Kentucky
‘We haven’t forgotten about you’ – Eastern Ky. flood recovery continues, supported by UK providers
LEXINGTON, Ky. (Aug. 7, 2024) – It’s been two years. Two years since portions of Eastern Kentucky changed — both her landscape and her people.
“The holes. That is the thing that jumps out at me still on my drives each day,” said Key Douthitt, M.D., medical director for UK HealthCare’s North Fork Valley Clinic in Hazard, Kentucky. “The places where I knew there was a big building, and it is not there anymore. It is the absence of what was.”
The scars left behind by the 2022 flood are also not something those just passing through might notice at this point. But for those who call the area home, it is all still very fresh.
“Seeing those holes where you know people once lived or was someone’s once longstanding business … that is something that sort of hits you in the face every day,” said Douthitt, who makes his commute to work each day in Perry County through some of the hardest-hit areas.
Douthitt says just because there are remnants of crumbled buildings and properties wiped away, that doesn’t mean progress is not happening.
“It is a grind. There’s a reason why they call it long-term recovery,” he said. “It’s because you must go in knowing in that we’re not going to turn this around in six months and get everybody fixed. You have to keep in mind that it is a long process — a marathon, not a sprint.”
As the housing chair for the Breathitt County Long Term Recovery committee, he knows firsthand about the grind. He also sees the slow but steady progress being made. “We are up to 11 houses that we’ve built for flood survivors through Mennonite Disaster Services,” said Douthitt.
Eleven might not seem like much, but considering the challenges and work it takes on the front end just to find a place for a new home to be built, 11 homes and all those that will follow are critical in the big picture.
“Each new home that goes up, it helps people not lose hope,” said Douthitt.
After all, this is far from a small task, with hundreds of homes destroyed or majorly damaged in Breathitt County alone. Plus, the 2022 flooding came on the heels of a FEMA-declared flooding disaster in 2021 that the county is also still recovering from.
“You sort of feel sometimes like you’re spinning your wheels trying to get things moving in the right direction,” said Douthitt. “But I’m hopeful.”
Douthitt continues to help flood survivors navigate the process of applying for and receiving relief assistance money from the government to get back into permanent housing. Some of the money can be used for reconstruction. That means someone’s home was destroyed, but they can rebuild on that same plot of land but at a different location on the land. Then other money can be used for what is considered new housing. New housing is for somebody who does not have any land out of the floodplain and must find new property to build on.
“The big issue is there is not a whole lot of land that is suitable,” said Douthitt. “The whole point is to get people out of the floodplain so they are safer from future floods and not exposed to that trauma again.”
In Eastern Kentucky, it’s common for generations of families to put their homes on the same stretch of land. Douthitt has found many people do not want to leave their property. He cites a common refrain: “I was born and raised here, and this is where I’m going to die.”
Douthitt and others on the housing committee watched people in their communities living in campers, mobile homes and even tents. They knew they had to get people out of those temporary homes. This led Douthitt to walking unoccupied areas to find strips of land suitable for building. After a few weeks of trekking the terrain, including a 200-acre property that took about eight hours, he realized he needed to work smarter, not harder. The family medicine doctor tapped into his resources as part of the UK family and connected with Doug Curl at UK’s Kentucky Geological Survey (KGS).
“I’m so fortunate that as a part of UK, I’ve had these resources. We have never felt alone,” said Douthitt.
With the expertise and resources through KGS, they were able to make headway and a quicker rate and use their time and energy more efficiently. Now roughly two years out from starting the process, some promise is being seen thanks to the mapping work.
“The city did purchase a property we identified through the maps,” said Douthitt. “It is currently undergoing environmental review with the plan to build at least seven new houses on the property. There are some other properties we identified and referred that are being looked at by the county.”
There are some properties also being referred to or that they plan to refer to Gov. Andy Beshear’s office to see what resources are available for engineering and development costs to make the land suitable for homes. Douthitt says these properties are promising sites for dozens of homes.
“Since this process uses government funds, they have to do an environmental review and check off other criteria. It is just a long, long process,” he said. “In the meantime, our neighbors are living in substandard conditions. Every week that passes, it’s just going really slow, because you want to get these people recovered. You want to get them back in a safe place that they can call home and that gets them out of the floodplain. It definitely isn’t happening as quick as we would like, but we’re seeing some progress, and I expect next year it will really explode.”
