COVID-19 has impacted everyone differently. For the Dixie Pan in Nortonville, theyâre hoping to find someone who will save the business if things donât turn around quickly.
âItâs either sell the restaurant or lose everything,â said Shawn Littlepage, owner of the Dixie Pan. âThe Governor has said that we all have to make sacrifices, but is losing everything I have going to be my sacrifice for a virus?â
Since the pandemic hit earlier this year, Littlepage said that heâs had to layoff 17 employees and lost a quarter of a $1 million in sales.
Since the restaurant has been struggling financially, Littlepage decided to put it on the market.
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The impact of the Nashville explosion on Christmas Day was felt even as far as Hopkins County, knocking out 911 communications over the weekend but has since been fixed on Monday.
An RV exploded Christmas morning at Second Avenue and Commerce Street in downtown Nashville causing AT&T outages to begin around noon on Friday, according to reports. The outage impacted a large portion of Kentucky along with the Nashville Metropolitan area.
âAT&T had some significant issues as far as landlines and mobile phones,â said Hopkins County EMA Director Nick Bailey. âThere were some Internet issues as well.â
Bailey said the southern part of the county completely lost AT&T cell phone service over the weekend.