The government shutdown is threatening a food benefit program that helps one in eight Kentuckians. Our elected leaders yawn.
Stephen C. “Steve” Cawood, an Eastern Kentucky lawyer who championed coal miners, clean water and better schools, died Oct.
Cawood was unafraid to challenge the region’s powerful coal industry as an attorney and one-term state legislator.
7mon MSN
Utility bills are eating up paychecks across Louisville, leaving less money for everyday expenses
For tens of thousands of Louisville households, utility bills pose a major barrier to housing affordability, a new report ...
At the national level, the impact would be astronomical. University of Kentucky Center for Poverty Research Director James ...
SNAP provides food benefits to low-income families. In California alone more than 5.5 million Americans rely on SNAP each ...
2don MSNOpinion
Medicaid change for KY Appalachians with substance use disorder will cost us all | Opinion
H.R. 1 will devastate Medicaid, but Kentucky can protect thousands of residents, particularly those at highest risk, while ...
Kentuckians receiving much-needed cash payments through the Kentucky Transitional Assistance Program will receive less ...
The funding bill, which is in limbo with the shutdown, would reject the Trump administration’s request to rescind funding for ...
A local nonprofit is working to end period poverty across Kentuckiana and on Sunday, the community stepped up to help.
In a middle school art room at Francis Parker School of Louisville, students in the Frances Club are building, painting and ...
Rep. Cynthia Roe (R-Lindsay) hosted an interim study Thursday exploring policy solutions related to lung cancer prevention, ...
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