• A permit application for a $100 million fix to the Millennium Tower's sinking and tilting problem was submitted months ago, but the approvals are likely to take over a year. Construction, which will involve ripping up the sidewalks around the building, isn't likely to start until 2020. [SF Business Times]
  • The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday rejected a proposed 63-unit residential building on Folsom Street in SoMa because it would cast a partial shadow on a public park. The building would have had 15 below-market-rate units in it. [Chronicle]
  • A 21-year-old San Leandro man was fatally shot while sitting in a car on an East Oakland Street just after midnight last night. Another man in the car was injured. [CBS SF]
  • One person died in Tomales Bay on Tuesday. The Marin County Sheriff's Office and Marin County Fire responded to a distress call in the bay near Tom's Point, and found one person lifeless in the water and four others injured. No other details are available. [SFGate]
  • SF's Chief Deputy Sheriff Paul Miyamoto announced his expected run for the Sheriff job. Sheriff Vicki Hennessy announced her retirement last month. [Bay City News]
  • The Santa Clara Valley Water District continues studying the Anderson Dam project near Morgan Hill, readying for a redesign that will make it more seismically safe. The dam currently has a one in four chance of failing during an earthquake, but construction won't begin until at least 2022. [NBC Bay Area]
  • A grand jury has issued subpeonas for PG&E's records on the Caribou-Palermo line, which is believed responsible for sparking the Camp Fire in November. [NBC Bay Area]
  • East Bay cycling advocates are concerned about what will happen with all the extra vehicle traffic on surface streets during the planned MacArthur Maze construction project. [Streetsblog]