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Ky. court upholds law for safety devices for Amish

Kentucky’s Supreme Court has upheld a state law requiring an Amish sect to post orange safety triangles on their buggies.  However, the ruling is irrelevant because lawmakers changed the law earlier this year.  Today's decision also let stand the convictions of several Graves County Amish men who challenged the law.  

In March, the men asked the Supreme Court to grant them a religious exemption from using the orange triangles.  The case originated with a conservative Amish sect in Graves who prohibit the use of the slow-moving vehicle sign.  They say the color is gaudy and that they depend on God, and not manmade symbols, for their safety.  The new state law allows them to use gray or reflective tape instead.

Todd Hatton hails from Paducah, Kentucky, where he got into radio under the auspices of the late, great John Stewart of WKYX while a student at Paducah Community College. He also worked at WKMS in the reel-to-reel tape days of the early 1990s before running off first to San Francisco, then Orlando in search of something to do when he grew up. He received his MFA in Creative Writing at Murray State University. He vigorously resists adulthood and watches his wife, Angela Hatton, save the world one plastic bottle at a time.
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