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Coalition wants California to spend billions to close the digital divide
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Over 400 organizations coming to our Federal event next week! - State of Reform
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But he and his wife, Marcelina Hernandez Lopez, had so many questions.
What medications was he being given? How was the virus affecting his body? And, most importantly:
Would he survive?
No one at Mercy Hospital Southwest in Bakersfield spoke the couple’s language, Mixteco, an indigenous language from southern Mexico. Hernandez, 62, didn’t know he had the right, under state and federal law, to request an interpreter, and the hospital didn’t offer him one.
His wife was beside herself. “I feel a lot of sadness in my heart, because I don’t know what’s going to happen to my husband, and I don’t know what his condition is,” she said through an interpreter on Feb. 19, as her husband lay in a hospital bed. “He’s suffering a lot in that place … He tells me people come and give him injections, he wants to know what they are, but he doesn’t understand.”
California hospitals given leeway to use ‘last resort’ staffing waivers, analysis shows
There are more than 460,000 licensed nurses in California. Nurses have played a crucial role in caring for COVID-19 patients during the pandemic Author: Jill Castellano | inewsource and Tarryn Mento | KPBS Published: 3:58 PM PST March 4, 2021 Updated: 5:08 PM PST March 9, 2021
SAN DIEGO COUNTY, Calif. Nurse George Santiago performed CPR on a patient at Palomar Medical Center Escondido. The man, hooked to a ventilator, didn’t survive.
“I’m picturing myself as if this is my family member and there is nothing I can do,” Santiago said. “The desperation, the hopelessness. That’s what kind of kills you.”
Sacramento Report: Lawmakers Zero in on Police Hiring and Training
Two competing bills in the Legislature are seeking to raise the standards for police recruitment and hiring. Meanwhile, police training efforts are also getting a fresh look.
Two competing bills in the Legislature are seeking to raise the standards for police recruitment and hiring.
Both bills are driven by the belief that more education makes for better police officers. But they differ in whether higher education should merely be incentivized or an actual requirement. One is backed by police unions and wouldn’t impose any hard education requirements; the other would require officers to either be 25 or have a college degree.
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