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HCS hosting early registration for preschool and kindergarten

Early registration dates are coming up for preschool and kindergarten classes at Hardin County Schools.

Registration for HCS elementary schools that house preschool and kindergarten will be held Friday, March 8 from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Those elementary schools are: 

-Creekside (151 Horseshoe Bend, Sonora, KY)

-Cecilia Valley (931 E. Main Street, Cecilia, KY)

-G.C. Burkhead (1323 St. John Road, Elizabethtown, KY)

-Heartland (2300 Nelson Drive, Elizabethtown, KY)

-Lincoln Trail (3970 Bardstown Road, Elizabethtown, KY)

-Lakewood (265 Learning Place Lane, Cecilia, KY)

-New Highland (110 W.A. Jenkins Road, Elizabethtown, KY)

-Rineyville (275 Rineyville School Road, Rineyville, KY)

A second registration date for future preschool and kindergarten students will be held Tuesday, March 26 from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the Hardin County Board of Education building.

A screening process for all children seeking admission into preschool takes place during the registration events, so children will need to attend with their parents.

For more information, call 270-769-8911 or go online to the Hardin County Schools website.

UPDATED: BlueOval SK pledges $500K for ECTC Family Scholar House Family Service Building; bomb threat forces evacuation of batter facility site

Elizabethtown Community and Technical College President Dr. Juston Pate said BlueOval SK’s pledge to donate $500,000 over the next five years in support of the Family Scholar House ECTC Campus goes beyond money.

“It’s not just the dollar amount,” Pate said. “It’s, truly, we recognize the impact that this project is going to make for generations and generations of families in this area, and we recognize what a significant contribution this is to that project.”

Representatives from ECTC, BlueOval SK, and Family Scholar House were joined by Kentucky Lieutenant Governor Jacqueline Coleman for a check presentation ceremony in recognition of the battery maker’s financial commitment which will go towards the Family Services Building at the 48-unit Family Scholar House facility, providing students and their families with “access to childcare, food, and other supportive services and resources.”

Pate said the Family Scholar House facility will help ECTC students succeed, which will in turn help area employers like BlueOval SK.

“This project is clearing a path for the future workforce of this region, and we know that by removing stable housing as a barrier for our students, we’re going to be able to increase that workforce,” Pate said. “ECTC, we are so proud to say, is the number one provider of workforce and education training in Central Kentucky, but this is going to allow us to really provide that holistic support that we can’t do on our own.”

BlueOval SK CEO Michael Adams said the company is committed to being good neighbors.

“We look forward to continuing to develop relationships with community partners like ECTC,” Adams said. “People are the most important part of BlueOval SK. We care about our team. We care about the people and the communities in which we are located. Community engagement through service, partnerships, and investment is a fundamental part of our culture.”

Lieutenant Governor Coleman said investment in postsecondary education is an investment in the future.

“Elizabethtown and Hardin County are the fastest growing areas in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, largely thanks to BlueOval SK, and so by supporting the student parents here at ECTC, we are investing in the future of both Hardin County and the commonwealth altogether,” Coleman said.

ECTC hopes to begin construction on the Family Scholar House facility this spring. To learn more about the facility and how to donate, find the Home for Hope Campaign on ECTC’s website.

Later in the day Thursday, the BlueOval SK construction site was evacuated due to a bomb threat.

“Someone at the BlueOval facility found a note, a bomb threat note, inside a Porta-John,” said Chief Deputy David Lee with the Hardin County Sheriff’s Office. “The note said that a bomb will go off on 2-22-24 at one o’clock.”

Detection dogs from the Louisville Metro Police Department and Fort Knox Explosive Ordnance Disposal were called to the scene. Nothing was found as of 3 p.m. Thursday. No further updates were made, but law enforcement officers were still seen at the BlueOval SK site at around 5 p.m.

911 still available as multiple wireless customers report service outages

Area wireless customers are among those impacted by a nationwide service outage Thursday.

“This morning, we’ve had a report of multiple outages in the area of cell phones, mainly focused towards AT&T, that’s our biggest provider with the most outages,” said Hardin County Emergency Management Director Joey Scott. “Verizon has some outages. T-Mobile and Cricket Wireless have also been affected, as well.”

Emergency responders still have access to their communication lines and 911 is still accessible.

“If you need to call 911, you still can,” Scott said. “You just need to be using your Wi-Fi or a landline. At this time, we haven’t got any kind of timeframe on when this is going to be back up and running, but we are monitoring it from the state EOC side as well as the local EOC side.”

AT&T said in a statement that it is aware of the outages and is working to restore services.

Nolin River Wildlife needs milk for influx of babies

Nolin River Wildlife Director Mary Key says spring is one of the most critical times at the wildlife rehab as that’s when baby animals tend to arrive in abundance.

“A baby animal comes to us after it’s either been injured or orphaned, most likely orphaned, and you know, it’s really usually people-related,” Key said. “It’s somebody trapped and relocated mom, or shot mom, or run over mom, so I think it’s really important that we work as a community to help out these guys.”

A surprise quick start to baby season means the refuge needs assistance keeping up its supplies.

“Usually we start late March, early April, but we’ve already had two litters come in in February, which is unheard of, so we were slow to ask for donations this year because we weren’t expecting things to happen so quickly, but we use so much Esbilac puppy formula, and goat formula for the deer, and it’s our biggest expense and the thing that we end up using a lot of our money donations for,” Key said.

Everything donated to the refuge goes directly towards the refuge’s mission of rehabbing and returning animals to their natural habitats.

“Every bit of the donation and everything they contribute goes directly to the animals,” Key said. “We don’t have any paid employees. It all goes directly to taking care of the animals.”

To learn more about how to donate, or to contact the refuge to learn about how you can support efforts to collect milk for the animals, find Nolin River Wildlife on Facebook.