
Tom Vacar
After two years of freelancing while working full time in L.A., Tom became a full-time staff member of KTVU as Consumer Editor, in 1991.
Tom has covered every major disaster including earthquakes, wildfires, floods, levee breaks and droughts and has had a big hand in covering business, economics, consumer affairs, aerospace, space, the military, high technology, ports, logistics, airlines and general news.
Tom worked at KGO TV and KGO Radio from 1979-1985. He moved to KCBS-TV and KNX News Radio in 1985 before moving to KTTV in 1988.
Tom is originally from Salem, Ohio (a small industrial town of 11,000 people between Cleveland and Pittsburgh). He got his undergraduate degree in Political Science and Government at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland Ohio in 1972 as a designated Undergraduate Scholar. Tom got his Law Degree from Cleveland-Marshall College of Law in 1978.
In his 31 years at KTVU, he calculates that he has covered 8,000 stories. For 18 years, KTVU was home to Tom’s syndicated Great American Toy Test (nominated for a national Emmy). He has covered many major disasters including the Caldor Fire in Lake Tahoe, the L.A. quake in 1994, the Napa Quake, the Great Recession, the Pandemic and the long drought.
Tom loves the diversity of the region’s people, cultures and ethnicities. That, he says, is what truly makes the Bay Area’s natural beauty even more beautiful.
Tom shoots still pictures, mostly of wildlife while traveling with his wife Sharon, a former SF Opera soprano who also worked as a producer for 17 years. He has also traveled to England, Italy, Japan, Honduras, Bahrain, British Virgin Islands, The Grenadines, St. Martin. Puerto Rico, New Zealand, Society Islands, Panama, etc.
The latest from Tom Vacar
Bracing for Trump's latest tariff plan
The president is promising to roll out a massive tariff plan that he says will free the U.S. from reliance on foreign goods. Experts are worried about the potential economic consequences.
2 consecutive months of fewer jobs in California – an omen of recession? What experts say
Last week's California employment figures may be signaling a tectonic shift in the state's four-year gains in jobs.
How will auto tariffs affect car prices and dealerships?
There are now just four shopping days until Trump's expected 25% tariffs on imported vehicles and vehicle parts take hold on April 3.
California may create its own version of National Institutes of Heath and Science
State Senator Scott Wiener has introduced legislation that would create California's own version of the National Institutes of Health.
Shuttered horse track at Alameda County Fairgrounds hopes for revival
The racetrack at the Alameda County Fairgrounds has closed, marking the end of at least five generations of horse racing in Pleasanton.
Marin County supervisors approve e-bike ordinance, banning use for children under 16
Marin County will soon become one of the first counties in California to regulate the use of electric bikes for children under 16.
'Protected' immigrants on the DHS chopping block
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is moving to revoke special status legal protections for more than a million Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans. But, another half million more specially protected immigrants are on the chopping block as well.
Oakland Marathon draws a record 10,000 runners
The marathon came off without a hitch: a record ten thousand strong, a color wheel of humanity, from here, near, far and wide.
UC Berkeley rally: Could it cost the university hundreds of millions of dollars?
Students and faculty members rallied at UC Berkeley's Sproul Plaza on Wednesday, protesting what they call escalating and unlawful threats from the Trump administration.
Oakland Roots inaugural Coliseum game almost sold-out: 25K people
At Frank Ogawa Plaza, the City of Oakland hosted a meet the team event for the Oakland Roots Soccer Club which will play, at Oakland Coliseum for the home opener on March 22nd and years beyond.