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Beatrice P. Bevil

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BeatriceBevilBeatrice P. Bevil, 84, of Owensboro passed away Friday, May 29, 2015, at Owensboro Health Regional Hospital. She was born August 19, 1930, in Auburn, Ky., to the late Lewis and Mary Helton Porter. She had been a member of First Baptist Church since 1941. Beatrice was a dedicated homemaker and enjoyed spending time with family, especially her grandchildren. She was also very fond of her cat, Millie. Beatrice was preceded in death by her husband of 30 years, James W. Bevil, in 1980; a son, Terry Bevil, in 2005; and a grandson, Justin Howard, in 1999. She is survived by her children, Roy Cook, Jr. (Debbie), of Owensboro, Patricia Curtis (Buddy), of Shelbyville, Ky., Dianna Bryant (Dennis), of Hartford, Ky., Timothy J. Bevil, of Duluth, Ga., and Tammy Slack (Danny), of Fordsville, Ky.; grandchildren, Michael Cook, Eric and Charles Bryant, Heather Morris, Holly Jones, Jackie Howard and Derek Howard; three great-grandchildren; and family friend, Cindy Boarman. A graveside service will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at Rosehill Cemetery. Memorial contributions may be made to Beatrice’s family c/o Dianna Bryant.

USDA packages disaster protection with loans to benefit producers

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U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farm Service Agency (FSA) State Executive Director, John W. McCauley, announced that producers who apply for FSA farm loans also will be offered the opportunity to enroll in new disaster loss protections created by the 2014 Farm Bill.

The new coverage, available from the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP), is available to FSA loan applicants who grow non-insurable crops, so this is especially important to fruit and vegetable producers and other specialty crop growers.

“FSA is opening its doors wider so that more specialty farmers know of our array of services,” said McCauley. “And new, underserved and limited income specialty growers who apply for farm loans could qualify for basic loss coverage at no cost, or higher coverage for a discounted premium.”

The basic disaster coverage protects at 55 percent of the market price for crop losses that exceed 50 percent of production. Covered crops include “specialty” crops, for instance, vegetables, fruits, mushrooms, floriculture, ornamental nursery, aquaculture, turf grass, ginseng, honey, syrup, hay, forage, grazing and energy crops. FSA allows beginning, underserved or limited income producers to obtain NAP coverage up to 90 days after the normal application closing date when they also apply for FSA credit.

In addition to free basic coverage, beginning, underserved or limited income producers are eligible for a 50 percent discount on premiums for the higher levels of coverage that protect up to 65 percent of expected production at 100 percent of the average market price.

Producers also may work with FSA to protect value-added production, such as organic or direct market crops, at their fair market value in those markets. Targeted underserved groups eligible for free or discounted coverage are American Indians or Alaskan Natives, Asians, Blacks or African-Americans, Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders, Hispanics, and women.

FSA offers a variety of loan products, including farm ownership loans, operating loans and microloans that have a streamlined application process.

Growers need not apply for an FSA loan, nor be a beginning, limited resource, or underserved farmer, to be eligible for Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program assistance. To learn more, visit www.fsa.usda.gov/nap or www.fsa.usda.gov/farmloans, or contact your local FSA office at https://offices.usda.gov.

OC Trail Town Task Force Committee meeting June 4

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The Trail Town Task Force Committee will meet Thursday, June 4, at 6 p.m. at the Ohio County Extension Office in Hartford. Everyone is invited to attend.

Agenda

Old Business.

  • Three foot by eight foot banner with NPS logo: Quote has been sent to Russell Clark for approval by NPS.
  • Survey for walkable community as part of Pedestrian Plan: The survey has been distributed and several have been returned filled out.
  • Planning a Community Rough River paddle trip with Canoe Kentucky supplying boats. July 25, 2015 is the date for Summer Paddle on Rough River. Planning and discussion.

New Business.

  • Where to put-in and take-out for Summer Paddle.
  • Adding a bicycle event in Ohio County Park on July 25 discussion.
  • Trail Town sub committee’s chairperson’s discussion. Chairpersons need to be in place for continuing Trail Town Certification.
  • Volunteers needed for proposed MBT in Ohio County Park.
  • Adjournment

Next meeting: July 2, 2015 6 p.m. at Ohio County Extension office.

