News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Dodging showers and storms through Derby weekend
SUMMARY: Spring warmth returned to Central and Eastern Kentucky on Friday, with highs in the 70s and 80s. Gusty winds and rising humidity signaled more storms, with strong to severe thunderstorms expected Friday evening, mainly involving damaging winds and large hail. The Kentucky Derby forecast predicts intermittent rain and thunderstorms, with temperatures in the mid to upper 60s. Sunday will see scattered showers as a persistent low pressure system remains over the region. A brief dry period is expected Monday before another round of light, spotty showers returns on Wednesday.
The post Dodging showers and storms through Derby weekend appeared first on www.wtvq.com
News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Evening weather forecast: 5/2/2025
SUMMARY: Evening weather update for 5/2/2025: Scattered storms remain, with one severe storm in parts of Lee and Jackson Counties, centered over McKe until 7:00 p.m. The watch has been mostly lifted, though a strong storm in Anderson County could prompt another warning shortly. Most storms are expected to subside by 9:00 p.m. Derby weekend brings showers and storm chances, especially around Church Hill, with a rainy Sunday as well. Louisville will see a significant temperature drop. Scattered showers and storms will continue into tomorrow morning, with possible isolated severe storms and lingering rains into Sunday. More updates will follow as needed.

Kentucky’s evening weather forecast for May 2, 2025.
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Elizabeth McCall with Woodford Reserve
SUMMARY: Woodford Reserve is celebrating the 151st Kentucky Derby with a special $5,000 Mint Julep served in exquisite gold-plated cups featuring the Derby trophy and synthetic pink sapphires. Master distiller Elizabeth McCall highlights the tribute to the three rare female Kentucky Derby winners by tailoring the julep recipe to honor them, using three types of mint—chocolate, spearmint, and peppermint—and Woodford Reserve bourbon. The event supports a charity in Paris, Kentucky, providing sanctuary for broodmares, honoring mares that have contributed to the thoroughbred industry. The celebration took place at Churchill Downs during Derby weekend.

Out & About with DeAnn Stephens
News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Louisville air pollution regulator to contest grant termination for air toxics study
by Liam Niemeyer, Kentucky Lantern
May 1, 2025
Louisville’s air pollution regulator will dispute the Trump administration’s termination of a grant that funded an air toxics monitoring study in West Louisville, a larger community effort to study air pollution health impacts in neighborhoods near the Rubbertown industrial complex.
The Louisville Metro Air Pollution Control District (APCD) received a memo from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency March 31 stating a $1 million grant from the Environmental Justice Government-to-Government Program would be terminated because, in part, it was “inconsistent with, and no longer effectuates, agency priorities.” An EPA official in a court filing wrote recently that the agency was canceling hundreds of EPA grants, most of them involving environmental justice programs.
Matt Mudd, a spokesperson with APCD, told the Lantern Wednesday the regulator planned to dispute the grant termination with the EPA through an internal process. Rachael Hamilton, the executive director of APCD, in an April 16 board meeting described the option to dispute the grant termination as an “administrative remedy” that would be sent to a regional EPA administrator. Hamilton said in the meeting last month there had been a “fair amount” of litigation from other grantees that have had grants terminated.
The funding, announced in 2023 during the Biden administration, was set to support the placement of canisters measuring volatile organic compounds and two other monitors measuring airborne metals. Some of the monitors were to be placed downwind of Rubbertown, a cluster of chemical plants near West Louisville that have long been the subject of complaints from the adjacent neighborhoods and beyond.
Maybe the Biden-Harris Administration shouldn’t have forced their radical agenda of wasteful DEI programs and ‘environmental justice’ preferencing on the EPA’s core mission of protecting human health and the environment.
– A statement from the EPA’s headquarters provided by a spokesman
The monitors were to be a part of a one-year study to compare the amount of air pollution and health impacts to a previous study done in the early 2000s that found levels of a number of cancer-causing pollutants to be unacceptable high. Mudd said the study’s start date was “imminent” before the grant was terminated.
