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The Moral and Economic Good Sense of Salvaging Build Back Better — Voice of San Diego

In San Diego County, we know all too well the consequences of an under-funded child care system. Families pay upwards of $20,000 annually for infant care.

The Moral and Economic Good Sense of Salvaging Build Back Better — Voice of San Diego

In San Diego County, we know all too well the consequences of an under-funded child care system. Families pay upwards of $20,000 annually for infant care.

Readers from across nation remember, reflect on Sept 11, 2001, terrorist attacks

Readers from across nation remember, reflect on Sept 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
fremonttribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fremonttribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

L A community clinic in hard-hit Latino neighborhood only gets 100 vaccines for its 12,000 patients

L.A. community clinic in hard-hit Latino neighborhood only gets 100 vaccines for its 12,000 patients Cindy Carcamo © Provided by The LA Times Ana Canales, 78, receives the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine Saturday from medical assistant Licelda Perez at Boyle Heights Clínica Romero, which hosted its first vaccination drive for patients 75 and older. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) Miguel Angel Murcia said he would have been content to get his COVID-19 vaccine at Dodger Stadium’s mass drive-through vaccination site. But the 75-year-old doesn’t drive. He doesn’t have family nearby. And he doesn’t have internet access. So instead Murcia relied on persistence repeatedly phoning the staff at Clínica Monseñor Romero in Boyle Heights where he’s been a patient for more than a decade.

Clinic in Latino area gets 100 vaccines for 12,000 patients

Print Miguel Angel Murcia said he would have been content to get his COVID-19 vaccine at Dodger Stadium’s mass drive-through vaccination site. But the 75-year-old doesn’t drive. He doesn’t have family nearby. And he doesn’t have internet access. So instead Murcia relied on persistence repeatedly phoning the staff at Clínica Monseñor Romero in Boyle Heights where he’s been a patient for more than a decade. “When will you have the vaccine available?” he asked. Advertisement Advertisement On Saturday, Murcia’s diligence paid off. He became the third person to become inoculated at the clinic’s first vaccination drive. The community clinic provides health services in Boyle Heights and Pico-Union, serving communities that are at the epicenter of the pandemic predominantly Spanish-speaking Latino and Indigenous people from Mexico and Central America.

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