Overview
- The operator, which filed Tuesday at the Munich district court, now has a provisional administrator and serves 585 residents across six homes with about 740 staff.
- The administrator said facilities will keep operating during a site-by-site review and he linked the collapse to higher costs, staff shortages and a promised bridge loan that never arrived.
- In Unna, a closure threat eased after staff agreed to stay on and the company pledged to pay overdue wages by Friday, with about 20 residents still in the home.
- In earlier actions, the regulator shut the Laatzen home on April 1 and moved 59 residents, and the Gröbenzell site in Bavaria has already closed after its last resident left.
- Transfers are being prepared for May 1, with several reports naming Rhemia Residenzen for Velbert and Rotenburg while one report cites Emida for Velbert, a point the administrator is expected to clarify.