............... All I was asking was for places that provide king air training. Most of them will then provide ratings as well.
Actually, you will probably have a hard time finding a Part 142 schoolhouse in the USA, like Flightsafety, CAE, SimCom, or the other smaller 142 schools (like FlyRight, King Air Academy, etc) that can issue the KA200 Type Rating. For FlightSafety, you should check with their learning center in Wichita, which is the lead center for King Air training; if any FlightSafety location can do the training for, and subsequently test and issue, the King Air 200 type rating, it would be their Wichita facility. The problem is, that while any of the above schools can do the training for the King Air 200, in order for them to issue a KA200 type rating, the school must have an FAA approved curriculum specifically for that Type Rating training course, and a Training Center Evaluator (TCE) who is approved by the FAA to do that test and issue that KA200 Type Rating. Historically, these schools have not had that capability or approval, since customer requests for a King Air 200 type rating, here in the USA - where the vast majority of the King Air 200's are not over 12,500 lbs and therefore do not require a type rating - are fairly uncommon.
Now, that might be changing. There is a company called Centex Aerospace, that offers a conversion to raise the King Air 200 max gross takeoff weight to 13,420 pounds. It is called the Centex Halo 250 mod, you can Google it. If you call them, I am guessing they would probably know who can train for and/or issue an FAA King Air 200 type rating, because whoever purchases their STC for that weight increase, is going to need to get that KA200 Type Rating to take advantage of that modification.
What you might end up having to do, if none of the part 142 schools is FAA-approved for a KA200 Type Rating class and issuance, is take a regular KA200 initial class, at any of the part 142 schools, and then schedule a type rating checkride with the FAA, in the airplane. They do have inspectors who can give the King Air 200 type rating check ride in the airplane. I had an FAA Inspector agree to give me a KA200 Type Rating check ride a few years ago when I was considering this Halo 250 modification, for a 200 that I was flying regularly at that time, but I left that job before that Halo 250 weight increase STC was approved.