OCHS selling sections of old gym floor

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The Ohio County High School (OCHS) is replacing the gym floor and bleachers during the school's summer break and is offering people the chance to own a piece of the old floor. The Ohio County School Board accepted the final bids to replace the high school's gym floor and lower level bleachers in November 2014. The gym floor and bleacher replacement is underway and the old floor has been removed. The old gym floor has been there since the high school opened over 50 years ago. According to OCHS Principal Greg Decker, the school will be selling sections of the old gym floor this Thursday, June 4, and Friday, June 5, from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. The sections will measure three feet by five feet and will cost $50 per section. Decker recommends bringing a truck to pick up the sections because they won't fit in a car or SUV.  

Myrl Duvall English

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MyrlEnglishMyrl Duvall English, 87, passed away Monday, June 1, 2015, at Owensboro Health Regional Hospital. She was born in Centertown on May 26, 1928, daughter of the late Clifton and Mirtie Smiley Duvall. Myrl was a member of and very active in the Centertown United Methodist Church and was a loving mother and grandmother. She had worked at Montpelier Glove Factory in Hartford and Thomas Industries in Beaver Dam. Myrl was preceded in death by her husband, William “Bill” English, in 2011. Survivors include three daughters, Stella (Truman) Bishop, Mertie English (Kalani) and Teresa (Willard) Miller; one son; Albert Ray Greta) English; 13 grandchildren, Timmy, Chris, Nickie, Jenny, Drew, Shane, Seth, Melissa, David, Crystal, Retha, Sesiley and Andy; 34 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild. Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday, June 4, at Centertown United Methodist Church. Friends may visit with the family at the church on Wednesday, June 3, from 4 p.m. until 8 p.m. and also at the church Thursday from 9 a.m. until funeral time at 1 p.m. Burial will follow in the Waltons Creek Cemetery near Centertown. Bevil Bros. Funeral Homes, Inc., in Beaver Dam are in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may be sent to: bevilbrosfuneralhomes.com.

Billy G. Ferguson

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BillyFergusonBilly G. Ferguson, 83, of Beaver Dam, died Monday, June 1, 2015, at his home. He was born in Hartford to the late Enus Perry and Modie Francis Ferguson. Billy was a coal miner working at Peabody Coal Company Ken Underground Mine. He was preceded in death by a daughter, Susan Ferguson. Survivors include two daughters, Sandra Ferguson, of Charleston, S.C., and Joanna (Jeff) McCloud, of Canton, Ga.; three sons, James (Charnetta) Ferguson, of Beaver Dam, William Ferguson, of Woodstock, Ga., and Randy (Lisa) Ferguson, of Rosine; two brothers, Donald Edward (Nell) Ferguson and Jackie Dean Ferguson, both of Beaver Dam. Services are 11 a.m. Thursday at Bevil Bros. Funeral Home in Beaver Dam with Bro. Glendon Geary officiating. Burial will be in Sunnyside Cemetery in Beaver Dam. Visitation will be from 4 p.m. until 8 p.m. Wednesday and from 9 a.m. until funeral time on Thursday at the funeral home. Online condolences may be sent to: bevilbrosfuneralhomes.com.

Ella Faye Bruner

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EllaFayeBrunerElla Faye Bruner, 68, of Hartford, passed away on Sunday, May 31, 2015, at Owensboro Health Regional Hospital. She was born June 25, 1946, in Hancock County, to the late Pete and Ruby Tindle Laslie, Jr. She was retired from Glenmore Distillaries and enjoyed flower gardening. At one time, she enjoyed raising Doberman Pinscher dogs. She also was preceded in death by her husbands, Jerry L. Bruner and Richard Heyne. Surviving are her sons, Terry Lee Bruner and David Wayne (Peggy) Bruner, all of Hartford; six grandchildren, Brittney Bruner, Terry Lee Bruner II, Devin Ray Bruner, Jerry Lucas Brucer, Aerial Faye Bruner, and Ruby Ann Bruner; two great grandchildren, and two sisters, Joyce Laslie, of Owensboro, and Linda (Earl) Barnard, of Hartford. Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 3, at Glenn Funeral Home and Crematory with burial following in Owensboro Memorial Gardens. Visitation will begin at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to the American Lung Association, 55 W. Wacker Dr., Suite 1150, Chicago, IL 60601. Online condolences may be placed at: www.glennfuneralhome.com.

