- Chance the Rapper, who was supposed to be kicking off a tour this week and appearing at the Chase Center Saturday, is postponing until January. He says he needs to spend more time with his wife and family after she just gave birth to their second baby. [Chronicle]
- After sending days of press releases to local media about crime on the Embarcadero, the waterfront residents fighting the homeless Navigation Center just lost again in court. A San Francisco Superior Court judge declined to grant a temporary restraining order to halt construction of the temporary structure. [Examiner]
- Kaiser Permanente is facing down a nurses' strike, and now Gov. Newsom has signed a new law requiring them to report individual revenue for each of its 35 hospitals. It's technically a nonprofit, despite being the state's biggest insurance provider. [SF Business Times]
- An Oakland teenager with muscular dystrophy, Sylvia Colt-Lacayo, tells NBC Bay Area about the challenges of attending Stanford as an incoming freshman. She couldn't pass up the free ride, but it's a challenge when she requires 24/7 care. [NBC Bay Area]
- A 37-year-old pedestrian suffered life-threatening injuries Friday night in a collision with a vehicle on Mission Street between First and Second Streets. [Hoodline]
- The FBI is now investigating the company that owned the boat involved with last week's fire off the Santa Barbara coast. [ABC 7]
- State Sen. Scott Wiener is putting forth legislation to prevent PG&E from unnecessarily shutting the power off to cities in order to mitigate wildfire risk. [Chronicle]
- Someone has been hacking into construction messaging signs in Berkeley to say things like "The Future Sucks," and "Uber Abuses Labor." [Berkeleyside]