all

Coronavirus: BM worker delivers care package of loo roll to man with bowel cancer

Reading now: 754
www.mirror.co.uk

A shop worker has stepped up for her elderly customers by delivering care packages after spotting one couple struggling. B&M worker Tanya Elliot had helped the man, who has bowel cancer, and his wife when they ventured out to get their essentials.

Disappointed that they couldn't get hold of any toilet roll at the Whitehaven branch, they left their number and Tanya called them the next day.

Not wanting the couple in their 80s to make another journey to the shop, Tanya stepped up and delivered a care package with toilet roll, sugar, tea bags, hand wash and sweets to their home.

And the 35-year-old shop assistant didn't stop there as she also delivered the same package to the couple's elderly neighbours and included her phone number in case

Read more on mirror.co.uk
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Community members urged to 'wake up' and help promote safety for students in Philadelphia - fox29.com - city Philadelphia
fox29.com
43%
179
Community members urged to 'wake up' and help promote safety for students in Philadelphia
PHILADELPHIA - Senseless violence in the City of Philadelphia has many on edge. This is especially the case after a 12-year-old girl was shot in a drive-by shooting in North Philadelphia on Tuesday while walking home from school with her younger brother. So far, police have not made any arrests and no suspects have been announced. The school district said it is in constant contact with police and will continue to work towards its Safe Path Program, but with more than 200 schools in the district, they need support and help from the community. FOX 29 spoke to Jose Ortiz, a parent who now walks his son home from the Feltonville School of Arts and Science. RELATED: 'Stay on the line': Philadelphia Police Commissioner responds to concern of long 911 wait timesOrtiz's son was absent on the day of the shooting, but that would have been the typical route he took on his commute home. "It's crazy because he missed that day that it happened and he walks actually through that same light it happened at," Ortiz said. "Yesterday, he was kind of scared to walk home by himself, so I came and picked him up." The safety of local children walking to and from school has become a growing concern. Chief Keven Bethel, a Special Advisor on School Safety for the School District of Philadelphia, appeared on Good Day Philadelphia.
DMCA