OC Schools Local Planning Committee (LPC) meeting June 9

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SUBMITTED The Ohio County Schools’ Local Planning Committee (LPC) will conduct a public meeting on Tuesday, June 9, at 5:30 p.m. at the Ohio County Board of Education Building at 315 East Union Street in Hartford. This is the first of a series of meetings to develop a District Facilities Plan for Ohio County Schools. The Kentucky Department of Education will be conducting a training session for LPC members at this first meeting, via a prerecorded web session. This meeting and future meetings will be informal gatherings to encourage local participation through community suggestions relative to future utilization of existing school facilities and construction of new school facilities. These community suggestions or recommendations will be closely monitored by the Local Planning Committee in the development of a proposed District Facility Plan for the Ohio County School District. The public is welcome and invited to this series of meetings.

EPA provides update on county arsenic dump

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A photo provided by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency of the area marked as the site of the arsenic contamination.

ArsenicDumpGoogleEarthPhoto3After the Kentucky Department of Environmental Protection requested the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to perform a time-critical removal action at an arsenic site on 209 Shinkle Chapel Road in November, a federal order gated the property from the public and the agency began conducting its investigation.

Art Smith, on-scene coordinator for the U.S. EPA Region 4 office in Louisville, said the EPA’s contractors visited the site in late March and collected a limited number of samples. This was primarily to identify the type of arsenic compound permeating the property and to confirm the reported high concentrations of the substance.

“We got our samples back, we confirmed the values that were reported to us by the Kentucky Department of Environmental Protection, so we confirmed the arsenic contamination as there as reported to us initially,” he said.

The agency was then able to identify the arsenic compound as arsenic trioxide.

“Arsenic trioxide historically has been used as a herbicide, but we’re unable to confirm whether that was the intended purpose or would explain the presence of it at the site,” Smith said.

The agency also conducted a limited survey of the site and ruled out the possibility of a widespread contamination at the surface. Instead, the arsenic seems to be confined primarily in an area that is covered in a white, powdery substance and has moved 100 feet down a hillside.

While the agency has yet to obtain any information of how deep the arsenic has penetrated through the soil, Smith said the concentrated areas on the surface measured around 30 feet in diameter.

In addition to these findings, the EPA found arsenic dust inside of the hall of the property’s home when it cracked open the hall’s door.

“We don’t know how expansive that is, but we confirmed what we thought was possible was, that over the course of time, when people had lived there, some of it had gotten tracked back into the home from that area out in the clearing,” Smith said.

Since a widespread contamination has been ruled out, Smith didn’t think the arsenic was a threat to any nearby homes. However, wildlife passing through the area could be at risk if they were to ingest any of the arsenic compound.

It’s also not yet known if the arsenic has affected the nearby surface waters, since an investigation hasn’t been conducted yet, or whether a responsible party is involved.

While a follow-up investigation on the site hasn’t been scheduled, it will include the next step in the cleanup process, which will be to define the volume of contaminated material that has to be removed from the site.

Sheriff’s Dept. searching for vandals

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The Ohio County Sheriff's Office is searching for the person, or persons, who vandalized this sign at the corner of U.S. Highway 69 North at Marvin's Chapel Road.

[caption id="attachment_28321" align="aligncenter" width="675"]The Ohio County Sheriff's Office is searching for the person, or persons, who vandalized this sign at the corner of U.S. Highway 69 North at Marvin's Chapel Road. The Ohio County Sheriff's Office is searching for the person, or persons, who vandalized this sign at the corner of U.S. Highway 69 North at Marvins Chapel Road.[/caption] The Ohio County Sheriff's Department is investigating the criminal act of vandalism and destruction of a sign belonging to New Hope Full Gospel Church. The sign is on State Route 69 North at Marvins Chapel Road. A reward of $300 is being offered by Ohio County Sheriff Tracy Beatty for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons involved in this criminal act. You may call Ohio County 911 Dispatch at 270-298-4411 to speak to an officer.
If you have information and wish to remain anonymous, you may call the OC Sheriff's Office hotline to leave a message. The number is 270-298-4446.

