liquor licenses of more than a hundred corner storee in baltim. baltimorr. the majority are locaaed in preddminatly poor nieghborhoods. ressarchers ffund. theeestablishments contribute to higher levels of violent crime. the health departmenn decided to take action aftee hearingg oncerns from communityygroupp looking for ways to improve their neighborhoods. 10:24:111througg the zoning code these businesses can choose to continue operating but not sell alcohol they can choose to move to a different looation where they can sell alcohol or if they want to make other decisions it is up to them 10:24:25 worth of reviews and public s hearings efore any changes areemade. our. question of the day./. do. you agree. with the baltimore city? -3 go to fox- balttmore dot com ./ tell us what you think./. sound off thru facebook../. send us a tweet./ or text your answer to 45 203../ enter ffxx5a for yes../ fox45b for no./ sparrows poont sttll mill owes paltimore millions of dollars in wate
entire region, with the exception of far, far western maryland. we have a severe thunderstorm warning as i mentioned. it just expired for loudoun county and fairfax, virginia. could be a couple of warm days headed our way. all right, bob. thank you. the other big story wjz is following today. eggs tainted with salmonella. the owner of an iowa egg farm is in the hot seat on capitol hill. lawmakers also heard from people who got sick during the outbreak during this summer. reporter: this 77-year-old colorado grandmother went into septic shock and nearly died, after eating a salmonella- tainted appetizer in july. fever, vomiting, diarrhea. reporter: carol lobato is one of the over 1600 victims of the nation s largest salmonella outbreak. it sparked a recall of a half billion eggs. now, congress wants to know what went wrong? americans should be able to have their eggs over easy, without having to worry that the eggs will make them queasy. reporter: the owner of one
saying about the doctor, his condition and the police investigation. hello everybody i m denise koch. and i m vic carter. here is what people are talking about tonight. wjz is staying on the story live at hopkins tonight. derek valcourt explains the doctor s condition is improving. reporter: orthopedic surgeon was shot by a son of a patient. shooting on nelson eight. there s a shooting in the hall way. reporter: moments before the gunshot, the doctor informed the son that the surgery did not go well. cohen was rushed into surgery and survived. he was my knight in shining armour. that s why i was so devastated to hear of the horror that happened to him. reporter: former patient susan revanock credits cohen for her health. i shutter to think of what my back would be like without cohen s help. reporter: ron gold critics ben hopkins security. incidents of violence o the rise in u.s. hospitals, especially in emergency rooms. those kind of very emotional tra
top of the morning, at the top of the hour. it s a fantastic day. sharon is in with traffic. you may need this this morning. temperatures are on the cool side, cooler than we had in awhile. in some cases it s in the 40s. it dropped to 49 in baltimore. 40s out in the mountains. we ll show you the range from 46 in bel air to 61 in annapolis. just along the water, the temperature has moderated a little bit. as we head through the afternoon going to be a lot of sunshine it. will warm us up to 77 but that is the beginning. we re going into the 80s and eventually 90 degrees in this five-day forecast. thank you. a problem on northern parkway. here s sharon gibala. we still have fire work activity from a two-alarm fire overnight. that as falls road closed at northern park way. that s between northern park and englewood. you can take roland to get around. we have preparations beyond way for the baltimore book festival. the right lane of charles street is closed because of it bet
captioning funded by cbs another gorgeous morning here in the city, as it is almost fall. good morning, everybody, i m harry smith. and i m maggie rodriguez. unfortunately we begin this morning with some breaking news. the sad story out of afghanistan where it s been another deadly morning for nato troops, specifically our troops. nine coalition forces, all of them americans, died in a helicopter crash in the southern part of the country. cbs news correspondent mandy clark is in kabul this morning to bring us up to date. mandy, what can you tell us this morning? reporter: well, according to nato sources, early reports indicate that all nine are believed to be americans, and they were on a special forces mission. the crash happened around 4:00 a.m. in southern afghanistan. sources say it occurred in zabul province just north of kandahar, a taliban-dominated region. there was no enemy fire in the area when the helicopter went down. and the cause of the crash is under inve