This is abc 7 mornings. Good morning. It is sunday, june 25th im Tiffany Wilson in for Carolyn Tyler. Lets start with a quick check of the weather. Here is meteorologist lisa argen. Good morning to you. We see all the fog behind you and check it out, looks like a summertime pattern here. Live doppler 7 with all of the sunshine so far in our inland east bay. But dont worry it spreading to the west. And well have a good dose of that. Want to point your attention no to the north of us, a source of further cooling as we get going for the last week of june. 56 in the city. 62 in mountain view. San jose, cloudy at 63. Upper 50s santa rosa. 64 and sunny skies in concord and livermore nice at 63. 50s, 60s, to near 70 now with clouds and sun. Partly cloudy through noon time. More sun, but still a little gray at the coast. 60s there. Breezy. Mid80s inland. Look at last full week of june coming up with my accuweather sevenday forecast in a few minutes. A celebration of diversity is about to take
Cristina martinez grew up in the small central mexican town of capulhuac, where barbacoa is not just a meal, its a way of life. Her mother and father cooked barbacoa for a living. cristina chopping meat and in her town, 99 of the people there cook barbacoa. While cristina carries on the family tradition, she wants a better life for her 3 children in mexico. Cristina, voice cracking w emotion, explaining in spanish how difficult it is shes saying its very difficult. Shes here for the economic stability of the family, and to provide for them. She came to the United States illegally, crossing the border first in 2006 and then again in 2009. The reason she came here was so her daughter would have access to nursing school. And even though were married she has no access to a green card or a visa. Thats because of a Us Immigration law known as the 10 year hard bar. If she wants to get legal not only would she have to go to mexico, shed have to wait a full 10 years outside before she could eve
Cristina martinez grew up in the small central mexican town of capulhuac, where barbacoa is not just a meal, its a way of life. Her mother and father cooked barbacoa for a living. cristina chopping meat and in her town, 99 of the people there cook barbacoa. While cristina carries on the family tradition, she wants a better life for her 3 children in mexico. Cristina, voice cracking w emotion, explaining in spanish how difficult it is shes saying its very difficult. Shes here for the economic stability of the family, and to provide for them. She came to the United States illegally, crossing the border first in 2006 and then again in 2009. The reason she came here was so her daughter would have access to nursing school. And even though were married she has no access to a green card or a visa. Thats because of a Us Immigration law known as the 10 year hard bar. If she wants to get legal not only would she have to go to mexico, shed have to wait a full 10 years outside before she could eve
cristina chopping meat Cristina Martinez grew up in the small central mexican town of capulhuac, where barbacoa is not just a meal, its a way of life. Her mother and father cooked barbacoa for a living. cristina chopping meat and in her town, 99 of the people there cook barbacoa. While cristina carries on the family tradition, she wants a better life for her 3 children in mexico. Cristina, voice cracking w emotion, explaining in spanish how difficult it is shes saying its very difficult. Shes here for the economic stability of the family, and to provide for them. She came to the United States illegally, crossing the border first in 2006 and then again in 2009. The reason she came here was so her daughter would have access to nursing school. And even though were married she has no access to a green card or a visa. Thats because of a Us Immigration law known as the 10 year hard bar. If she wants to get legal not only would she have to go to mexico, shed have to wait a full 10 years outsi
Cristina martinez grew up in the small central mexican town of capulhuac, where barbacoa is not just a meal, its a way of life. Her mother and father cooked barbacoa for a living. cristina chopping meat and in her town, 99 of the people there cook barbacoa. While cristina carries on the family tradition, she wants a better life for her 3 children in mexico. Cristina, voice cracking w emotion, explaining in spanish how difficult it is shes saying its very difficult. Shes here for the economic stability of the family, and to provide for them. She came to the United States illegally, crossing the border first in 2006 and then again in 2009. The reason she came here was so her daughter would have access to nursing school. And even though were married she has no access to a green card or a visa. Thats because of a Us Immigration law known as the 10 year hard bar. If she wants to get legal not only would she have to go to mexico, shed have to wait a full 10 years outside before she could eve