Kentucky
Kentucky leads the nation in child abuse cases: How foster care can help
LEXINGTON, Ky. (FOX 56) – In mild of Could being ‘Nationwide Foster Care Month,’ the state and native foster businesses make clear sure shortages they’re dealing with.
In accordance with the Citizen Foster Care Overview Board, there are 45 Kentucky counties which can be in want of volunteers to evaluate foster care instances.
Ken Howlett, Information Director at k105.com, reported that volunteers are wanted within the following counties:
Boone, Boyd, Bracken, Breckinridge, Campbell, Carroll, Clinton, Cumberland, Fayette, Fleming, Floyd, Fulton, Gallatin, Graves, Hancock, Hardin, Harlan, Hickman, Jackson, Jefferson, Kenton, Knott, Laurel, Lee, Leslie, Letcher, Madison, Marshall, Mason, McCreary, Monroe, Muhlenberg, Perry, Pike, Ohio, Owsley, Robertson, Scott, Trigg, Warren, Wayne, Webster, Whitley and Woodford.
In Fayette County, one non-public child-placing company, Nightlight Christian Adoptions and Foster Providers, is dealing with one other kind of scarcity: not sufficient households are stepping as much as foster kids.
“There are kids who’re coming into care because of the drug epidemic,” Government Director Dana Poynter, MS, stated.
Administrative assistant, Leesa Del Rio stated, “Kentucky is main the nation in youngster abuse instances and in addition, in infants who’re born to moms who’re hooked on substances.”
Del Rio stated the primary main trigger for youngster abuse in Kentucky is neglect.
As a result of drug epidemic, the foster care trade is in want of extra households to step up and supply protected properties. One of many many providers Nightlight provides is inserting kids into foster properties and getting ready the properties to deliver a baby in.
“We seek for households who’re keen to be foster households and practice them, work with them,” Poynter stated.
Del Rio provides, “It’s simply such an enormous problem for Kentucky and we’re in a disaster proper now discovering properties for the entire youngsters who want placement.”
One other large scarcity is on the state stage, the place Kentucky is needing extra volunteers, in 45 counties, to take a look at the youth’s instances in courtroom.
“Every county is accountable for having a volunteer evaluate board for every case,” Poynter stated. “And if an adoption must happen, principally what they’re going to be doing is making suggestions to the courts.”
Nightlight has additionally seen one other rising problem with households not returning to the foster program after one yr.
“As a result of it’s laborious,” Poynter stated. “I believe there’s not all the time sufficient respite households or caregivers to present them a break.”
Nightlight stated households and caregivers are additionally stretched skinny because of the pandemic.
“Lots of people grew to become jobless, and that put loads of stress on households and that results in some abuse conditions, and I really feel like there have been in all probability loads of kids that got here into care at the moment,” Poynter stated.
Poytner and Del Rio are each foster mother and father themselves, and might attest to how rewarding it may be to foster kids, whether or not it results in reunification with the unique households, or adoption. Poytner shares that she just lately adopted her toddler daughter, Carolina, after fostering her for a couple of quick weeks.
Nightlight stated they perceive not everybody is ready to foster or undertake, however everybody can do one thing to assist these disaster’ they’re dealing with.
To get entangled or to donate to Nightlight Christian Adoptions, click on right here.
Kentucky
Federal crackdown on silica dust begins as mining experts highlight impact to Kentucky workers
After a years-long rule-making process at the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), coal mines will have to keep workers safe from toxic silica dust by lowering the legal exposure limit from 100 micrograms to 50 micrograms over an 8-hour work shift.
Experts have long-known that silica dust is causing a surge in the incurable black lung disease among central Appalachian coal miners. It’s caused as miners inhale bits of the rock that’s being pulverized to get to harder-to-reach coal seams.
“You want to know what it’s like to have black lung?” John Robinson, a former miner battling the disease asked at a roundtable discussion in Louisville on Monday. “Grab your pillow off your bed, go outside, and get your push mower going in your yard.”
Other industries who extract things like metal, sand and gravel will also need to comply with the silica standards. For the first time ever, they’ll also be required to X-ray workers’ lungs. Those X-rays will be stored in a database managed by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
Those industries have said they don’t see the same epidemic coal has with black lung, but regulators hypothesize that’s because they don’t look.
“My guess is, that when we go looking for a problem, when we go looking at these miners and their chest films, we’re probably going to see silica in those lungs,” NIOSH researcher Scott Laney said.
U.S. Representative Morgan McGarvey hosted Monday’s roundtable in Louisville with federal experts discussing the impact of the rule. There are no active coal mines in his district, but he is the only Democrat in Kentucky’s congressional delegation.
