Kentucky
Kentucky schools struggling to meet SRO law requirements
MADISONVILLE, Ky. (WFIE) – A legislation handed in April requires all Kentucky public colleges to have a college useful resource officer (SRO) at every college campus.
The legislation states the deadline for each constructing to have an SRO was August 1.
Of the 11 college Kentucky college districts within the Tri-State, solely three have sufficient SROs to cowl all their campuses.
“The difficulty that actually is going on right here in Owensboro and I’m certain throughout the state is that the native police pressure doesn’t have sufficient folks to supply up,” mentioned Owensboro Public Colleges Public Info Officer Jared Revlett.
OPS has simply two SROs to cowl its 12 buildings. Whereas college officers rotate officers to maintain college students and employees secure, a part of the explanation they don’t have sufficient is funding.
“That is simply one of many mandates that has come via from the legislature that faculty districts are required to satisfy with out extra funding,” Revlett mentioned.
Hopkins County Colleges has been in a position to put an officer in any respect 12 of its campuses.
Protected Colleges Coordinator Robert Carter says that’s as a result of they made SROs a precedence again in 2017.
“People who have the choice making energy got here collectively and mentioned we all know cash is a matter we all know funding is a matter, however is there something we are able to do this’s an excessive amount of in regard to the protection of our kids, and people folks mentioned we have to do what we are able to,” Carter mentioned.
Regardless that Hopkins County Colleges has met the requirement, and has for years, Carter says SROs might be onerous to search out.
“We name them unicorns,” Carter mentioned. “There are extra college useful resource officers which might be obtainable throughout the Commonwealth of Kentucky than there are college useful resource officers obtainable to fill them.”
14 Information reached out to the Kentucky Division of Prison Justice Coaching, which oversees colleges and their useful resource officers.
We requested a number of instances if there could be penalties for districts that don’t have an SRO at every campus. They didn’t reply that query.
Copyright 2022 WFIE. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Kentucky vs. Duke game thread and pregame reading
It’s finally here, BBN. The Kentucky Wildcats and Duke Blue Devils are set to face off in the 2024 Champions Classic.
Game time is set for approximately 9 PM ET on ESPN following Kansas vs. Michigan State, which tips off at 6:30. You can watch the game online using ESPN+ or listen on the radio via the UK Sports Network.
This is it. This is the game everyone’s been waiting for, and it’s finally happening tonight in Catlanta.
Will the Cats be able to topple the sixth-ranked Blue Devils, or will Duke continue to control this series since that 1998 Elite Eight comeback?
We’ll find out soon enough!
Pregame Reading
Go CATS!
Kentucky
La Grange woman wins $60,000 on Kentucky Lottery scratch-off ticket
(LEX 18) — The Kentucky Lottery announced that a La Grange woman recently won the top prize of $60,000 on a scratch-off ticket that was purchased at Fast Lane Liquor in La Grange on Oct. 30.
Officials detailed that Rose Richie won the prize after she purchased a $5 Mood Money Scratch-off and won on all 15 spots on the ticket. This resulted in the $60,000 top prize win.
“I kept going and saw another $4,000 and another $4,000,” Richie said. “When I saw the whole board, I knew I hit the $60,000.”
Richie went on to call her husband in excitement, officials said.
“I was having an anxiety attack,” she said. “I told him, “Honey, please come home, I’m nervous. I’m making sure my eyes are seeing right.”
The following day, Richie headed to the lottery headquarters and received a for $43,200 after taxes while the liquor store that sold the winning ticket will receive $600.
“I’ve been praying for a little nest egg,” she said. “This will help us stay ahead.”
Kentucky
Looking at the rollout of the Kentucky medical cannabis program
FRANKFORT, Ky. (WSAZ) – Voters in dozens of cities and counties across Kentucky voted in favor in November to allow medical cannabis businesses to operate in their communities.
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said there’s been “an overwhelming support” behind medical cannabis.
The statewide program will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2025, according to the Office of Kentucky Medical Cannabis.
The issue passed in all 53 counties, and 53 cities that had medical cannabis local questions on the ballots allowed those businesses to operate in their areas, Beshear said.
In a team Kentucky briefing, Gov. Beshear said,” We saw overwhelming support at the polls for our new system of medical cannabis … meaning every citizen in every part of Kentucky that it is time and they want to see the option in their community.”
Counties that take no action via ordinance and ballot initiative are automatically opted in to allow medical marijuana businesses, as are cities in such counties, according to the Kentucky Office of Medical Cannabis.
Beshear signed medical cannabis use into law for people who have certain medical conditions in 2023.
The window to apply for a medical cannabis business license was July 1 through Aug. 31. During that time, the Office of Medical Cannabis received 4,998 applications, of which 918 were cultivator and processor applicants.
In Boyd County, L&O Legacies, a tier I cultivator, and Bijal Kentucky LLC., a processor, were amongst the 26 applicants selected through a lottery basis in October for medical cannabis business licenses. Click here
The available categories included 10 Tier I cultivator licenses, four Tier II cultivator licenses, two Tier III cultivator licenses, and 10 processor licenses.
A total of 48 dispensaries will be awarded licenses in late November and December through a lottery drawing basis.
Each county will get one dispensary except Jefferson and Fayette, which will get two each.
To qualify for a medical cannabis card starting Jan. 1, 2025, the holder must have a qualifying medical condition, which includes any type or form of cancer regardless of the stage; chronic, severe, intractable, or debilitating pain; epilepsy or any other intractable seizure disorder; multiple sclerosis, muscle spasms or spasticity; chronic nausea or cyclical vomiting syndrome that has proven resistant to other conventional medical treatments; and post-traumatic stress disorder. For more information visit, kymedcan.ky.gov.
Copyright 2024 WSAZ. All rights reserved.
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