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Kentucky still in ‘search and rescue’ as death toll reaches 11, says Beshear

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kentuckylantern.com – McKenna Horsley – 2025-02-17 10:46:00

Kentucky still in ‘search and rescue’ as death toll reaches 11, says Beshear

by McKenna Horsley, Kentucky Lantern
February 17, 2025

Kentucky is still in the “search and rescue phase” following deadly statewide floods over the weekend, Gov. Andy Beshear said Monday morning.

The governor said 11 Kentuckians have now been confirmed dead as a result of the weather. During a press conference at the Kentucky Emergency Operations Center in Frankfort, Beshear said the latest deaths include an adult man in Hardin County and another man in Floyd County. 

With some rivers still cresting, more severe weather is on the way for Kentucky Tuesday night into Wednesday night. Pooled water is at risk of freezing, leaving black ice on roads while the predicted snow would create challenges for transportation crews already working to clear roads, Beshear said.

Beshear expressed gratitude for local, state and national crews coming to Kentucky to help with emergency response efforts. He said the entire state has standing water in different areas and more than 300 roads were still impacted and closed. 

“We are still in the search and rescue phase of this emergency,” the governor said. “We still have multiple different missions that are underway. There are still people that are in harm’s way.” 

Water covers Three Springs Road in Warren County, Feb. 16, 2025. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Austin Anthony)

As of Monday morning, 175 National Guard soldiers and airmen were active in Kentucky, including members of the Indiana National Guard. Beshear said additional aviation crews from Indiana and Tennessee are bound for Kentucky. Federal urban search and rescue teams from Indiana, Ohio and Tennessee were also part of operations in Kentucky. 

Beshear said two National Guard trucks were overcome by high flood waters in separate missions. While it “got very dangerous for one set of guardsmen,” they are safe. One truck was still underwater and was unrecoverable until waters recede. 

Beshear said the state would apply for individual federal assistance on Monday. President Donald Trump had previously approved Beshear’s request for an emergency disaster declaration.

“We now believe that we have enough damage and evidence of enough damage to request that help for our people,” Beshear said. “If we secure it, it will open up immediate need and cleaning and sanitizing money that becomes available pretty quickly to our people.” 

After that, applications can open for further individual assistance up to $42,500, the governor said. 

While the flooding in Eastern Kentucky was not as devastating as in July 2022 when record rains caused flash flooding, Beshear said daily rainfall records were set in Frankfort, Paducah, Bowling Green, London and Jackson. 

“I think we know that climate change is making more weather events happen, but we keep getting hit over and over,” Beshear said in response to a question. “And while the ‘why’ is hard, I think we always see God in the response.

“Good people, brave people, doing the right thing, showing up for their neighbors, hopefully contributing to the Team Kentucky Storm Relief Fund. We’ve got to make sure we’re here for every victim and victim’s family of this storm, but also everybody who’s displaced. They deserve as much of our effort as those that were harmed after the tornadoes or that last set of flooding.” Beshear was referring to deadly tornadoes that tore through Kentucky in December 2021, killing 74 people.The flooding in Eastern Kentucky in 2022 took 45 lives.

Secretary of Transportation Jim Gray emphasized drivers should not enter high water. He said transportation workers are continuing to make road repairs, such as responding to a rockslide on I-69 in Caldwell County, but a “very high” number of road closures remain. To get up to date information about road closures, visit goky.ky.gov.

As of Monday morning, 14,672 people were without power, the governor said. 

Some state facilities were also impacted by the weather. Department of Juvenile Justice Community Services offices in Harlan, Pike and Clay counties have been “flooded and they’re inoperable,” Beshear said. The department is looking for temporary office locations. 

The main source of water for Breathitt County Juvenile Justice Center has been shut off, affecting the local juvenile detention center. The detention center is using bottled water and looking for portable showers, the governor said. The county expects to get the water back on within three days, “but we know that we’re going to need water a lot quicker than that.” 

Monday afternoon, Beshear will travel to Pikeville in Eastern Kentucky and provide another update on the emergency response. Depending on logistics, he may meet with families taking shelter at Jenny Wiley State Resort Park. Across four state parks, 143 people were taking shelter as of the morning update. 

