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William Prewitt
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

William Prewitt, 77, of Hazard , passed away Saturday, June 15 in Hazard.

He was a retired truck driver for Combs Petroleum, and the son of the late Silas Prewitt and the late Dora Gayhart Wilkerson. He was also preceded in death by his wife, Brenda Fraley Prewitt.

He is survived by his daughter, Kimberly Prewitt and Glenn Farler of London; son Wendell Prewitt and wife Marie of Bulan; sister Ruth Kirby of Ohio; brother Charles Prewitt of Ohio; grandchildren Jenifer Boggs, Jordan Prewitt, and Billy Ray Farler; and five great-grandchildren.

Arrangements are being handled by Maggard Mountain View Chapel of Hazard, where the funeral services will be held on Wednesday, June 19 at 2 p.m. with Jack Carter officiating. Masonic Rites will begin at 1:30 p.m. Interment will be at Riverside Cemetery in Hazard.

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Clyde Franks
Jun 19, 2013 | 1 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Clyde “Joe” Franks, 70, died Monday, June 17 at the Hazard ARH medical center.

He was born on June 2, 1943, to the late Jesse Franks and Marie Lane Franks. He was a life-long resident of Perry County, a roofer by occupation, and enjoyed hunting and fishing. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army, and also preceded in death by his brother, Carly Franks.

He is survived by his lifelong companion, Blanche Stacy of Ary; sons Anthony Franks and Jason Franks, both of Ary; daughters Jenon Franks of Ary and Jodi Franks of Batavia, Ohio; brothers Oscar Franks of Lothair and Gene Willard Franks of Tennessee; sisters Judy Spencer of Christopher and Betty Joseph of Lothair; along with 13 grandchildren and a host of other relatives and friends.

Funeral services will be conducted on Saturday, June 22 at 11 a.m. at the Engle-Bowling Funeral Home of Hazard with Danny Stacy officiating. The interment will follow in the Stacy-Franks Cemetery located at Ary. The visitation will be at the Engle-Bowling Funeral Home on Friday Evening from 6 to 9 p.m.

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LKLP cuts programs as sequester rears its ugly head
by Amelia Holliday
Staff Reporter
Jun 19, 2013 | 1892 views | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print

HAZARD — The dirtiest four-letter word an American could utter just a few months ago was actually a nine-letter word that merely meant cutting government spending. However, since the end of March, many seem to have forgotten about the impending doom felt after the federal sequester cuts were announced.

This month, the LKLP Community Action Council, a non-profit organization serving Leslie, Knott, Letcher, and Perry counties that seeks to better the community and the poor through community action, was reminded just how dirty that nine-letter word could be after being forced to cut funding to multiple programs in the area.

Ricky Baker, executive director of the council, said the board was forced to make some difficult decisions at its last board meeting regarding programs aimed at helping those most in need in the area.

“Anytime there’s a cut, you know, it’s going to be tough on the agency as far as trying to maintain the staff that you have, and you do sometimes have to cut back on the clients you serve because you can’t take those kinds of cuts without something hurting,” Baker said.

The Head Start program, a federal program that provides education, health, and nutrition services to low-income families, which LKLP oversees, will have its federal funding cut by over $200,000 this coming fiscal year.

“We actually have letters we’re preparing to send out to participating parents with what effects it’s going to have on them,” Baker said.

LKLP also provides public transportation to those who qualify financially in the area and contracts transportation services out to other regions in the state including Bowling Green and Richmond.

Perry County Judge-Executive Denny Ray Noble, a member of the LKLP board, said the board was facing possible termination of those services provided outside of the region because of losses of large amounts of money to that part of the transportation program.

“We don’t need to be doing that. If we’re losing money we don’t need to be doing that,” Noble said

The board voted earlier this month to terminate those contracts outside of the region if there was no way to get back that lost money. Last week, Baker said state legislators called to let the board know that funds had been found to assist the contracted transportation program.

“We were going to have to terminate those if the state did not provide additional funding, but they actually decided to provide more funding,” Baker said.

Noble said there is a reason the state would not let LKLP terminate those transportation contracts.

“They can’t get anyone else to do it,” he said. “The good part about that, they’ve got that call center, and the call center’s here in Hazard and it creates jobs. If we cancel all those contracts we’re going to lose those jobs and jobs is what we need right now.”

