- The 10 p.m. curfew went into effect in San Francisco last night, but did anyone really notice a difference? Most restaurants have been wrapping up service around 9 p.m. anyway, and it's not like SF's streets are usually all that happening in the winter months as nights get frigid. [Chronicle]
- A new Stanford study found immediate impacts on teens from exposure to wildfire smoke. The study looked at teenagers in the Fresno area who were exposed to this year's wildfire smoke and found inflammatory markers in their blood that could lead to risk of developing asthma or changes in immune systems. [ABC7]
- The pre-Thanksgiving COVID testing drive at the 24th Street BART station found an 8-percent positivity rate among Latinx residents. That is four times the city's current average positivity rate of 2 percent. [Mission Local]
- SF Supervisor Norman Yee is still pushing for his ban on smoking anything but medical cannabis in apartment buildings over three units — which would make SF the largest US city to enact such a ban. Supervisor Rafael Mandelman is still suggesting an amendment that would exempt all cannabis. [Chronicle]
- Two CHP officers were shot at by two suspects in Oakland overnight after they attempted to make a traffic stop on I-580, and neither were injured. [Mercury News]
- The California Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence of notorious SoCal serial killer Chester Dewayne Turner, who is on San Quentin's death row. [Associated Press]
- Travelers returning to Santa Clara County via San Jose Airport are being told to self-quarantine for 14 days. [KRON4]
- Starbucks is giving free coffee to frontline workers through the month of December. [NBC Bay Area]