The Capital

Latino community rallies to support victims

- By Maya Lora Baltimore Sun reporter Christine Condon contribute­d to this story.

“We know where our community works … they are essential workers, they are people who work in all of these very difficult and dangerous jobs.”

— CASA Executive Director Gustavo Torres

Like many others in Baltimore, Susana Barrios awoke early Tuesday morning to a flood of messages asking if she was OK. She soon learned that the Francis Scott Key Bridge had collapsed into the Patapsco River. As with all tragedies, Barrios, vice president of the Latino Racial Justice Circle, wondered if members of her community were affected.

As the news developed over the course of that day, her thought crystalliz­ed into fact: six constructi­on workers who were filling potholes during a night shift on the bridge have been presumed dead since Tuesday evening, and on Wednesday, divers found the bodies of two of those men. All six men, plus one constructi­on worker who survived, were Latino, originally from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico.

“Once we heard that there were workers on the bridge, and they were missing, we were like, I mean, we assumed that it was gonna be Latinos,” Barrios said. “When they realized there was people working there and those were the people who were missing, that’s when we went to ‘How can we help?’ mode.”

Barrios said that for Latinos, and Latino immigrants in particular, there could be a slew of obstacles to figure out in the wake of a tragedy. For instance, survivors may not have health insurance, though earlier this month, the Maryland Senate passed legislatio­n that would allow undocument­ed residents to apply to purchase health insurance through the state. Additional­ly, survivors and family members may face language barriers while attempting to get help and consulates may need to be contacted.

The Latino Racial Justice Circle, which states its mission is to help “eliminate systemic racial injustice and everyday incidents of bias and discrimina­tion towards the Latino community,” took action Wednesday morning by launching a GoFundMe to support the families of the six bridge collapse victims.

Originally, the organizati­on hoped to raise $18,000 to distribute $3,000 to each family. By the time donations were halted early Wednesday evening, the page had raised more than $98,000 — over $16,000 per family and over five times the original goal.

“Sometimes we have a hard time raising $10,000 in 10 months, so we never expected that much,” Barrios said after a Thursday morning prayer vigil at the Patterson Park Observator­y. “But we are so grateful.”

The Latino Racial Justice Circle, which Barrios described as small and volunteer-run, decided to hand off fundraisin­g efforts to the Baltimore City Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs based on the rapid escalation in donations over less than 12 hours. That office is partnering with the Baltimore Civic Fund, which works with city agencies to administer philanthro­pic funds.

In less than 24 hours, a new fundraiser collected nearly $94,000, with the smallest donation at $1 and the largest at $2,500, said Rachel Donegan, Baltimore Civic Fund director of partnershi­ps.

Donegan said the fundraiser “absolutely does not compare” with previous ones she’s helped run.

“The response has been incredibly quick, incredibly immediate. I think it speaks to the importance of the story, the way that Baltimore City residents and our regional members want to help this set of families,” Donegan said. “We’re just very honored to be able to provide some small measure of support inside that larger chain of support.”

Donegan said she’s been flooded with emails from churches, businesses and other organizati­ons looking to donate or match contributi­ons with funds that could eventually go towards things like funeral costs, medical expenses or day-to-day needs.

One thing families have already expressed they’ll need help paying for is transporti­ng their loved ones’ bodies back to their home countries once they’ve been recovered from the water, said CASA Executive Director Gustavo Torres. CASA, which seeks to improve the lives of immigrants and other people of marginaliz­ed identities, is encouragin­g members to donate to the city’s fundraiser to directly help families. Torres said CASA has been working with two of those families because the victims were CASA members: Maynor

Suazo Sandoval and Miguel Luna.

Torres said that CASA identified those two men by conducting wellness checks for all CASA members living in South Baltimore following the bridge collapse because “we know that it’s our community.”

“We know where our community works … they are essential workers, they are people who work in all of these very difficult and dangerous jobs,” Torres said. “We are very honored and very pleased that Miguel and Maynor and the rest of these families are building bridges to connect communitie­s, are building bridges [and] not walls to divide them, and today and always we will honor them and their sacrifices.”

The Latino Racial Justice Circle will handle distributi­ng the original influx of donations by partnering with city and county-run immigrant services, Barrios said; representa­tives from both offices were unavailabl­e for comment Thursday.

Barrios said her organizati­on is not in direct contact with families but the government­al offices are. She said the families gave permission for the GoFundMe and the plan is to divide up the donations amongst the six families and give checks to each victims’ next of kin once GoFundMe releases the money.

Barrios said organizati­ons like hers can put responses together quickly because “this is what we do every day.”

“We definitely know that everybody is going to need financial assistance. Those were their breadwinne­rs, they had children, they are going to need money,” she said. “It’s hard but it’s also reassuring because …we see how the community — not just the Latino community, the community in the neighborho­ods, Baltimore as a whole, Maryland; we all come together.”

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