Crash victim getting by with friends’ help
Marisa O’Neil
Vance Hanning has been a regular sight around the Vista shopping
center for the past 35 years, picking up a doughnut, getting a
haircut or just sharing stories with others on his walk to work as a
stocker at the center’s supermarket.
So when Hanning, 56, didn’t stop by for a few days at Vista Barber
to chat with longtime employee Ralph Cornejo, the barber wondered
where he was.
When he went to check on him at El Metate Market, Cornejo found
out Hanning had been seriously injured Jan. 22, when a car hit him in
a nearby alley as he walked a friend home.
The driver took off, leaving Hanning in the alley with a broken
hip and leg injuries. He has been recovering at Hoag Hospital since
the accident.
“It’s terrible,” Cornejo said. “He’s upset. He figured maybe [the
driver] didn’t have insurance or something.”
Costa Mesa Police have not found the driver who ran down Hanning
and fled.”It just hits you,” said Eduardo Covarrubias, manager of El
Metate. “To think somebody could leave somebody just lying there. How
could you not know you hit someone?”
Hanning, who was profiled in the Daily Pilot in 2001, has worked
the same job at the same market for 35 years. He has always lived
within walking distance, said his mother, 76-year-old Maryellen
Basham.
He’s never had a driver’s license.
He’s so well-known and loved in the area that customers have been
asking about him and wanting to visit him in the hospital, fellow
employee Mayra Lopez said.
Employees at the market made donations for Hanning’s medical care
and this week put a collection box in the store for customers who
want to help him.
Hanning had hip-replacement surgery and was on a ventilator until
last week, after contracting pneumonia, his niece Alison Miller said.
Once he gets out of the hospital, he will likely need to have
physical therapy at a live-in facility for another four to six weeks,
his mother said.
“I just feel like he’s going to keep thinking about that job and
his friends, and I think he’s going to do OK,” she said.
Though he’s well-liked, Hanning is known for his cantankerous
personality.
“You see that movie ‘Grumpy Old Men?’” Covarrubias said. “He would
have been perfect for it.”
When nurses at the hospital told Miller that her slumbering uncle
seemed “so sweet,” she recounted, she warned them about his
personality.
“Just you wait,” she said with a laugh.
But he has a way with children, who always seem to appreciate his
unique charm, she said. He often got chastised at work for sneaking
candy to children who came into the store, Covarrubias said.
Hanning has a long recovery ahead of him but is already talking
about his job and getting back to his regular life, Covarrubias said.
And when he’s ready to return, his job will be waiting for him.
“I don’t think the store could be the same without him,” he said.
“He’s part of history.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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