Beshear reminded Kentuckians to call 911 only in situations where their life is threatened or are facing an emergency. For non-emergency situations, call 502-607-6665 or visit kyem.ky.gov

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.

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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed

Stormy weather continues into the mid-week

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www.wtvq.com – T.G. Shuck – 2025-06-17 15:06:00

SUMMARY: Central and Eastern Kentucky have experienced persistent stormy weather with scattered showers and slow thunderstorms causing localized heavy rain and minor flooding. Tuesday saw cooler highs in the upper 70s to low 80s under thick clouds. Wednesday brings muggy conditions with mid-80s highs and mostly dry skies early, but a cold front will increase late-day thunderstorm chances, with a Level 2 severe risk for damaging winds northwest of Lexington. The front passes Thursday, ending daily storms but not lowering temperatures. Summer kicks off Friday with mid-80s warmth, rising to upper 80s and low 90s by the weekend, with humid, mostly dry weather and possible afternoon storms early next week.

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Smiths Grove man arrested after motorcycle pursuit

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www.wnky.com – WNKY Staff – 2025-06-17 13:28:00

SUMMARY: A Warren County man, Steven Dye, 38, of Smiths Grove, was arrested after leading Kentucky State Police on a high-speed motorcycle chase in Bowling Green. The pursuit began when troopers attempted a traffic stop for a missing taillight. Dye fled, reaching 75 mph in a 35 mph zone, ran a red light, nearly caused a head-on collision, and eventually lost control on Rock Creek Drive. Authorities found meth, pills, marijuana, a handgun, digital scales, cash, and a stolen motorcycle. Dye faces multiple charges including drug trafficking, fleeing police, possessing a firearm as a felon, and driving under the influence.

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Two-thirds of those in nonpartisan poll view GOP’s tax and spending cut bill unfavorably

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kentuckylantern.com – Jennifer Shutt – 2025-06-17 06:37:00


A KFF poll reveals broad public opposition to the GOP’s House-passed “big, beautiful bill,” with 64% of Americans disapproving, including 87% of Democrats and 73% of independents, though 61% of Republicans and 72% of MAGA supporters favor it. Opposition grows when informed of impacts like a $700 billion Medicaid cut and 10 million losing insurance. The bill risks reducing funding for hospitals and blocks Medicaid funds for Planned Parenthood, a provision opposed by 67%-80% of respondents. Despite controversy, 83% support Medicaid overall. Senate Republicans are modifying the bill, facing vote-a-rama debates before approval.

by Jennifer Shutt, Kentucky Lantern
June 17, 2025

WASHINGTON — Republicans and backers of President Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again platform support the party’s “big, beautiful bill” as passed by the U.S. House, though Americans overall view the legislation unfavorably, according to a poll released Tuesday by the nonpartisan health research organization KFF.

The survey shows that nearly two-thirds of those polled, or 64%, don’t support the tax policy changes and spending cuts Republicans have included in the sweeping House version of the bill that the Senate plans to take up this month.

When broken down by political affiliation, just 13% of Democrats and 27% of independents view the legislation favorably. Those numbers are in sharp contrast to Republicans, with 61% supporting the bill and 72% of those who identify as MAGA supporters.

But those views fluctuated when the people surveyed were asked specific questions about certain elements of the package and the real-world impacts of the legislation:

  • The overall percentage of those surveyed with an unfavorable view of the bill increased from 64% to 67% when they were told it would lower federal spending on Medicaid by more than $700 billion, an estimate by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
  • Dislike of the legislation rose to 74% when those polled were told policy changes would lead to 10 million people losing their health insurance coverage, another estimate from the CBO analysis.
  • Opposition rose to 79% when people were told the legislation would reduce funding for local hospitals.

“The public hasn’t had much time to digest what’s in the big, beautiful, but almost incomprehensible bill as it races through Congress, and many don’t have a lot of information about it,” KFF President and CEO Drew Altman wrote in a statement. “Our poll shows that views toward the bill and its health-care provisions can shift when presented with more information and arguments about its effects, even among MAGA supporters.”

