I'd like to hear more about everything Mitch has done for the state. Particularly Eastern KY. I'll hang up and listen...
What are his results?
He's the irreplaceable pillar of Kentucky. If he's not responsible for our jobs or healthcare or anything else then what does he do? And why aren't you taking this up with Brian? He made the claim you disagree with.
He isn't irreplaceable by a long shot but MJ as a better option is asinine. Those things you list could be much worse and would be with a more liberal dominated federal government.
How do you post so much from school, btw?
It won't be a democrat that beats Mitch. He will have to lose in the primary. I don't know much about Matt's platform, but Mitch has done nothing for Ky. and I would vote for anyone besides him.
Again, I am not advocating for Mitch the man but for keeping the power and influence of his position.
I am all for term limits as well, but we dont have those now and KY can enjoy the privileged that comes with having the Senate President.
Here are some things a Senate President can do regardless of party and this list is only for the last year or so:
Funding for construction of a federal prison in Letcher County, Kentucky.
$175 million for the Olmsted Locks and Dam project.
Fort Knox, Fort Campbell, the Blue Grass Army Depot, as well as the Kentucky National Guard – the largest year-on-year increase in funding in more than a decade.
Department for Veterans Affairs approved his request for $75 million to spend on the planning of a new VA hospital in Louisville.
155 million for the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), which will help support economic development in Eastern Kentucky. This ARC funding includes $50 million to support communities hurt by the downturn in the coal sector, $10 million for high-speed broadband deployment in distressed counties within Central Appalachia, and $6 million for basic infrastructure improvements in Central Appalachia.
- $30 million through the Department of Labor (DOL) to provide training and employment services to dislocated coal workers for the Eastern Kentucky Concentrated Employment Program’s Hiring Our Miners Everyday (HOME) initiative, which has provided job training and employment services to thousands of Kentuckians.
- $75 million for the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) pilot program -- $25 million of which will go to Kentucky. This funding will supplement the annual AML reclamation funding the state receives for the reclamation of abandoned mine sites. FY 2016 and FY 2017 appropriations from this program have already funded several successful projects in Kentucky.
- Language maintained from FY 2016 and FY 2017 to support the transportation of industrial hemp grown in compliance with the enacted 2014 Farm Bill.
- $25 million for the Delta Regional Authority to support economic and infrastructure development in communities in the Mississippi Delta region, including a number of counties in Western Kentucky.
- Over $961 million for chemical agents and munitions destruction funding – $831.9 million of which will go to DOD’s Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives program – to support chemical demilitarization efforts at the Blue Grass Army Depot in Richmond.
- $9 million for the Air National Guard Response Forces Facility in Louisville.
- Over $236 million for the National Guard Counter-Drug program which supports the Kentucky National Guard’s marijuana eradication program in Eastern Kentucky.
- Includes a provision to support Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College (SKCTC) and their students at their five campuses in Cumberland, Harlan, Middlesboro, Pineville, and Whitesburg, by providing flexibility to the U.S. Department of Education to account for economic conditions when deciding which schools may continue participating in the federal student aid program.
- Over $9 million in Department of Education funding to support work colleges like Berea College and Alice Lloyd College in Kentucky.
- Over $27 million -- a $2 million increase -- for the Printing House for the Blind in Louisville to continue its important work to create products for visually impaired students and people across the country.
- Extends for two years, the Secure Rural Schools program, an initiative that provides compensation to counties with a low tax base, due to the presence of federal forestlands, with funds to help provide for essential county services such as operating schools for their residents. This will benefit counties in Eastern and Western Kentucky, including those around the Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area and the Daniel Boone National Forest.
Every state wants these types of things but there is only so much money to go around.
Add in what he and Hal Rodgers have ben able to to do together and it is quite an accomplishment.
Again, if he was a democrat he would be able to do these things, junior members have no sway whatsoever. It is all about the level of influence.
Last edited: