News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Neighbors react to man being shot, killed by off-duty officer in Jeffersontown
SUMMARY: An off-duty Jeffersontown officer responded to reports of a man causing a disturbance by knocking out windows near Billtown Road. Upon confronting the individual, the officer fired a lethal shot, killing the man. Neighbors expressed shock and anxiety, with many watching the police activity for hours and feeling unsettled in their normally quiet neighborhood. The officer was unharmed and not wearing a body camera, as he was in plain clothes. It remains unclear if the man was armed, though other footage related to the case is believed to exist. Authorities continue investigating the incident.
Neighbors react to man being shot, killed by off-duty officer in Jeffersontown
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Morning weather forecast: 5/29/25
SUMMARY: This morning’s forecast shows mostly dry conditions across the region, with isolated showers developing mainly in central Kentucky, including Bourbon, Nicholas, and parts northwest of Owensville. Dense fog is present in southern and southeast Kentucky but will clear soon. Temperatures are in the low to mid-60s, rising to the mid and upper 70s today with scattered afternoon storms likely. A southern disturbance will bring rain to southeast Kentucky later tonight, with most rain arriving after midnight, causing a wet Friday morning commute. Cooler, stormy conditions will persist Friday, but drier, warmer weather returns early next week despite possible isolated showers over the weekend.
FOX 56 chief meteorologist Justin Logan shares central Kentucky’s Thursday morning forecast.
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
U.S. could have the best health care. But not if profit-driven private sector keeps control.
by Kay Tillow, Kentucky Lantern
May 29, 2025
Ours is the only nation in the industrialized world that has turned health care over to the private sector, subjecting all of us to life expectancy five years below the norm in other wealthy countries.
More of our babies die in the first year of life and more of our moms die in childbirth than in any other industrialized country.
We spend twice as much per person on health care in the United States as peer countries, yet we have the highest rates of death for conditions that are treatable.
On the congressional agenda are cuts to Medicaid of more than $600 billion over 10 years. Hundreds of thousands Kentuckians are among those in the line of fire. The results will be deadly. Administration officials are determined to offset the tax cuts that will benefit the wealthiest even though it means loss of health care for millions of Americans.
People are in the streets to stop the catastrophic damage to Medicaid.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 10.3 million people would lose their Medicaid coverage by 2034 under the GOP bill. Med Pac, the independent agency that advises Congress, predicts the projected cuts will throw 8 million onto the uninsured rolls.
Med Pac has also informed Congress that the privatized Medicare plans, misnamed Medicare Advantage, that were supposed to save money are instead costing us $84 billion a year more than if those patients were in traditional Medicare.
So this looks like an easy fix. Leave Medicaid alone. Cut out the Medicare Advantage plans, placing those patients onto the better coverage of traditional Medicare, saving more than enough money over 10 years than is needed to offset the tax cuts. Problem solved!
But in health care things are seldom simple. The Medicare Advantage patients who gained access to traditional Medicare would find themselves faced with unaffordable monthly premiums for the prescription drugs and supplemental coverage they would need. The Medicaid patients who were rescued from the firing squad will continue to suffer at the hands of the private Medicaid managed care companies that regularly deny 12% of claims, a rate double the awful rate in Medicare Advantage.
Medicaid patients would still have a hard time finding specialists. Their rural hospitals would continue to close as the Medicaid payments are insufficient to maintain the necessary infrastructure. Billions of the public funds provided for Medicaid patients would be siphoned into the coffers of the insurance companies as care, by law, is secondary to profit, in this privatized Medicaid system.
Those fortunate enough to have health care through their employers will continue to find the premiums, deductibles and co-pays beyond their means. The average family plan is now over $25,000 a year. The 15 years since the passage of health care reform have left 100 million of us in medical debt in what the Commonwealth Fund accurately calls a failing health care system.
Over 130 national and local organizations have called for a national day of action on Sat., May 31, to “Demand Health Not Profit: Put Single Payer on the Nation’s Agenda.”
On that day in 25 cities from Detroit to Houston and Seattle to Charlotte, people will gather to advocate against cuts in an already failing system and in favor of enhanced Medicare for all.
The protesters are demanding passage of a publicly financed, national single-payer program that would provide comprehensive coverage to everyone.
In Kentucky, the Rally for Health Not Profit will be at noon Saturday at the Mazzoli Federal Building in Louisville. The people there will be fighting for all of those on the firing lines and insisting that, this time around, we can remove the profits from health care and enact a plan that cares for all of us.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
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 U.S. could have the best health care. But not if profit-driven private sector keeps control. 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: Left-Leaning
This article presents a clear progressive perspective on healthcare policy, criticizing the privatization of health services and highlighting the negative impacts of Medicaid cuts championed by Republicans. It emphasizes health inequities, government spending priorities favoring the wealthy, and supports a national single-payer system. The tone and framing favor expanded public healthcare coverage and decry private-sector profit motives in healthcare, consistent with left-leaning advocacy for more government involvement and social safety nets. However, it stops short of overt partisan attack language, focusing instead on policy critique and grassroots activism.
News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
RECAP: Steven Lawson trial enters second day in Bowling Green
SUMMARY: The trial of Steven Lawson, charged with conspiracy to commit murder and tampering with evidence in the 2015 disappearance of Crystal Rogers, continued in Bowling Green. Rogers’ body was never found. Several witnesses testified, including Lawson’s stepdaughter, Lorin Hardin, who contradicted his claims about helping her before Rogers vanished. Elizabeth Chesser revealed Lawson’s alleged threat to his wife regarding knowledge of a murder. Detective Tim O’Daniel presented cell tower evidence placing Lawson’s phone on the route Rogers took the night she disappeared. Phone records showed calls between Lawson, his family, and Brooks Houck, who faces murder charges. The trial resumes May 29.
The post RECAP: Steven Lawson trial enters second day in Bowling Green appeared first on www.wnky.com
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