Officials have lauded the Biden administration for the measure, which was promised but undelivered in multiple previous administrations.
“I’ve always considered myself, yes, representing my district, but also being a representative of our state,” McGarvey said. “When you talk about the safety of our workers, to me, that’s never been a political issue.”
McGarvey’s office said the lawmaker wanted to learn from federal experts about what is needed “to ensure effective implementation and enforcement of this rule.”
One thing that might make it difficult to implement and enforce? A flat budget at the federal mine agency. Congress recently denied a $50 million budget increase for more mine inspections and more silica dust sampling.
“We just need to help get MSHA more money to help enforce this,” National Black Lung Association Vice President Vonda Robinson said. “They need more guys to go out and help, to be able to enforce this.”
“MSHA has had flat budgets for, I don’t know how many years now,” MSHA Assistant Secretary Chris Williamson said at a panel earlier in June. “You’re talking about people because in almost every federal agency, the cost driver is personnel. We will do the best we can with what we’re given to work with, but it will remain a priority.”
Appalachian advocacy groups have criticized the measure for largely relying on companies to accurately self-report high silica dust samples. They say it gives companies “every incentive to continue cheating and hiding dangers” and compared it to letting a “fox guard the hen house.”
Williamson has repeatedly promised that any companies caught cheating on the silica testing and reporting requirements will be dealt with severely.
Meanwhile, the silica rule is facing two separate legal challenges from mining industry associations. They’re asking federal judges to analyze the rule for its legality.
“Worker safety and health is a core value of our association, but unfortunately, this rule has missed the mark,” National Stone, Sand and Gravel Association CEO & President Michael Johnson said in a written statement. “MSHA’s crystalline silica rule includes provisions that were not included in the proposed rule, for which we were not provided the opportunity to comment, as required by law.”
Although companies are expected to begin lower silica dust levels now, enforcement will begin in April 2025 for coal companies and 2026 for non-coal.
State government and politics reporting is supported in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Kentucky
Kentucky man charged after shooting in Bell County
BELL COUNTY, Ky. (WATE) — One man has been injured and another man has been charged following a reported shooting at a Bell County, Kentucky residence Sunday night.
The Bell County Sheriff’s Office said in a social media post shared overnight Monday that deputies responded to a residence on Blue Ridge Church Road around 10:05 p.m. for a report of a man being shot. The victim, who had been shot twice, was initially taken by a family member to Middlesboro ARH Hospital. They were later taken by AirEvac and unable to give a statement according to BCSO.
At the scene, Bell County deputies made contact with a 20-year-old suspect identified as Matthew Shelton, of Page.
Shelton told deputies that the victim had left the residence running with his hand behind his back, and Shelton felt he was “going to be hurt, so he discharged his firearm striking the individual,” BCSO’s post states.
This is a developing story. Download the WATE 6 News app or sign up for our email alerts for updates.
Based on the on-scene investigation, deputies arrested Shelton and charged him with assault in the first degree. He was taken to the Bell County Detention Center. The investigation is ongoing.
Kentucky
KY space camp aims to introduce more girls to aerospace science
MOREHEAD, Ky. (WKYT) – The STEM field is a predominantly male-dominated area, but for one space camp program, they’re working to change that.
Over the last week, several high school girls from across the Commonwealth and beyond have been getting a glimpse of what its like to work in the aerospace industry.
“I was just really excited, like wow, I can learn all of this stuff in two weeks and have all of this fun and meet other girls who are interested in this stuff like me,” said high schooler Ruby Korman.
This is all thanks to the SpaceTrek Program, which is a space systems program for young women that has been happening in Morehead.
“Girls in SpaceTrek get exposure to electricity and electronics and they develop the knowledge, skills, and abilities to understand space craft subsystems,” said the program’s director, Jennifer Carter.
Through the two-week-long program, the girls get to do a bunch of hands-on activities, like launching their own satellite-like device called a cricket sat.
The cricket sat is sent into the sky collecting data on the temperature.
“The primary takeaway for girls participating in SpaceTrek is that they see a tangible college and career pathway in aerospace,” Carter added.
That’s exactly what happened for the program’s co-instructor Chloe Hart.
“Throughout my time at SpaceTrek, I just fell in love with space systems engineering and ground station communications specifically, and that’s when I decided to change my career path and go into space systems engineering,” Hart said.
And beyond the group bonding activities and guest speakers, like WKYT’s own meteorologist Alexa Minton, girls get to see that there is space for them in this industry.
“My team created SpaceTrek to be what we needed when we were young teenagers. We needed this academic challenge to show ourselves what we are truly capable of doing,” Carter said.
The program will wrap up Saturday, June 22.
Copyright 2024 WKYT. All rights reserved.
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