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    Candidate intro: Lindsey Noller Turner, seeking Henderson County District Judge, 1st Division seat

    Candidate intro: Lindsey Noller Turner, seeking Henderson County District Judge, 1st Division seat

    Local leaders to present a proposal in support of Farmer and Frenchman at Tuesday’s fiscal court meeting

    Farmer and Frenchman zoning request moves to planning commission for a public hearing

    Local candidates who have filed (through Dec. 12)

    Goodfellows donations through Dec. 12

    City and Habitat deal has led to clearing of nine blighted properties

    City and Habitat deal has led to clearing of nine blighted properties

    City commission denies Henderson Distilling Co. chance to match future sale of the former HMP&L administrative office building

    City plans to renovate old HMP&L admin building and use as office space for three departments

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    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    In some parts of the U.S., the grid of the future might be closer than you think

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    December releases hope for continued momentum

    December releases hope for continued momentum

    Cols will play a new style with same Sweet Sixteen goal

    Cols will play a new style with same Sweet Sixteen goal

    Burnett’s first starts lead to Athlete of the Week

    Burnett’s first starts lead to Athlete of the Week

    Colonels September sports roundup

    HCHS football final stats

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

    Cols fall 44-21 in season-opening loss

    HCHS football stats (through game 12)

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    Layered Pasta Bake is sure to chase the chill of winter away

    Layered Pasta Bake is sure to chase the chill of winter away

    It’s a tough time of the year for many. RVBH wants those who need help to call 988

    It’s a tough time of the year for many. RVBH wants those who need help to call 988

    West Baden Springs Hotel is a holiday wonder

    West Baden Springs Hotel is a holiday wonder

    Of Public Record (from December print edition)

    Grants available from Deaconess Henderson Hospital Community Program Fund

    New tool in Deaconess MyChart facilitates the gift of life though organ donation

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

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    Candidate intro: Lindsey Noller Turner, seeking Henderson County District Judge, 1st Division seat

    Candidate intro: Lindsey Noller Turner, seeking Henderson County District Judge, 1st Division seat

    Local leaders to present a proposal in support of Farmer and Frenchman at Tuesday’s fiscal court meeting

    Farmer and Frenchman zoning request moves to planning commission for a public hearing

    Local candidates who have filed (through Dec. 12)

    Goodfellows donations through Dec. 12

    City and Habitat deal has led to clearing of nine blighted properties

    City and Habitat deal has led to clearing of nine blighted properties

    City commission denies Henderson Distilling Co. chance to match future sale of the former HMP&L administrative office building

    City plans to renovate old HMP&L admin building and use as office space for three departments

    Trending Tags

  • Tech
    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    In some parts of the U.S., the grid of the future might be closer than you think

    Trending Tags

  • Entertainment
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    December releases hope for continued momentum

    December releases hope for continued momentum

    Cols will play a new style with same Sweet Sixteen goal

    Cols will play a new style with same Sweet Sixteen goal

    Burnett’s first starts lead to Athlete of the Week

    Burnett’s first starts lead to Athlete of the Week

    Colonels September sports roundup

    HCHS football final stats

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

    Cols fall 44-21 in season-opening loss

    HCHS football stats (through game 12)

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    Layered Pasta Bake is sure to chase the chill of winter away

    Layered Pasta Bake is sure to chase the chill of winter away

    It’s a tough time of the year for many. RVBH wants those who need help to call 988

    It’s a tough time of the year for many. RVBH wants those who need help to call 988

    West Baden Springs Hotel is a holiday wonder

    West Baden Springs Hotel is a holiday wonder

    Of Public Record (from December print edition)

    Grants available from Deaconess Henderson Hospital Community Program Fund

    New tool in Deaconess MyChart facilitates the gift of life though organ donation

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

    Alice P. Taylor Christmas Candlelight Service celebrates 100th year

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Introducing the Lantern series ‘No Kentucky Home’

Jamie Lucke by Jamie Lucke
May 20, 2025
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Courtesy of Kentucky Lantern

Driving from the Lantern’s office in Frankfort to my house in Lexington, I’m often snagged by a couple of red lights, where I avoid eye contact with the person standing on the corner holding a cardboard sign asking for money.

One of the luxuries of city life, I suppose, is keeping some people no closer than your peripheral vision — and thoughts.

That luxury is less available in small towns, where the person on the street is not anonymous but someone you once worked beside on the line at the poultry plant. Or someone who reminds you of your child or mother. Or someone who’s sleeping in your church’s parking lot.

Today we begin a series of stories from one such Kentucky place.

It’s a small place that looms large in the imagination because of its musical heritage. It inspired John Prine to sing “Oh, daddy, won’t you take me back to Muhlenberg County” in his anti strip-mining anthem “Paradise.” Not much more than 30 miles from the cradle of bluegrass music, Bill Monroe’s Rosine, Muhlenberg County contributed a guitar style — thumb-picking — made famous by native son Merle Travis, who also wrote the GOAT of coal mining songs: “You load 16 tons, what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt.” Don and Phil Everly — the chart-topping Everly Brothers — trace their lineage to Central City.

Muhlenberg County is not extraordinary, though, in another respect: The struggle to come to terms with what it owes the people whom many of us (me included) conveniently keep on the far outskirts of our minds. I’m confident we’d find similar stories and conflicts across Kentucky, in state capitols and all the way to the debates raging right now in Washington, D.C.

These very personal stories introduce us to people who don’t avoid eye contact, who see the “campers” and couch surfers and evicted as neighbors. And, most emphatically, not as eyesores or threats.

These stories are about a shortage of services and housing, made worse by a surplus of untreated addiction and trauma.

Reporter Liam Niemeyer and I are sorry that some officials were unwilling to talk to him. Liam reached out via email, phone messages and dropping by. And it’s not too late. Their perspectives are important; we need to hear them, especially those of people who hold elected office. I recognize that solutions are not obvious, simple or inexpensive.

We are able to tell such intimate stories because Liam has spent a lot of time getting to know the people and the place. We weren’t sure what the story would be in the summer of 2023 when, pursuing an idea sparked by a report in a local newspaper, Liam spent a day with several people in Muhlenberg County who lacked housing. He also began to meet local people who wanted to help. As he stayed in touch by phone and in person, we knew we had a story worth telling even as we wrestled with how to tell it.

I hope you will find our efforts worthwhile as you meet Mallie and Gwen, Courtney and Jennifer, Zachary and the cantankerous but lovably philosophical John Paul.

We hope these personal stories will inform and inspire policy discussions and the search for solutions.

Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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