Kentucky
Are Kentucky schools safe? Assessing laws following Texas shooting
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WAVE) – Kentucky security officers plan to make use of the occasions of the college capturing in Uvalde, Texas as a studying lesson, simply as they did when the state had a college capturing of its personal in 2018.
“There’s lots of people who at the moment are speaking, ‘Okay, what are we going to do this’s preventative, we’ve acquired to do one thing,’” Ben Wilcox, state faculty safety marshal stated. “We have now, we did it three years in the past, and it’s working.”
In 2019, the Common Meeting made sweeping adjustments to make sure faculties have been safer after two college students have been shot useless the yr earlier than at Marshall County Excessive Faculty.
Underneath the Faculty Security and Resiliency Act which handed in 2019, faculties are required to implement safety measures even earlier than a customer steps inside the constructing. The primary entrance doorways stay locked with a digital camera buzzer used to establish these coming inside, and classroom doorways keep locked throughout instruction.
The legislation additionally mandates different measures, together with security assessments in faculties and psychological well being and energetic shooter coaching for each lecturers and faculty useful resource officers.
As well as, the legislation handed in 2019 requires each faculty in Kentucky to have an armed officer contained in the constructing, nonetheless, simply 43% of colleges within the state do.
Final legislative session, lawmakers handed an extra measure to assist districts that didn’t have the assets to place SROs in each constructing. The legislation requires the state to gather knowledge from every district with out SROs to find out the rationale why they’re unable to put them in faculties, whether or not it’s as a consequence of lack of cash or manpower. State security officers will then current that knowledge to the Common Meeting which is able to work to price range for sure assets to get extra armed officers inside faculties.
“It’s not designed to punish the districts that don’t have officers, it’s to search out out what the district must get these officers,” Wilcox stated. “We haven’t been in a position to current that but. We have now to know what number of officers we want, what’s it going to price, what’s it costing already?”
Government director of the Kentucky Heart for Faculty Security, Jon Akers informed WAVE Information armed officers in faculties undergo intense coaching on policing, energetic shooter response, and psychological well being.
“These people within the faculties function position fashions, mentors,” Akers stated. “They’re not simply there to see how many individuals they’ll arrest. They’re there to get into prevention.”
It’s troublesome to measure how useful SROs are in stopping hazard inside a college, however Wilcox stated it probably occurs usually.
“Having an armed officer on the premises can act as a deterrent,” Wilcox stated. “We don’t know what number of energetic shooter conditions didn’t occur as a result of we had an armed officer. I additionally want I had the information of what number of energetic shooter incidents that didn’t occur as a result of that officer was a trusted grownup to any individual within the faculty who was in a position to work with college students, so we didn’t get to that time.”
Security officers additionally pressured the truth that faculties can’t maintain youngsters protected 24/7. They inspired the general public and oldsters to assist shield youngsters once they’re out of the classroom by reporting suspicious social media exercise to police and being attentive to what your youngster is doing.
Copyright 2022 WAVE. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Nebraska lands Kentucky WR transfer Dane Key
Editor’s Note: This article first appeared on Rivals.com, the leader in college football and basketball recruiting coverage. Be the first to know and follow your teams by signing up here.
Matt Rhule sewed up a strong piece to the offensive puzzle for next season, landing former Kentucky wide receiver Dane Key. The 6-foot-3, 210-pounder will have one year of eligibility remaining.
Key picked the Cornhuskers over Ole Miss, Georgia and others.
Rhule snagged Key at the perfect time, he’s coming off his best season with the Wildcats, securing a career-high 47 receptions and receiving yards in 715 yards.
Key’s consistency will make him an instant impact player for Nebraska next season. He’s been a starter since his true freshman season and accumulated 1,870 yards on 126 receptions and scored 14 touchdowns.
Key checked in at No. 13 overall in the Rivals Portal rankings.
Stay locked in on the Rivals Transfer Tracker to keep up with the latest transfer news, portal entries, commitments, and rankings. For a deep-dive into the transfer portal, make sure you visit the Rivals Transfer Search page.
The Rivals Transfer Portal X account is a must-follow for any college football fan.
The winter college football transfer portal window is scheduled to open on December 9th, 2024 for 20 days. Additionally, players have a 30-day window to transfer when their head coach leaves. There is also a five-day window for players to transfer after their team has finished postseason play. A 10-day transfer window will open on April 16th as well.