Terry Johnson, a spokesperson for the EPA regional office that covers Kentucky, provided a statement from the agency’s headquarters that stated the EPA was reviewing all awarded grants “to ensure each is an appropriate use of taxpayer dollars and to understand how those programs align with administration priorities.”
“Maybe the Biden-Harris Administration shouldn’t have forced their radical agenda of wasteful DEI programs and ‘environmental justice’ preferencing on the EPA’s core mission of protecting human health and the environment,” the statement read.
Johnson did not answer emailed follow-up questions from the Lantern asking what specific issues the agency had with the grant.
Rep. Joshua Watkins, D-Louisville, who represents parts of West Louisville neighborhoods in the state legislature, said he hoped the city would exhaust all resources “to ensure that their mission isn’t hindered by any changes — this sort of whiplash of changes — that we see coming from the federal government.”
“Environmental justice is a freedom issue, and if you don’t have a high quality of air, you aren’t free to breathe and live a quality of life,” Watkins told the Lantern. “Clean air is nonpartisan. You need it if you’re Republican, you need it if you’re a Democrat.”
Watkins, who noted city residents in predominantly Black neighborhoods in West Louisville have significantly lower life expectancies compared to the east half of the city, questioned why the air toxics monitoring study wouldn’t align with the EPA’s mission of protecting human health and the environment.
“What neighborhoods align, I guess, with the EPA mission?” he said. “If not for the residents of West Louisville who have documented evidence of significantly worse health outcomes, why would we not focus on those citizens?”
The air monitoring study was a piece of a larger project addressing the health impacts of air pollution, involving other community partners including the University of Louisville’s Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute, the West Jefferson County Community Task Force, Park DuValle Community Health Centers and Louisville’s public health and wellness department.
UofL researchers planned to conduct a wastewater sampling study alongside the air toxics monitoring study and collect data from both to determine “community health risks”; Park DuValle Community Health Centers would use the health impact findings from the project to train health professionals on how to treat exposure to air pollution; and the West Jefferson Community Task Force would hold community meetings to provide feedback on the project’s findings and policy recommendations.
Arnita Gadson, the executive director of the West Jefferson County Community Task Force, told the Lantern she was especially interested in how the “much needed” project planned to help inform community health workers and doctors on how to treat the impacts of exposure to air pollution. She said the health impacts of air pollution can also extend beyond West Louisville, given that residents impacted by pollution can move elsewhere and bring their health issues with them.
“This grant was to help everybody,” Gadson said. “I think we were on the precipice of actually establishing a platform that meant that doctors really could start using some of this.”
Attempts on Wednesday to reach the CEO of Park DuValle Community Health Centers and a key UofL researcher involved with the project were not successful.
Eboni Cochran, the co-director of the grassroots organization Rubbertown Emergency ACTion that seeks to push back against pollution from industries in Rubbertown, told the Lantern while the termination of the grant was sad, APCD could do more to address immediate air pollution impacts. Cochran pointed to ongoing complaints of dust and fires at an industrial plant in the Parkland neighborhood of Louisville.
“An important part of what they were doing was to engage medical professionals, right? I think that is vital to the work of environmental justice,” Cochran said. “However, you can even prevent or reduce people’s likelihood of them even having to get to the medical professional if you listened to the people who live near these industries.”
This story has been updated to clarify that the EPA statement came from the agency headquarters.
Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com.
The post Louisville air pollution regulator to contest grant termination for air toxics study appeared first on kentuckylantern.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
The article presents a factual account of the termination of a grant intended for an environmental health study, with a focus on air pollution in West Louisville. It highlights the perspectives of local officials, community leaders, and researchers, especially those advocating for environmental justice. While the tone is largely neutral, it subtly leans towards the Center-Left by emphasizing the importance of environmental justice, the need for government intervention, and the criticism of the Trump administration’s actions, particularly regarding the cancellation of grants. The article does not explicitly endorse a partisan perspective, but the framing of environmental justice as a fundamental issue reflects values commonly associated with the Center-Left. The inclusion of community responses questioning the termination of the grant further aligns with advocacy for environmental and public health initiatives, often championed by the Left. Overall, the piece offers a relatively balanced report while showcasing an implicit alignment with progressive values on environmental policy and justice.
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