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News

Ukrainian refugee in Las Vegas rebuilds life with charity's assist

By Miles Cooper March 5, 2025
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LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — A girl left her dwelling nation, Ukraine, three years in the past and has since rebuilt her life within the Las Vegas valley with the assistance of Lighthouse Charities.

Liudmyla Inozemsteva left Ukraine together with her daughters. On the time, her husband stayed behind to combat in opposition to the Russian military, however he has since reunited with them in Las Vegas.

“When I came here I was like a high school student, you know without credit, without a debit card, you can’t even rent an apartment or do simple things,” Inozemsteva stated. “I am so grateful for Lighthouse Charities; they help a lot for me with my first car, with my apartment, with my food.”

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Cindy Trussel Founder and CEO of Lighthouse Charities has assisted many refugee households by educating them English and offering fundamental wants and job expertise.

“There is nothing I could possibly tell you in words that I could describe seeing someone reach their goals to give back to the community,” Trussel stated. “Become self-sufficient and ultimately become an asset to our community. It’s essentially why I do what I do and why I get out of bed every morning and come and do this work.”

Inozemsteva is now working full-time at Frosted Bakery and persevering with to rebuild her life.

“I have a job. I have money and I pay my taxes and I just step by step want to have a better life when everything was destroyed,” Inozemsteva stated.

She says that regardless of being in America, she worries in regards to the state of Ukraine.

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“I’m so grateful and thankful for all American people, but I’m just feeling… the situation in the Oval Office I feel like that it’s destroyed all independence of Ukraine and all the people of Ukraine.” Inozemsteva tearfully stated. “When you have something and left everything and now you feel like something’s changed.”

The purpose is to proceed to maneuver ahead, and she or he says she’s fortunate to have discovered a house away from dwelling in Las Vegas.

“My English is more improved, and it’s easy to understand and speak and just to have a community and to have friends and to have a job and to have everything I need in my life,” Inozemsteva stated.

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Nevada town of Primm was a cheap, beloved Vegas alternative. Then new California casinos killed it
**Primm Casinos to Close Permanently This Summer, Victims of California’s Gaming Expansion** Primm, Nevada — For decades, the small border town along Interstate 15 served as a convenient first stop for Southern California drivers heading to Las Vegas. Its trio of casino resorts offered lower-stakes gambling, affordable rooms, and a quirky roadside atmosphere that many travelers came to know well. That era is now ending. The last remaining full-time casino in Primm, Primm Valley Resort, will shut its doors on July 4. The closure follows the permanent shutdown of Whiskey Pete’s in December 2024 and the conversion of Buffalo Bill’s to events-only operations last summer. Together, the three properties once formed a compact gambling corridor that drew steady weekend traffic from across the state line. **A once-thriving roadside stop** Primm’s location, roughly 40 miles south of the Las Vegas Strip, made it an easy pull-off for motorists traveling between Southern California and Nevada. Families and casual gamblers often chose the town for its lower room rates and smaller crowds compared with the Strip. The properties also provided jobs and housing for hundreds of workers who lived on site or nearby. Over time, however, visitor numbers dropped. Weekend traffic proved insufficient to keep three full-scale casinos profitable, according to statements from the operator, Affinity Gaming. The company notified employees and tenants that all operations would end this summer, with staff required to vacate company housing by early July. **California’s closer options take hold** The decisive shift came from the rapid growth of tribal casinos inside California. Resorts such as Morongo and others in Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego counties now sit much closer to the population centers that once supplied Primm’s customers. Drivers no longer need to cross into Nevada for a full casino experience. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the change by cutting overall travel, but the structural advantage of shorter drives remained even after tourism recovered. Southern Californians who once stopped at Primm for a quick session now find comparable or larger facilities within their own state. **What the closures mean for the community** – Hundreds of jobs will disappear when the final property shuts down.
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