
On this edition of How to Bay Area we take closer look at masks, the funny face protectors that have sparked so much controversy since this pandemic began (and as we discover, long before then as well). Over the course of the program we speak with three expert guests on the best masking practices, as well as what the latest science has to say about mask effectiveness. We also take a closer look at Bay Area history to find out what the region's last bout with pandemic has to teach us today as we sort through one Covid controversy after another.
Guests:
Nicole Meldahl, executive director of the Western Neighborhoods Project history nonprofit in San Francisco
Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease physician at UC San Francisco
Dr. Krutika Kuppalli, a Bay Area infectious disease physician and also a biosecurity fellow with the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security
Host:Keith Menconi
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Aug 11, 2020
36 min

On this edition of How to Bay Area, we consider the monumental effort to prepare the Bay Area for reopening from the Covid-19 lockdown, and why it is that health officials still believe that work is not yet done.
Guest:Dr. Marm Kilpatrick, who studies infectious diseases at UC Santa Cruz’s Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
Host:Keith Menconi
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May 31, 2020
51 min

Even the most rigorous social distancers among us will most likely need to venture outside every now and then, so when we do, how can we avoid bringing the virus back inside with us? On this edition of How to Bay Area, we speak with Annelys Roque Gardner -- an infectious disease specialist with UC San Francisco -- who gives us the same advice she’s giving to her friends and family about how to best keep homes clean, safe, and virus free.
Host:Keith Menconi
Programming note: This edition features an expanded interview from a recent KCBS In Depth program
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Mar 31, 2020
24 min

When it comes to sheltering in place it seems like there shouldn’t be that much too it: stay there, don’t move. But life is more complicated than that, and it’s pretty clear that different Bay Area residents have decided to interpret these orders in different ways. So on this edition of How to Bay Area, we speak with social epidemiologist Carolyn Cannuscio to hear it from the expert, what are the safest social distancing practices during the coronavirus pandemic?
Host:Keith Menconi
Programming note: This edition features an expanded interview from a recent KCBS In Depth program
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Mar 31, 2020
34 min

Here in the Bay Area the number of people infected with coronavirus can still be counted on one hand, and all of them so far appear to have been isolated before they spread the illness more widely.
Spreading faster though: fear about the illness. And that fear is at times manifesting itself in ugly ways, including numerous reports of harassment targeted against Asian Americans. But if coronavirus concern isn't going anywhere, is there a more productive way to direct those worries?
On this edition of How to Bay Area we'll be discussing how Bay Area residents can better respond to coronavirus risks. In the first segment, we check in with two Bay Area health experts who have been working to prevent the spread of the illness to learn more about the current risks for the region. Then in the second half of the program we speak with two psychology experts and consider how to better react to our own overreactions.
Guests:
Dr. Sara Cody, the director of Santa Clara County’s Public Health Department and a county health officer
Dr. Charles Chiu, a Professor of Laboratory Medicine and infectious disease at the University of California, San Francisco
Roxane Cohen Silver, a professor of psychological science, public health and medicine at the University of California, Irvine who has studied the psychological toll of past health scares
Sherry Wang, professor of counseling psychology at Santa Clara University who wrote an opinion piece for the the San Francisco Chronicle with advice on how to combat discrimination fueled by the coronavirus scare
Host: KCBS Radio reporter Keith Menconi
See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Feb 21, 2020
43 min

As fire season gets ready to blaze into full force communities around California are getting ready too. In some places this means clearing out excess vegetation, elsewhere it means hardening homes to make them more resilient to fire -- but no matter the work, it's more and more clear that Californians are approaching it with a new sense of urgency prompted by the past two years of devastating fire seasons.
On this edition of How to Bay Area we speak to fire prevention experts to learn about the work we should all be doing to prepare our homes, our communities and ourselves for fire season. This will include practical home hardening tips as well as explainers on how to interpret the torrent of information that broadcasts out from disaster zones when fires begin.
Host: KCBS reporter Keith Menconi
Guests:
Todd Lando, executive coordinator at Fire Safe Marin
Michele Steinberg, the wildfire division director at the National Fire Protection Association
Lucas Spelman, Cal Fire Battalion Chief
Resources:
Firewise, a national program from the National Fire Protection Association, which recognizes communities that meet certain fire safety standards and provides those communities with support. Learn how to become a Firewise site here. And learn how to prepare your home for wildfire here.
Cal Fire's Ready Fore Wildfire website with more helpful information on how to prevent the spread of wildfires.
Production Note:
This edition of How to Bay Area first aired on KCBS as an episode of In Depth. This version of the program has been expanded to include more tips on fire prevention than we could fit in the broadcast.
See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Aug 2, 2019
38 min

