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Hardin County residents can bring items to landfill for Free Dump Day

Hardin County residents can take advantage of Saturday’s Free Dump Day event at the Pearl Hollow Landfill.

From 7 a.m. to 2 p.m., residents can bring all waste materials that are not regulated or defined by applicable federal, state, or local laws as hazardous, infectious, biomedical, explosive, toxic, radioactive, volatile, and/or flammable. All loads must be tarped and secured.

The event is for Hardin County residents only. No contractors or commercial businesses are allowed. Regulations apply.

Hardin County government is also reminding residents that trash pick up will be delayed one day from Tuesday through Saturday due to the Labor Day holiday.

The landfill is located at 1620 Audubon Trace in Elizabethtown. Contact the Hardin County Public Works Department at 270-360-9207 for more information.

Free concert Sunday at North Hardin Christian Church

Area residents are invited to a special event this weekend at the North Hardin Christian Church.

“We have a concert by the Southern Plainsmen out of Louisiana, and they’ll be performing at the North Hardin Christian Church this coming Sunday, September 8, at 6 o’clock,” said North Hardin Christian Church Pastor Ronald Hockman. 

Hockman says the concert has become an annual event for the church.

“They have been doing this for us for something like 13 years, and it’s a free concert,” Hockman said. “There’ll be no offering taken by the church and the public is invited to attend.”

The church is located at 123 Persimmon Ridge in Radcliff. Find the North Hardin Christian Church Facebook page for more information.

KCTCS celebrating record year for student enrollment

The Kentucky Community and Technical College System says it expects to welcome more than 85,000 students to its campuses this fall, which the system says is an 8.4 percent increase from last year and will set a 10-year record.

Elizabethtown Community and Technical College President and CEO Dr. Juston Pate says ECTC has also seen substantial growth.

“The college has really had a record period of growth since 2017,” Pate said. “Our graduation rate has gone from 31 percent to a little over 57 percent.”

KCTCS says the system has seen growth across all student classifications. New student enrollment is up 11 percent, credential-seeking enrollment is up 11.9 percent, and high school students taking dual credit courses is up 11.6 percent.

Pate says more and more people are recognizing that a community college education can be more than just a cost-saving measure.

“The real value is the quality of the education, and the people who chose to teach at a community college because they wanted to teach,” Pate said. “They didn’t want to do research. They didn’t want to publish papers. They want to be with students. That, to me, is what’s reflected when you start looking at the way ECTC has increased its student success. We’ve got to where now the number of students who are passing all of their classes in the first semester is, I think it’s almost like 80 percent. That’s unheard of.”

KCTCS expects to enroll about 112,000 students by the end of the 2024-2025 school year in either an associate program designed to transfer to a four-year university or one of 104 technical programs.

In addition to expanding programming, KCTCS campuses have focused on assisting students with barriers to education, such as ECTC’s work with Family Scholar House.

“I think all of these things have just really led us to meet students where they are, help them overcome the barriers they’re facing, and getting them the skills and the education, the training they need to go out and get that career that’s going to change their lives and their families’ lives,” Pate said.

Visit the KCTCS website for more information on enrollment numbers, and visit ECTC’s website for more information on classes and program offerings.