- Google founder and recently stepped-down Alphabet co-CEO Larry Page has apparently been working quietly on a project to create a universal influenza vaccine. He's funded a for-profit company called Shoo the Flu which is already providing free flu shots to children and teachers in the Bay Area. [TechCrunch]
- The SFPD has just extended its goal time for responding to high-priority calls. For years the department clocked an average 5.5-minute response time, however that wasn't being measured from when a 911 call came in, so they're now making the goal 8 minutes. [Chronicle]
- Three people have been charged after the deaths of a Santa Rosa father and his 13-month-old son were linked to fentanyl-laced methamphetamine purchased in San Francisco. The father and son were both found dead of fentanyl intoxication in September. [Press-Democrat]
- The situation involving the man climbing a building and refusing to get down appears to have resolved peacefully around 4:30 p.m. [SFist]
- Two Peninsula travel agency operators who were selling discounted air tickets through an illegal air-mile-bartering scheme pleaded no contest to fraud charges. [CBS SF]
- One person is dead after a multiple-vehicle collision on southbound I-280 in Cupertino this morning. [Bay City News]
- BART was having systemwide 20-minute delays today, in part due to the rain. [CBS SF]
- A Lamborghini was found overturned and abandoned on a Southern California highway this morning with droplets of blood nearby on the road. [KRON4]