Senators wrestling with what to do

The House voted mostly along party lines to approve its 11-bill package in late May, sending the legislation to the Senate.

GOP senators have spent weeks internally debating which parts of the House legislation to keep, which to change and which to remove, while also conducting closed-door meetings with the parliamentarian to determine which parts of the bill comply with the rules for the complex reconciliation process.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., plans to bring his chamber’s version of the package to the floor next week, though that timeline could slip. Before the Senate can approve the rewritten bill, lawmakers will spend hours voting on dozens of amendments during what’s known as a vote-a-rama.

Significant bipartisan support for Medicaid

The KFF poll released Tuesday shows that 83% of Americans support Medicaid, slated for an overhaul and spending reductions by GOP lawmakers.

That support remains high across political parties, with 93% of Democrats, 83% of independents and 74% of Republicans holding a favorable opinion of the state-federal health program for lower-income people and some with disabilities.

Those surveyed appeared supportive of a provision in the House bill that would require some people on Medicaid to work, participate in community service, or attend an educational program at least 80 hours a month.

The change is supported by about two-thirds of those surveyed, though the numbers shift depending on how the question is asked.

For example, when told that most adults on Medicaid already work and that not being able to complete the paperwork associated with the new requirement could cause some to lose coverage, 64% of those polled opposed the new requirement. 

Planned Parenthood

There was also broad opposition, 67% overall, to language in the House bill that would block any Medicaid funding from going to Planned Parenthood for routine health care. There is a long-standing prohibition on federal funding from going toward abortion with exceptions for rape, incest, or the life of the pregnant patient.

Opposition to the Planned Parenthood provision increased to 80% when those polled were told that no federal payments to Planned Parenthood go directly toward abortion and that ending all Medicaid payments to the organization would make it more challenging for lower-income women to access birth control, cancer screenings and STD testing.

Republicans are more supportive of that change, with 54% backing the policy and 46% opposing the new block on Medicaid patients going to Planned Parenthood. But 78% of independent women and 51% of Republican women oppose the change.

Food assistance program

Those surveyed also had concerns about how changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, would impact lower-income people’s ability to afford food, with 70% saying they were either very or somewhat concerned.

Democrats held the highest level of concern at 92%, followed by independents at 74% and Republicans at 47%.

Overall, Republicans hold the highest share of people polled who believe the dozens of GOP policy changes in the “big, beautiful bill” will help them or their family.

A total of 32% of Republicans surveyed believe the legislation will benefit them, while 47% said it will not make much of a difference and 21% said it will hurt them or their family.

Thirteen percent of independents expect the legislation will help them, while 39% said it likely won’t make a difference and 47% expect it will harm them or their family.

Of Democrats polled, just 6% said they expect the GOP mega-bill to help them, while 26% said it wouldn’t matter much and 66% expected it to hurt them or their family.

When asked whether the bill would help, not make much of a difference, or hurt certain groups of people, the largest percentage of those polled expect it to help wealthy people.

Fifty-one percent of those surveyed said they expect wealthy people will benefit from the bill, 21% believe it will help people with lower incomes and 20% said they think middle-class families will benefit.

Seventeen percent think it will help immigrants, 14% expect it to help people who buy their own health insurance, 13% believe it will help people on Medicaid, 13% think it will help people on SNAP and 8% expect it will benefit undocumented immigrants.

KFF conducted the poll June 4 – 8, both online and by telephone, among a nationally representative sample of 1,321 U.S. adults. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points for the full sample size. 

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.

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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

This article presents data from a nonpartisan poll while highlighting public opposition to a Republican-backed bill, emphasizing the negative impacts of proposed GOP policy changes, particularly in areas like Medicaid, SNAP, and Planned Parenthood funding. The framing often underscores how public support drops when consequences are explained, and it presents the perspectives of Democrats and independents more sympathetically. Although factual and sourced, the tone and selective emphasis on adverse outcomes and dissent suggest a modest Center-Left bias in how the information is contextualized and presented.

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