Carla Roach Sanders

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CarlaSandersCarla Roach Sanders, age 71, of Cadiz, Ky., a native of Ohio County, Ky., passed away Tuesday, June 2, 2015, at Trigg County Hospital in Cadiz. Carla graduated from Hartford High School in 1961. She continued her education at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Ky. In 1963, she married Dr. Jack E. Sanders, a longtime resident of Trigg County. Carla attended cosmetology school and owned the Americana Beauty Shop in Lexington, Ky. She was owner-operator of Hansel and Gretel children’s clothing shop in Cadiz from 1975—1980, as well as Sand Oak women’s boutique from 1980-1987. She was also a member of Cadiz Baptist Church. Carla had a lifelong love for gardening, and each spring her flower garden was bursting with colorful blooms. She also had a special talent for interior decorating. She enjoyed socializing and played bridge with longtime friends in two Cadiz bridge clubs. She was a wonderful cook and took great pleasure in hosting large family gatherings on holidays and special occasions. In her later years, Carla became an avid reader of fiction, with a penchant for thrillers and mystery novels. She also enjoyed going to movies and concerts with special friends. She was preceded in death by her parents, Homer and Mary Roach; one daughter, Kelly Rae Sanders Haugh; and one brother; Phil Roach. She is survived by one son; Steven Sanders and wife, Terese Rabbitt, Atlanta, Ga.; two daughters, Kendra Redd and husband, James Rodman, III, Cadiz, Ashley Hunter and husband, Jeff, Cadiz; eight grandchildren, Erica Beth Thompson and husband, Jeff, Emily Mayfield and husband, Chris, Caroline Redd, Elizabeth Redd, Ivey Redd, Jude Hunter, Jacob Hunter and Joel Hunter; four great-grandchildren, Riley Thompson, Cash Thompson, Reece Thompson and Bradley Mayfield; two nephews, Phil Roach, Jr., Owensboro, Ky., Jason Roach, Sikeston, Mo.; and special friend, James Robert Lawrence, Cadiz. Arrangements are being handled by Goodwin Funeral Home, Inc., 138 Main St. in Cadiz, Ky., where the family will receive friends after 5 p.m. on Thursday, June 4. Funeral Service will be at Goodwin Funeral Home at 11 a.m. Friday, June 5, with the Reverend James Rodman Redd, III, officiating and Steven Sanders providing the eulogy. Burial will follow at East End Cemetery in Cadiz, Ky. Memorial Contributions can be made to: Gateway Garden Club, 340 Ramon Oliver Road, Cadiz, KY 42211 or Trigg County Historical & Preservation Society, Inc., PO Box 1008, Cadiz, KY 42211.

Ohio Co. real estate transfers for June 4

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Real estate transfers: Judson Ranney Hunter and Whitney Nicole Bray Hunter to Claude R. and Christina Killman Lot in Ohio Co., Ky. Frank Nicely to Marksberry Poultry Farms LLC Tract in Ohio Co., Ky. Mark Nicely to Marksberry Poultry Farms LLC 5 acres in Ohio Co., Ky. Mildred Nicely to Marksberry Poultry Farms LLC Tract in Ohio […]

