San Francisco, CA
Former San Francisco Giants Pitcher Traded to Cincinnati Reds

The San Francisco Giants have been quiet during the trade deadline, but that hasn’t stopped many teams around baseball from getting better. The Milwaukee Brewers are the latest team to do so, trading for right-handed pitcher Frankie Montas.
In return, the Cincinnati Reds will get Joey Wiemer and former Giants pitcher Jakob Junis, according to Bob Nightengale of USA Today.
Junis pitched for San Francisco in the 2022 and 2023 seasons, appearing as a starter in 17 of his 23 appearances in 2022. In his second year, he was used mostly out of the bullpen, starting in just four of the 40 games he saw action on the mound.
He pitched well in 2023, posting a 3.87 ERA and striking out 96 in 86.0 innings pitched. In the 26.0 innings he’s thrown this season, Junis has been even better, posting a 2.42 ERA.
The right-hander will now go to the Reds, where he could be a big piece in their bullpen.
One thing the Giants need to be keeping in mind is the return for some of these players. Outside of this trade, multiple players have been dealt for packages that seem outrageous. The Houston Astros traded for Yusei Kikuchi, moving Jake Bloss, Joey Loperfido, and Will Wagner in the deal.
If San Francisco can get that type of package back for some of their top trade assets, they need to be on the phone. While they have a chance to still make the postseason, teams are overpaying like never before for upgrades.
Why not take advantage of that right now?

San Francisco, CA
Scientists investigate as whale deaths surge in San Francisco Bay

A total of 15 whales, including 14 gray whales and one minke whale, have died so far in 2025, according to a joint press release from California Academy of Sciences and the Marine Mammal Center.
“The reason or potential reasons behind the massive spike in sightings this year are still being investigated by researchers,” the release said.
The latest death, a gray whale found in the San Francisco Bay Area on Wednesday, marked the sixth whale death in as many days.
Newsweek reached out via email to the California Academy of Sciences and the Marine Mammal Center on Saturday during non-working hours for more information.
Why It Matters
There has been “unusually high number of sightings” of whales in the region this year but there has also been an increase in deaths. The whale population has seen a 45 percent decrease since the 2019- 2023 Unusual Mortality Event (UME), according to the release.
A record-low number of newborn whales was also seen this year, causing concern among researchers for the long-term outlook for the North Pacific gray whales, following the second UME in a 20-year period.
“These whales basically left the Arctic with a half tank,” Giancarlo Rulli, a spokesperson for the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, recently told Phys.org about the other deceased whales discovered in the region.
“The food sources that they were normally accustomed to eating that were highly nutritious for this massive, 10,000–12,000-mile journey, had moved farther away due to climate change, and as a result, these whales were left to forage on food matter that was much less nutritious.”
What To Know
The whale on Wednesday was found near the Alamere Falls in Point Reyes National Seashore, the joint release said, which is about 30 miles northwest of San Francisco.
While some of the deceased mammals have been necropsied, others have either been too far decomposed or stranded in areas that are inaccessible, making it difficult to pin these deaths on one similar cause.
While it is not unusual to see whales in the region as they migrate, the number of deaths is the highest it has been, including in 2019 when 14 whales were found deceased in the UME, according to the release.
The number of deaths currently matches the record of 15 for all of 2021, the release said. At least three of these deaths have been attributed to suspected vessel strikes, but others remain undetermined.
The whales that have been spotted alive have been observed to be either regular size or emaciated.
There are a total of 33 confirmed gray whale sightings in the San Francisco Bay this year, compared to only six seen last year, with about a third of those whales remaining in the bay for about 20 days.
Whale carcasses have been found as far north as Alamere Falls, as far west as Farallon Islands and as inland as Berkeley.
Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
What People Are Saying
The California Academy of Sciences and partners at The Marine Mammal Center said in the press release: “With San Francisco Bay serving as a shared space for commerce and increased gray whale activity, experts at the Academy and the Center note it’s vital that all boaters—from large commercial vessels to sailboats—be ‘whale aware’ and continue to slow down. Gray whales often have a very low profile in the water that can make them difficult to sight, unlike other coastal whales like humpback whales.”
What Happens Next
The results of the necropsy on the whale found on Wednesday are still pending, complicated by a number of factors due to “inaccessible locations that hinder full post-mortem investigations, as well as poor tissue quality from advanced decomposition, and the lack of available locations to tow for further investigation.”
Meanwhile, the whales that are alive are expected to be in “the bay for another one to two weeks before continuing their annual northern migration to arctic feeding grounds,” according to the release.
If people do see whales, they can report them through an app called Whale Alert or the Marine Mammal Center website. Sightings of dead whales should be reported to the Academy’s department of Ornithology and Mammalogy.
San Francisco, CA
OUSD names former union president as interim superintendent

The Oakland Unified School District Board of Education has picked veteran educator Dr. Denise Saddler to serve as interim superintendent for the 2025/2026 school year.
In their announcement the district said Dr. Saddler was previously the principal at Chabot Elementary School and the Network Executive Officer for the district.
She also spent six years as the president of the Oakland Education Association the union representing thousands of educators in the city.
In addition to her time in Oakland she served as the Assistant Superintendent of Education Services for the Berryessa Union School District in San Jose and has spent the last four years as a lecturer for the U.C. Berkeley Doctoral Program.
The school board is still finalizing the terms of Dr. Saddler’s contract the details of the agreement will have to be finalized at an upcoming board meeting. Dr. Saddler is expected to start on July 1.
She is taking over for Kyla Johnson-Trammell who had her contract terminated earlier this year. She had served as superintendent since 2017 and is reportedly among the longest-serving Oakland Unified superintendents in district history. Her termination came after she had her contract extended by three years back in August.
When Dr. Saddler takes over as interim superintendent she will be inheriting an estimated $95.7 million deficit. Earlier this year board members voted to freeze $29 million something board director Mike Hutchinson said would decimate 50% to 80% of their after-school programs.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco dog owners urged to stay alert amid coyote pupping season

It’s coyote pupping season, and this is the time of year people may encounter more confrontations with them.
Those at Golden Gate Park recently noticed park rangers educating dog owners about an incident over the past weekend.
Howling coyotes at Golden Gate Park near Lindley Meadows, a popular spot where dog owners walk and play with their pups. Brandon Hartstein and his dog Oden encountered a pack of coyotes in the area about a year ago.
“We were walking on a trail that’s not too popular and all of a sudden, three coyotes just appeared and started kind of stalking us,” said Hartstein.
Similar stories of coyote encounters are surfacing this year. Lauren Roche watched her dog get chased by coyotes.
“She was running along the grassy area and I was running in the path that doesn’t have cars, and there were two coyotes that started chasing after her,” said Roche.
“And I look over, wow, they’re going so fast, and it was two coyotes chasing after her. Luckily, she was fast enough to outrun them, and I called her back over and they ended up going away.”
Signs like these are posted in Golden Gate Park to warn people about these potential run-ins with coyotes. Experts say coyotes are just protective during pupping season and are not displaying unprovoked aggression. They say the best thing to do is to shorten the leash and walk in the other direction. Something Hartstein tried to do.
“We kept on walking away,” said Hartstein. “I was making loud sounds trying to scare them off, and eventually we started running. Luckily, a biker came by and I flagged him down and he helped to chase them off.”
Some dog owners have noticed coyotes getting bolder and becoming used to humans in their territory. They say with these canines all over the Bay Area, the key is to limit conflicts and coexist with each other.
“I just kind of try to adjust my way of living because it’s part of where they live,” said Roche. “I wouldn’t have to adjust for someone coming into my home.”
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