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The outcome of a U.S. Supreme Court case based in Grants Pass, Oregon, could have consequences for street camping bans that effectively ban public homelessness across the country — including a similar statewide ban passed in Kentucky this year.
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Camp Graves, a western Kentucky nonprofit formed in the wake of the December 2021 tornado outbreak, is launching two new housing sites dedicated to aiding underserved populations impacted by the disaster.
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Residents and some Letcher County officials say FEMA’s strict regulations about debris removal and infrastructure repair have left large piles of debris and unfinished work throughout Appalachian eastern Kentucky and may have contributed to the damage last weekend.
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As winter approaches, many eastern Kentuckians whose homes were hit by historic floods in July are still living out of travel trailers or in other unstable accommodations.
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Governor declines to go into detail to protect ongoing land acquisition negotiations
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Waiting for housing almost a year after tornado laid waste to Mayfield
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Kentucky Sports Radio and the Kentucky Chamber Foundation presented the more than $950,000 check to the nonprofit in Dawson Springs, where around 75% of the community’s homes were damaged or destroyed by high speed winds last December.
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The Mayfield Community Foundation announced Tuesday is donating $250,000 dollars to the Mayfield-Graves County Long Term Recovery Group.
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Brian and Lesa Marcum pointed out sandy plots where homes used to be on Right Fork Buffalo Road a month after historic flooding hit eastern Kentucky. Water washed away cars, and clothing is still in tree branches sometimes 8 to 10 feet high.
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Researchers who recently spoke with tornado survivors in Bowling Green, Dawson Springs and Bremen, Kentucky are hoping what they’ve learned will help lead to the design of safer homes.
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Sixty adults with intellectual disabilities who live in single-family homes in the Owensboro region may be displaced when a housing company affiliated with a state program closes down April 9.
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Kentucky is set to receive about $74 million from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s disaster recovery funds.