There was a time when the Bay Area was home to highly visible queer communities full of LGBTQ-friendly businesses. And while you do still have plenty of rainbow flags in the Castro, if you look past the obvious symbols, the character of these neighborhoods has changed dramatically with many of those businesses shutting down and many long-time residents pushed out by the high cost of living.
So on this edition of How to Bay Area we speak with the people at ground zero of this change to find out what they feel like they’re losing and what they are fighting to preserve.
Through the course of this episode we learn how this preservation work is being carried out, how community organizers are adapting their work to the internet age and also offer practical advice on how to find queer-friendly housing in the Bay Area.
Hosts:
KCBS Radio reporter Keith Menconi and KCBS Radio production assistant Mary Hughes
Guests:
Terra Haywood, co-owner and business operations manager for The Stud
Jolene Linsangan, owner of Jolene’s Bar
Terry Beswick, executive director of the GLBT Historical Society
Brian Basinger, executive director of the Q Foundation
Juanita MORE!, creator of Juanita's List (and much more!)
Resources:
Here are some of the queer-friendly housing resources mentioned in this episode.
Juanita's List, a Facebook group connecting members of the LGBTQ community to queer-friendly housing in the Bay Area
Gay Area Queer Housing S.F. Bay Area, another Facebook group carrying out similar work
Q Foundation, a San Francisco-based nonprofit providing support and advocacy for those facing homelessness with a special focus on members of the LGBTQ community and those living with HIV/AIDS; among its services, the group provides assistance to those seeking public housing support in San Francisco.
Dahlia, San Francisco's public housing portal
The Bill Wilson Center, a Santa Clara-based service organization for at-risk or homeless youth and families. Their LGBTQ-specific housing programs include BWC Connections, LGBTQ Host Homes and their LGBTQ Transitional Living Program.
LifeMoves, a housing and service organization operating on the Peninsula and within Silicon Valley; the group just opened a new homeless shelter for LGBTQ adults in downtown San Jose.
Special thanks to Housing Trust Silicon Valley for helping to connect us with some of the organization's mentioned in this episode.
See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Jun 30, 2019
51 min

There are many sources of Bay Area angst -- the high cost of housing, the high cost of living, homelessness, the threat of wildfires -- but traffic stands out as an especially sore spot. There’s just something about it that grinds on our nerves and makes all our other headaches even more difficult to deal with. And like those other challenges the traffic problem isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.
On this edition of How to Bay Area, we speak to traffic experts of several stripes to find out how the traffic situation got so bad and what could be done to make it better.
We also provide practical advice on how you can use KCBS and other resources to shorten your drive time. And to close out the program we speak to a San Francisco-based stress expert to learn how we can all better cope with the mental strain that seems to be an all too common side effect of the Bay Area's punishing commutes.
Hosts: KCBS Radio Reporters Keith Menconi and Jenna Lane.
Guests:
KCBS Radio Traffic Reporters George Rask, John Atkinson, Kim Wonderley, Bob Pryor
John Goodwin, transportation expert and a public information officer for the Metropolitan Transportation Commission
Jason Henderson, professor of geography at San Francisco State University studying the politics of urban transportation
Jonathan Horowitz, clinical psychologist and director of the Stress and Anxiety Center in San Francisco
Show Notes:
You can find weekly traffic tips by checking out Bob Pryor's traffic blog on the KCBS Radio website. He'll clue you in to major events -- like parades, sports games, or large-scale construction -- that will be gumming up the ride so you'll know where not to drive during your commute and weekend excursions.
Portions of this How to Bay Area podcast were broadcast on KCBS Radio's weekly interview program, In Depth.
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Apr 9, 2019
1 hr 5 min

The Bay Area may be the land of online dating, but many active daters in the region say the quest for love has only gotten harder in recent years.
Could it be the heavy gender imbalance in Silicon Valley? Our tech-addicted lifestyle? The pressures of rising living costs and constant competition? All of the above?
In this edition of How to Bay Area we're going to try to get to the bottom of all this dating dissatisfaction: Our panel of local dating experts are going to field your top dating gripes to bring you practical solutions that will make the local dating game a little less dismal.
Hosts: KCBS Radio Reporters Keith Menconi and Megan Goldsby
Guests:
David Rodwin, who is currently performing in "F*ck Tinder: a love story" in San Francisco; a one-man show telling the story of Rodwin's path to love that wound through dates with 120 people in two years
Mikka Minx, event producer and writer who blogs about dating
Dawoon Kang, co-founder and Co-CEO of Coffee Meets Bagel
Sasha Silberberg, a dating coach who runs the matchmaking service OkSasha
See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Feb 19, 2019
52 min

Up and coming musicians in many cities would be hard pressed to find a stage on which to perform, but here in the Bay Area a thriving open mic circuit offers up an array of welcoming venues that give newbies a chance to sharpen their performance chops in front of supportive crowds.
For all those out there that have always had a nagging suspicion that they just might be the next Bob Dylan, or for anyone who just wants to understand what's going on in the local music scene, this is the episode for you.
What are the best places to perform? How can newbies make sure they put their best foot forward? Where does one find those legions of adoring fans? And most importantly, who is making this scene happen and how can we support them?
Hear about all that and more in this edition of How to Bay Area, KCBS Radio's new podcast explaining how to get stuff done in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Hosts: KCBS Radio Reporters Keith Menconi and Melissa Culross
Guests:
Megan Slankard, San Francisco-based musician
KC Turner of KC Turner Presents
Brandi Cheek, lead singer for San Francisco-based rock band Swamp Child
Paula West, jazz and cabaret singer
See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Feb 19, 2019
43 min
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