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Family responds to hit-and-run truck being found

Family responds to hit-and-run truck being found

UPDATE: Authorities locate vehicle in hit-and-run crash that left child fighting for life

UPDATE: Authorities locate vehicle in hit-and-run crash that left child fighting for life
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Search for hit and run driver, toddler in critical condition

Search for hit and run driver, toddler in critical condition Unmute TUCSON- Tucson Police are searching for the hit and run driver who left a toddler in critical condition. The incident happened Friday night just before 6:30p.m. Authorities say Casandra Hernandez was walking with her father, who was pushing 2-year-old Catalina Rodriguez in a stroller. The family was crossing West Irvington Road at South 9th Avenue when the stroller was hit by a silver or gray Ford 150 from the 2000 s. Casandra is six months pregnant. Doctors say she sustained minor injuries. The toddler is in critical condition. Her grandmother, Theresa Hernandez, says Catalina had surgery to remove a piece of skull from her brain.

Advocates working to get COVID-19 vaccine to Baltimore s hard-hit Latino community

With the pandemic hitting Baltimore’s Latino community harder than almost any other group, advocates and health care providers are pushing on many fronts to make sure these residents get the COVID-19 vaccine.

Baltimore to step up coronavirus outreach to Latino population

Print Tyler Waldman, WBAL NewsRadio 1090 and FM 101.5 Baltimore City officials on Friday announced an effort to increase coronavirus outreach to the city s Hispanic population. At a news conference outside the War Memorial Building, Mayor Brandon M. Scott said that Latinos comprise 15% of the city s coronavirus cases but just 5% of the city s population. The disparity reflects a national trend. Hispanic people who contract the disease are also far more likely to die of the virus. We know that COVID-19 continues to have an outsized impact on Black and brown communities here in Baltimore, Scott said. He cited the socioeconomic factors that put Hispanic people at greater risk, including a higher likelihood of working essential jobs, living in crowded spaces, having poorer access to care and, in some cases, exclusion from federal relief programs.

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