Some southwestern Ontario newspaper publishers are bucking trends by continuing to print paper versions of small-town newspapers at a time when they say their communities need them more than ever.
Following is the transcript that the Greenwich Sentinel commissioned of our recording of the televised version of the Round Hill Association First Selectman
PORT MOODY, B.C. A Port Moody woman who had been desperately trying to get her elderly mom out of the nursing home that she was transferred to only last week has finally been reunited with her. Sue Dupuis says a lack of communication had meant her 90-year-old mother was isolated and her family was shut-out. “She is sad, crying. I haven’t seen her look worse,” Sue Dupuis said in an interview March 9. A day after a story aired about their struggle on CTV, Dupuis says Fraser Health has since worked with her family and her mom has been transferred out of the nursing facility and is back home.
VANCOUVER A Port Moody, B.C., woman is trying desperately to get her elderly mom out of the nursing home that she was transferred into only last week. The reason? She says a lack of communication has meant her 90-year-old mother is now isolated and her family shut-out. “She is sad, crying. I haven’t seen her look worse,” Sue Dupuis said in an interview with CTV News. Dupuis says her mom, Joan Caldwell, had been living with her until a broken leg landed the senior in Eagle Ridge Hospital. Dupuis says she spent hours there each day for about a month, helping her mom with everything from physiotherapy to feeding.