here, and then we will get him on the track or on the field and going through sprints, jumping progressions.”
One of the last phases is to “start incorporating more plyometric movements with balancing,” said Cisneros.
Dr. Pandya is projecting Kittle could be back during the early part of next season, anywhere between September and October.
The good news is that Dr. Pandya says it is very unlikely after full recovery Kittle will re-injure his Achilles.
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San Francisco, CA
Suspect arrested in Caltrain copper wire theft in South San Francisco
Authorities on the Peninsula have arrested a man on probation on multiple charges after he allegedly stole copper wire from Caltrain tracks over the weekend.
According to the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office, deputies and volunteer pilots flying the sheriff’s office airplane were monitoring the tracks early Sunday. Authorities said they found a suspect actively removing cable from the tracks in South San Francisco.
In what deputies described as a “coordinated effort” which included help from South San Francisco police, deputies found the suspect and took him into custody. The suspect has been identified as 24-year-old Diego Sanchez-Palomares.
“The arrest highlights the effective use of technology and resources, including the Sheriff’s Office airplane, to detect crimes in progress,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.
An investigation determined Sanchez-Palomares removed about 50 feet of cable from beneath the Caltrain tracks. Deputies also learned he was on probation.
Sanchez-Palomares was booked into the Maguire Correctional facility in Redwood City on multiple charges, including grand theft, receiving stolen property, conspiracy, tampering with a railroad and trespassing at a railroad facility.
Deputies said the cable was recovered by deputies. The estimated repair cost is about $5,000.
According to jail records, Sanchez-Palomares remains in custody as of Monday.
San Francisco, CA
George Kittle used bottle of tequila to deal with devastating Achilles injury
San Francisco 49ers tight end George Kittle finished a bottle of top-shelf tequila after tearing his Achilles in the 49ers’ eventual 23-19 wild-card victory in Philadelphia Sunday night, according to The Athletic.
Kittle, who popped his Achilles in the second quarter, requested it after the injury, and a San Francisco employee was seen delivering a bottle of Patron to the 49ers’ locker room.
The bottle reportedly was sent from the owners’ suite at Lincoln Financial Field.
49ers owner Jed York personally visited Kittle in the locker room and asked if he could get him anything — and that’s when the bottle of tequila was delivered a few minutes later, according to The San Francisco Standard.
Kittle was pushed out of bounds on a 6-yard reception and immediately grabbed his leg.
The All-Pro tight end was carted off the field and hobbled on one leg into the locker room, as seen in videos online.
He was ruled out for the rest of the game.
York and Kittle’s wife, Claire Kittle, both appeared visibly somber as they entered the locker room, according to The Athletic.
The Niners were the underdogs heading into the wild-card clash with the reigning Super Bowl champion Eagles.
San Francisco was already down two key players in defensive end Nick Bosa (knee) and linebacker Fred Warner (ankle).
The Eagles’ offense was a mess.
They committed four drops on third down, the most in a playoff game since 2006, per ESPN stats.
The 49ers visit the top-seeded Seattle Seahawks in an NFC divisional playoff game on Saturday.
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