Hartford City Council lowers property taxes for 2015

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After pledging in March to lower the city’s property taxes in 2015, the Hartford City Council did so at its May 28 meeting. For months, the city council discussed ways to boost the city’s economic incentives. One of the options was to lower property taxes. Council member Tony Ward thought it sent a message to both businesses and residents that Hartford welcomed them. At its March meeting, the city council made a pledge, in the form of a motion, it would lower property taxes for 2015, if the state’s assessment supported it. At the April meeting of the city council, before the first reading of the 2015 Property Tax Ordinance, there was some discussion about the state’s assessment. After the city’s property is assessed, the state uses a formula to calculate the property tax rate. The state generally assigns the city a property tax rate that will bring in the same amount of revenue as the prior year’s rates. The state also allows the city to take four percent increase on the rate if it so chooses, to help offset cost of living increases or other unforeseen expenses. The city council clerk Lisa Martin spoke to Jason Chinn, the Ohio County Property Valuation Administrator, about the city’s likely property assessments for 2015. Chinn believed the city’s assessments would be pretty close to 2014’s, meaning, the council should be safe in lowering the property tax rates. Ward read the ordinance setting the city’s real property tax at $0.55 per $100 of assessed value and the personal property tax at $0.48 per $100 of assessed value. In 2014, the city’s real property rate was $0.59 per $100 of assessed value and the personal property tax rate was $0.7483 per $100 of assessed value. During the May 28 meeting, the city council heard the second reading of the 2015 Property Tax Ordinance. After council member George Chinn read the ordinance, council member Jerry Scoggins made a motion to approve the second reading of the 2015 Property Tax Ordinance. Council member Bob Clements seconded the motion. The motion passed unanimously and officially set the property tax rates for 2015. The council also approved the second reading of the Abandoned Urban Property Tax Ordinance at its April meeting. This ordinance would see an increase of the property tax on abandoned or decaying property in the City of Hartford. The intention of the ordinance would be to force property owners to do something about dilapidated or abandoned property. The property tax rate for those properties meeting the qualifications of the ordinance would be $1.50 per $100 of assessed value.

KYTC: Paving has begun along KY 878

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A contractor for the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) plans asphalt paving along KY 878 in Ohio County for the next few weeks. The project began yesterday. Paving along KY 878 will run from the KY 69 intersection at mile point 0.0 extending eastward to the KY 1164 intersection at mile point 2.877, a distance of 2.8 miles.
Motorists should be prepared to encounter one lane traffic with alternating flow controlled by flaggers. Appropriate caution is required where equipment, flaggers, and construction personnel are along the roadway in close proximity to traffic flow. Scotty’s Contracting and Stone, LLC, is the prime contractor on this $191,998 highway improvement project. The anticipated completion date is June 30, 2015, weather permitting. Motorists should slow down and be alert for equipment, flaggers, and maintenance personnel on the bridge deck in close proximity to traffic flow.

Leitchfield Police searching for missing juvenile

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Leitchfield Police are searching for Candice Jordan Sanders.

[caption id="attachment_28344" align="aligncenter" width="370"]Leitchfield Police are searching for Candice Jordan Sanders. Leitchfield Police are searching for Candice Jordan Sanders. [/caption] The Leitchfield Police Department needs your help in locating a missing juvenile, according to a post on the Ohio County Sheriff's Department Facebook page. Candice Jordan Sanders was last seen wearing a gray hoodie sweatshirt with an Abercrombie logo on the front, black jeans, and black tennis shoes.
Sanders is about 5' 3" tall, 113 pounds, green eyes, brown hair, and has fair skin. Her hair is known to be longer than shown in the photo. If you have any information on her whereabouts, please call the Grayson County Central Dispatch 270-259-0303.

OCMS track team places 33rd in state championships

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Ohio County Middle School’s boys’ track and field team placed 33rd in the 2015 Kentucky Track and Cross-Country Coaches Association (KTCCCA) Middle School State Track and Field Championship. The state meet was staged Saturday at the University of Louisville’s Cardinal Park Soccer and Track Stadium with over around 60 middle schools from across the state […]

Lady Eagle youth volleyball camp begins next week

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SUBMITTED The Ohio County Lady Eagle volleyball team will be holding its first camp for girls interested in learning the skills and game of volleyball next week beginning on Tuesday, June 9, at Beaver Dam Elementary. The OCHS volleyball team wants to teach aspiring young girls how to pass, set, hit, block, serve and dig. […]

Ohio Co. site, 1 of 15 approved for National Register listing

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The Kentucky Historic Preservation Review Board has approved 15 sites for listing in the National Register of Historic Places, nominations that will now be forwarded to the National Park Service (NPS) for final determination of eligibility. A decision on designation will be rendered within 60 to 90 days. According to a press release, the sites […]