Kentucky
Lowlife dad who owes over $100K in child support arrested getting off cruise ship in Miami: officials
A Kentucky dad who has racked up more than $100,000 in unpaid child support was arrested as he got off a cruise trip in Florida after several years on the lam, according to officials.
Dominic Weaver’s vacation ended with him in handcuffs after he was taken into custody by local cops exiting the cruise ship in Miami sometime last week and brought back to Bluegrass State, Jefferson County Attorney Mike O’Connell told a local Louisville news station.
The 47-year-old owes somewhere between $114,000 and $120,000 in child support, according to O’Connell.
Weaver was previously sentenced to five years of probation for flagrant non-support in 2019, according to Law and Crime.
“I don’t know when he left, but he fled the jurisdiction, and from the date of his sentence until today, and even today, he’s not paid one cent of child support,” the Kentucky county official told WDRB.
O’Connell said Weaver has four cases with the child support division.
“This is one of the most egregious events that brings something to light that I think I’ve ever seen,” O’Connell told the news station.
The official plans to ask the court to revoke his original sentence and instead get him behind bars for as long as four years.
The father’s lack of support for his kids is so poor he appeared on a 2021 list of parents that owe large sums of money for their children’s care. At the time, he owed nearly $100,000, according to county records.
Weaver’s arraignment is set for Jan. 6.
Kentucky
South Carolina lands talented player out of transfer portal following LaNorris Seller news
Former Western Kentucky offensive lineman Rodney Newsom will transfer to play for South Carolina this upcoming season, On3’s Pete Nakos reported. Newsom spent just one season with the Hilltoppers and will have two years of eligibility remaining.
The 6-foot-3 offensive lineman played in all 14 games at WKU this past season. He joined the team in the offseason after spending one year at Itawamba Community College in Mississippi.
Newsom played high school football at Briarcrest Christian (TN), where he was a three-star recruit in the 2020 class. He ranked as the No. 2,256 overall player and No. 158 interior offensive lineman in the cycle according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.
Newsom began his college career at Memphis and played two seasons with the Tigers prior to going to Itawamba. As a transfer, he ranks as the No. 119 overall player and No. 11 interior offensive lineman according to On3’s Transfer Portal Player Rankings.
Rodney Newsom is the seventh commitment in the Gamecocks’ transfer portal class, joining EDGE Jaylen Brown (Missouri), interior offensive lineman Nick Sharpe (Wake Forest), tight end Jordan Dingle (Kentucky), defensive tackle Gabriel Brownlow-Dindy (Texas A&M), LB Shawn Murphy, and QB Air Noland (OSU).
The portal officially opened on Monday, Dec. 9, 2024. More than 2,800 FBS scholarship players entered their names into the NCAA’s transfer database during the 2023-24 school year. Removing those who withdrew or went pro, the final total sat at 2,707 transfers.
So far this cycle, 2,160 players have entered the transfer portal with 676 of those already having committed to new schools.
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire.
The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
LaNorris Sellers signs new NIL deal with South Carolina for 2025 return
South Carolina star quarterback LaNorris Sellers has inked a new NIL deal with the Gamecocks’ NIL collective Garnet Trust, securing his return to Columbia for the 2025 season. Sellers holds an On3 NIL Valuation of $2.7 million.
His new deal now secures his return for 2025. Sellers put together an impressive 2024 season after taking over as South Carolina’s starting quarterback. He threw for 2,274 yards and 17 touchdowns in the air while adding 655 rushing yards and seven touchdowns on the ground.
Those numbers helped lead the Gamecocks to a 9-3 record, including a six-game win streak to end the year to just miss out on the College Football Playoff.
South Carolina had to hold off suitors for Sellers, as multiple schools made efforts in recent weeks for the quarterback to jump in the transfer portal. Garnet Trust declined to give specifics on the agreement but sources told On3 it’s on pace with other top quarterback deals in college football.
“Ever since the LSU game, he’s been having programs reach out to his people,” a Power 4 personnel staffer recently told On3 about the LaNorris Sellers situation. “Then as he kept balling out he’s only had more and more programs reach out. I mean he had playoff-caliber teams blowing up his phone like crazy before the Clemson game. After? That shit hasn’t stopped ringing.”
On3’s Pete Nakos contributed to this report.
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