The community doctor is among several UK and UK HealthCare employees who have literally had their boots on the ground from the beginning. They jumped into action to help their neighbors in the immediate aftermath. They were part of the teams traveling by foot, ATVs and even horseback to get to survivors in those first days. They were joined by other UK HealthCare providers in the area, UK Retail Pharmacy members and others who knew the terrain. The horseback teams were led by members of the Breathitt Horseman’s Association, which is part of the Breathitt County Cooperative Extension. The teams provided tetanus shots, medications, water, first aid and connections with other needed resources.
Their work to help flood survivors has been tireless and continues today. At times they use their field of expertise to help and at other times their compassion as humans drives them to help however they can. The UK Center of Excellence in Rural Health (UK CERH) and their Kentucky Homeplace program have certainly stood in as a resource for basic needs and source of comfort for survivors throughout the impacted counties. Kentucky Homeplace is recognized at the national, state and local levels as a community health worker model that works. For more than three decades , Kentucky Homeplace has been linking rural Kentuckians with medical, social and environmental services they otherwise might have gone without.
“Our community health workers at Kentucky Homeplace continue to receive referrals related to the flooding, even at the two-year mark. Our team will continue reaching out to help those in need of access to services and other essentials for daily living,” said Fran Feltner, D.N.P., director of the UK CERH. “As far as recovery, it will take years to recover from the damage of the flood and the interruption of daily living for the people in eastern Kentucky. There is still work to be done.”
Kentucky Homeplace leaders spoke at a national conference earlier this year to share how their community health workers have helped, both in the early response and in long-term recovery efforts. They emphasized the important role community health workers can play during disaster response and recovery.
“We haven’t forgotten about you,” said Douthitt. “We are out here every day trying to move this process forward, from the governor on down to our individual case managers and volunteers throughout the community. Everyone is going to have a safe place to live. Everyone deserves that and we are not going to stop till we get there.”
Douthitt says he often refers back to an old saying: How do you walk around the world? One step at a time.
“We just have to keep putting those feet forward,” he said. “If we keep moving the right direction, eventually we will get everyone completely recovered and until then we will celebrate our small victories – keeping the hope alive.”
Kentucky
Lexington veteran’s remains found in Indiana park
CLARKSVILLE, In. (WKYT) — The remains of a Kentucky veteran who was the subject of a Green Alert were found in a park.
The remains of Jyronna Dione Parker, 54, were found March 22 by officers from the Clarksville Police Department. His body was found in Ashland Park on the river’s shoreline.
In late 2025, a Green Alert was issued for Parker. This alert was cancelled by the Lexington Police department after they determined he was not at risk.
Despite the cancellation of the alert, Parker had been reported missing from Lexington since Oct 17.
What is a Green Alert?
Under Kentucky law, a Green Alert is issued when a veteran at risk goes missing. It’s designed to help first responders and the public locate missing veterans who may be in danger by quickly notifying emergency management agencies, search and rescue teams, and local media outlets.
Copyright 2026 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Kentucky legislature passes bill shrinking JCPS board to 5 members
Facts About the Kentucky General Assembly
Discover key facts about the Kentucky General Assembly, including its history, structure, and state government functions.
FRANKFORT, Ky. — A revamped bill unveiled late on the final day to pass legislation in the 2026 Kentucky General Assembly with the ability to later override a veto would significantly alter the makeup of Louisville’s public school board.
The new Senate Bill 4 would cut the number of seats on the Jefferson County Board of Education from seven to five. It includes an emergency clause, meaning it would go into effect immediately if passed — Rep. Jason Nemes, R-Middletown, who introduced the new bill in the House, said the legislation includes new district maps to be used when voters head to the ballot box this year but added JCPS would be able to redraw its own maps after that.
The bill passed in the House on a 72-21 vote mostly along party lines, with three Republicans (Rep. Vanessa Grossl, R-Georgetown, Rep. Patrick Flannery, R-Olive Hill, and Rep. Kim Holloway, R-Mayfield) joining Democrats in opposition.
It quickly passed 25-7 in the Senate a few minutes later, with Sen. Brandon Smith, R-Hazard, and Sen. Robin Webb, R-Grayson, joining Democrats in voting no.
A copy of the bill was not immediately available.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Stephen West, R-Paris, originally aimed to create a principal leadership and mentorship program. But after changes in the House, new provisions were added that would affect the makeup of boards for large school districts, including Jefferson County Public Schools and Fayette County Public Schools.
SB 4 is one of many education bills introduced this session, several of which have specifically targeted JCPS. Senate Bill 1, also passed on April 1, gives more power to JCPS’s superintendent while requiring the board to focus on long-term strategies.
The bills come as JCPS navigates an ongoing financial crisis, with a $188 million shortfall expected in the next budget. Prior to the revisions, the SB 4 would have required two new members with “expertise in finance” to be appointed by the state treasurer, Republican Mark Metcalf. That provision was removed during deliberations between the House and Senate.
