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Page 7 - Donald Kim News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Continue, save, quit? Houston arcades face unprecedented struggle during pandemic

Continue, save, quit? Houston arcades face unprecedented struggle during pandemic Rodrigo Barbosa, Correspondent FacebookTwitterEmail 1of18 William Russell Keys, owner of The Game Preserve arcade, says the industry has suffered financially during the COVID-19 pandemic.Michael Wyke / ContributorShow MoreShow Less 2of18 William Russell Keys, owner of The Game Preserve arcade, with some of the over 100 current, classic and vintage video and pinball games he has in the arcade Friday, Dec. 18, 2020 in Spring, TX. Key is having to make some hard decisions about the arcade in the face the financial consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic.Michael Wyke / ContributorShow MoreShow Less 3of18 William Russell Keys, owner of The Game Preserve arcade, plays one of the over 100 current, classic and vintage video and pinball games he has in the arcade Friday, Dec. 18, 2020 in Spring, TX. Key is having to make some hard decisions about the arcade in the face the financial consequences of the CO

Ontario urged to block transfer of Korean long-term care home s licence to for-profit operator

Galit Rodan/The Globe and Mail Sandra Kang is fighting to salvage all the things at her 103-year-old grandfather’s nursing home that bring him comfort: the Korean corn tea served at every meal, music from his East Asian country, personal support workers who speak his mother tongue. Jong Kil Kim moved to the Rose of Sharon Korean Long Term Care home in Toronto two years ago, when his Alzheimer’s disease and dementia made it difficult to look after himself and speak in English. But his nursing home, the only one in Canada exclusively dedicated to serving the Korean community, is facing an uncertain future. The Ontario government is reviewing a proposal to transfer its operating licence to a for-profit, chain operator with no ties to the Korean-Canadian community.

Petition aims to block transfer of Korean LTC home to firm with 115 COVID-19 deaths at 3 homes

Posted: Dec 12, 2020 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: December 12, 2020 Sandra Kang, 37, has started an online petition to try to prevent a private company from taking over the Korean long-term care home where her 103-year-old grandfather Jong Kil Kim has lived for two years. (Submitted by Sandra Kang) Nearly 7,000 people have signed a petition to block the transfer of the GTA s only Korean long-term care facility to a company that has seen some of Ontario s deadliest COVID-19 outbreaks in three of its homes. I have to do everything in my power to stop this from happening because for me it is just a non-negotiable thing, said Sandra Kang, who started the petition at the end of November. 

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