Another program being hit hard by budget cuts is the home care program. The Kentucky River Area Development District (KRADD) contracts this service out to LKLP, meaning LKLP is given funds by KRADD to perform the services for the program, which mainly include housekeeping, grocery shopping, and any other things participants, who are 60 years old or older, need to have done to remain in unassisted living. However, at last month’s board meeting, LKLP was forced to terminate that contract due to a contract disagreement.

“They (LKLP) sent us a proposal for a renewal to do the services with the dollar amount that they wanted per unit. That dollar amount was unacceptable, it was too high; we could not negotiate that, so they pulled their offer,” Peggy Roll, human services director for KRADD, said.

Baker said LKLP had lost around $30,000 this year because of the home care program, so was forced to ask for more in their new bid for next year.

Roll said with no other offers on the table, and LKLP’s contract ending on June 30, the agency had no choice but to apply for a waiver for the program.

“We really had no way of doing it any other way because we only got the one response. With the waiver we can go ahead and bring those services in house,” she said.

Although it is unclear exactly how much the waiver will be for, Roll said there was virtually no job loss as those aids who were working with LKLP with the home care program simply applied to KRADD for their same positions.

“Nobody’s going to lose services, in many cases they won’t even notice a change,” Roll added. “We want to ensure that people continue to receive care.”

Roll said the waiver can be renewed every year, although with budget cuts running rampant it is hard to estimate exactly how much money the program will be able to be afforded by the state.

“It’s not like Medicaid where every time you add a client you’re able to bill those services. There’s one pot of money and you can only serve the number of people that pot of money can do. That money has been cut eight times in the last 13 years,” she said.

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Have you had enough, yet?
Jun 19, 2013 | 275 views | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print

News last week that $2.5 million in multi-county coal severance tax money is being used to renovate Rupp Arena has ruffled quite a few feathers in the mountains, but the foremost question we have is one you might not expect.

Had Eastern Kentucky had enough, yet?

Eastern Kentucky has a long and not too terribly proud tradition of watching as the wealth created by our natural resources is hauled away by the trainload for the benefit of someone else, someplace else.

This is not a new story. This is just more of the same.

Still, at a time when coal miners are being laid off by the thousands, when county governments are on the brink of financial disaster because of coal severance shortfalls, when the popular belief is that the coal industry is locked in permanent decline, and when more and more people are growing frustrated by ineffective state and local efforts to diversify the region’s economy, watching as $2.5 million is spent to fluff up the cushions for millionaires and future millionaires is more than a bit too much.

We simply cannot understand how mountain legislators did not stage a revolt over this outright theft, but they didn’t. Instead, unfathomably, unconscionably, they allowed it to happen.

House Speaker Greg Stumbo at first defended the move, saying, “Though Rupp is not in the coalfields, many believe it plays an important role in the state because of the tradition of the University of Kentucky basketball program, and there is strong alumni support in our region as well.” To be fair, Stumbo has since said he will seek to have the money repaid, once bonds are issued for the Rupp Arena project.

Stumbo also said the money did not jeopardize any projects in the mountains. That is a bit of a stretch, but it is technically true. The way coal severance funding works is that a portion goes to the individual counties, another portion is set aside for multi-county projects, a tiny piece is carved out for the state wood products industry, and on and on. And, of course, all that shuffling comes about after the state General Fund takes half off the top. The money that was tapped for Rupp Arena came from excess multi-county funds.

Still, when one considers that Floyd and many other coal counties each lost over a million dollars in single-county coal severance revenue, one would think that legislators could have made a one-time adjustment to the funding formula to use the multi-county surplus to plug a portion of the single-county shortfall.

They didn’t. Instead, they chose bread and circuses … minus the bread. It appears they didn’t think us poor, ignorant hillbillies would mind, as long as the money went to gussy-up the basketball palace.

So, the question is out there: What is Eastern Kentucky going to do about this?

If ever there was a moment that could serve to unite the region in pursuit of reform in economic development efforts, or the lack thereof, this is it. Will mountain residents seize this opportunity to at long last demand fair treatment? Or will they be content to accept more of the same?

— The Floyd County Times

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