• According to CHP, a dark-colored SUV went off Highway 101 near the Burlingame Ford Dealership in a fatal early-morning car crash. Details are still vague — "it happened on southbound 101 near the Broadway off-ramp" — but Rollins Road from Cadillac Way to Toyon Drive is now reopened. [KRON4]
  • A condominium complex gas leak in San Jose went undetected for likely a long, long time. Two corroded underground gas pipes that caused separate major leaks were discovered in a courtyard at San Jose's Creekside Condominium complex, sparking concerns over safety: “When [a PG&E crew] started digging up the dirt, it all smelled like gas,” said homeowner John Arce Sr., who noted that this is probably not an isolated incident. [NBC Bay Area]
  • Chanting “housing is a human right,” around 60 protesters marched into The Keystone in SoMa yesterday evening to put a spotlight on the establishment’s property owner. The ritzy tavern is owned by Mosser Capital — which holds various buildings throughout the Bay Area, some the activists live in — and those who attended the display believe the firm could force them out of their residences as tenant prices continue to climb. [KPIX]
  • Business in Chinatown is coming to a standstill amidst growing concerns over the novel coronavirus. Eater SF this past week reported foot traffic in the neighborhood is down some 50 percent; the owner of Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory tells KRON4 his production is down "70- to 80-percent." [Eater SF/KRON4]
  • A San Jose driver was left unconscious after a parking dispute. [Mercury News]
  • Two Oakland hospitals — Kaiser Permanente Oakland Medical Center and Alta Bates Summit Medical Center — were ranked among the best hospitals in the country by health care information company Healthgrades. [Patch]
  • Almost 400 Americans aboard the quarantined ship Princess Diamond cruise ship will fly back home tomorrow. [ABC7]
  • There's The East Cut... and, now, apparently one apartment developer wants to make Van Mission a thing. [Curbed SF]
  • "I’m Leaving Now," a film that follows an undocumented Mexican immigrant through his struggles returning home to the family he hasn’t seen in almost two decades, screens at the Roxie Theater tonight at 5 p.m.. [Mission Local]