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Combs' biennial budget, passed by the General Assembly in 1960, used money from the new sales tax to increase school funds by fifty percent and establish the state community college system (now the Kentucky Community and Technical College System). [36]
The Kentucky Court of Appeals struck down Kentucky's Day Law, against integration, the following year. [97] Some areas of the state resisted the change. Notably, in 1956, when nine black students in Sturgis, Kentucky , attempted to enter the all-white Sturgis High School, they were blocked by 500 opponents of integration. [ 39 ]
1879-80 Kentucky General Assembly December 31, 1879 May 6, 1880 August 1879 1881-82 Kentucky General Assembly November 28, 1881 April 24, 1882 August 1881 1883-84 Kentucky General Assembly December 31, 1883 May 12, 1884 August 1883 1885-86 Kentucky General Assembly December 30, 1885 May 18, 1886 August 1885 1887-88 Kentucky General Assembly
In an attempt to get the tax passed, Laffoon agreed to seek only a 1 percent tax. [31] The proposal passed the House, but a Senate committee refused to report it to the full chamber for a vote. [33] Happy Chandler, Laffoon's lieutenant governor, opposed his call for a state sales tax. The sales tax proposal caused a rift in the Democratic party ...
Dozens of new laws passed by the 2024 General Assembly take effect today in Kentucky. Among some of the most high-profile items are measures on crime, education and health care, but the 60-day ...
As a 70-year-old single person residing in Kentucky I ask why our commonwealth does not yet have a Transfer on Death Deed law unlike 30 other states and Washington D.C.
During summer 1972, the law school moved from downtown Cincinnati across the Ohio River to NKU's Covington campus. In 1981, Chase moved to its present location on the NKU campus in Highland Heights, remaining within the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky metropolitan area. In 2006, the college of law was rebranded NKU Salmon P. Chase College of Law. [5]
A Kentucky judge recently struck down a 2022 law that would have allowed funding for charter schools, saying the law would have created a "separate but unequal" system of publicly funded but ...