Fiscal Court approves 2015/2016 budget, airport roof repair

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During its May 26 meeting, the Ohio County Fiscal Court approved the second reading of the 2015-2016 budget, approved an amendment to the OCEDA Revolving Loan Ordinance, donated money to Project Graduation and Relay For Life and paid for roof repairs at the airport. — The fiscal court approved the first reading of the 2015-2016 Fiscal Year budget during a special-called meeting on April 28. After sending the budget to Frankfort for a review, the court was tasked with approving the second reading of the budget. First District Magistrate Sam Small made a motion to approve the second reading for the 2015-2016 Fiscal Year budget, excluding the county’s compensation schedule. Fourth District Magistrate Larry Keown seconded the motion. Third District Magistrate Joe Barnes asked Ohio County Judge-Executive if the 2015-2016 budget reflected the new raises given to the county road department employees. Johnston said the money for raises was reflected in the budget, but the court would address the compensation schedule separately. After a roll call vote, the motion passed unanimously. At the May 12 meeting, the fiscal court approved the first reading of an amendment to change the Ohio County Economic Development Alliance (OCEDA) Revolving Loan Ordinance to allow OCEDA to receive money from outside sources other than coal severance money. Second District Magistrate Jason Bullock made a motion to accept the second reading amending the OCEDA Revolving Loan Ordinance. Keown seconded the motion. After a roll call vote, the motion passed unanimously. — Johnston informed the court members he received a request from Project Graduation for a donation to help pay the expenses of the event. Project Graduation is an event senior graduates attend at the Ohio County High School. Graduates are locked in the school overnight to play games and win prizes. The event was started to help students celebrate graduation in a safe manner. The court has donated to Project Graduation in the past, including $1,000 in 2014. Keown made a motion to give Project Graduation $500 and authorize Melton to write the check. Barnes seconded the motion. The motion passed unanimously. — Katie Harder, a representative of Relay For Life, came before the court seeking a donation for the Relay For Life event. Last year the court donated $500 to Relay For Life and Harder asked for the same amount this year. Keown made a motion to give Relay For Life $500 and authorize Melton to issue the check. Small seconded the motion. The motion passed unanimously. — Darren Luttrell, a representative of the Ohio County Airport Board, came before the court seeking help with some roof repairs at the airport. Luttrell said part of the roof at the airport started leaking over the winter and after all the rain of the last several months, it’s starting to get pretty bad. The roof is around 20 years old. The Airport Board got an estimate to repair the damaged quarter of the roof from Kentex Roofing for $6,600. The repaired quarter will have a two-year labor warranty and a 10 year warranty for materials.  Luttrell asked the court to fund the $6,600 needed to repair the damaged quarter of the roof. The company will also power wash the whole roof and check for other leaks as a part of the $6,600 estimate. After discussion, Keown made a motion to authorize Kentex Roofing to repair the airport’s roof for $6,600 and authorize Melton to issue the check. Bullock seconded the motion. After a roll call vote, the motion passed unanimously.

Ruby Johnson Wright

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RubyWrightRuby Johnson Wright, 88, of Professional Care Home in Hartford, passed away on Thursday, June 4, 2015. She was born in Rosine, Ky., on June 16, 1926, to Horace and Birdie Grigsby Johnson. Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph Wright; her infant daughter Doris; her son Wyman Autry; son-in-law, Timmy Porter; two brothers, Edward and Horace Johnson; one sister, Helen Swift; and her granddaughter, Beth Widner. She is survived by her children, Mitchell Wright and companion, Janie Davis, of Winslow, Ind., Garlena Strange and husband, Russell, of Evansville, Marilyn Coy and husband, Charlie, of Hartford, Guyetta Wright, of Navarre, Fla., Martha Burden and husband, Stephen, of Cromwell, Nancy Crea and husband, Robert, of Hartford, and Dena Porter and companion, Charles Thomas, of Morgantown; four sisters, Imojean Coates, of Louisville, Betty Woodcock, of Indianapolis, Glenda Dehart and Judy Wilkie, both of Evansville; one brother, Benjamin Johnson, of Evansville; and daughter-in-law, Joyce Autry. She was blessed with 22 grandchildren, 44 great-grandchildren and 15 great-great-grandchildren. Funeral Service will be held at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, June 7, at William L. Danks Funeral Home in Beaver Dam with Bro. Gary Embry officiating. Burial will be in Rosine Cemetery. Friends may visit with the family from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. until the time of service Sunday at the funeral home. Online messages of condolence can be made at: www.danksfuneralhome.com.
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