In an interview after the votes, board Vice-Chair James Craig told The Courier Journal a five-member board “has made sense to me for a number of reasons.” It’s in line with every other district in the state, he said, and it can be difficult to find qualified candidates who have the bandwidth in their lives to devote enough effort to do the job right.
“I think given the realities of what the legislature could have done, how other districts are governed and the challenges that we’ve faced, Senate Bill 4 reflects a compromise that should be workable,” Craig said. “… But I have significant concerns about Senate Bill 1 and the way it interacts with Senate Bill 4.”
Lawmakers have listened to concerns he and other education advocates have raised, he said, removing some of the “problematic provisions” that had been floated as ones that could be included in SB 1. But the bill takes power from the elected board, he noted, and gives it to an unelected superintendent — in Louisville’s case, he added, someone who is “new to the city of Louisville in the last year.” JCPS Superintendent Brian Yearwood testified against SB 1 earlier this session in Frankfort.
“In my opinion, voters in the city of Louisville do not want a super-empowered superintendent. They want a democratically elected Board of Education that is accountable to them,” Craig added.
Board members will have a discussion with their attorney about potentially challenging SB 1 in court, he said. A similar bill passed in 2022 was struck down late last year by the state Supreme Court after previously being upheld by the high court.
JCPS leaders and board members have raised concerns about the earlier iteration of SB 4 and the removal of two board positions. Three members of JCPS board — Craig, Chair Corrie Shull and Linda Duncan — are scheduled to be up for reelection in November.
Craig does not plan to run again this year, he added.
“Eight years of intense, uncompensated public service have been fulfilling,” he wrote in a text message. “It is time for me to return to the full time practice of law.”
This story will be updated.
Reach Lucas Aulbach at laulbach@courier-journal.com. Reach reporter Keely Doll at kdoll@courierjournal.com or follow her on X at @keely_doll.
Kentucky
Final gargoyle returned to its perch atop rehabbed Kentucky cathedral modeled after Notre Dame
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) — The last stone gargoyle has been returned to its perch as part of a two-year restoration of a Kentucky cathedral with a facade modeled after Notre Dame in Paris.
The rehab project at the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption was sorely needed to repair deteriorated stone, metal and glass that adorns the limestone exterior. The project included 32 recreated gargoyles along with repairs of deteriorated finials, arches and balustrades.
The 125-year-old church, in Covington just across the Ohio River from Cincinnati, offers the experience of a European gothic cathedral in the Midwest, said the Very Rev. Ryan Maher, the cathedral’s rector. The cathedral has an “intimate connection to what is really the most popular and most well-known cathedral outside of Rome itself,” he said.
“I think it’s very special and very unique,” said Maher, who watched from the sidewalk as the last gargoyle was raised to top of the facade on Monday.
The renovation price tag was nearly $8 million, and most came from donations, Maher said.
Brian Walter, CEO of Trisco Systems, the contractor, said the final gargoyle going in was “a symbol of the accomplishment of all our facade work.”
“That’s a big, monumental occasion for not only people here, but for us. That kind of symbolized the last stone we’re putting in,” Walter said.
Restoration plans grew out of Maher’s discovery in 2018 of a large piece of stone that fell from the exterior.
“We realized at that time that we needed to investigate not only the source of that one piece of stone that had fallen, but to take a look at the overall facade of the cathedral,” Maher said.
Workers will continue with smaller tasks around the facade, including the installation of chimeras that sit on the roofline, but the heavy lifting has been completed, Walter said.
“This is kind of a once or twice in a lifetime project,” Walter said.
-
South-Carolina4 days agoSouth Carolina vs TCU predictions for Elite Eight game in March Madness
-
Education1 week agoVideo: Trader Joe’s Dip Head-to-Head Taste Test
-
Miami, FL1 week agoJannik Sinner’s Girlfriend Laila Hasanovic Stuns in Ab-Revealing Post Amid Miami Open
-
Culture1 week agoWil Wheaton Discusses ‘Stand By Me’ and Narrating ‘The Body’ Audiobook
-
Minneapolis, MN1 week agoBoy who shielded classmate during school shooting receives Medal of Honor
-
Culture1 week agoWhat Happens When We Die? This Wallace Stevens Poem Has Thoughts.
-
Tennessee1 week agoTennessee Police Investigating Alleged Assault Involving ‘Reacher’ Star Alan Ritchson
-
Vermont4 days ago
Skier dies after fall at Sugarbush Resort
