Much Thanks and Love to Our Governor Beshear, this Easter.

GovBeshear4.11.20

Above – Gov. Beshear addresses the people of Kentucky on Saturday, April 11th.

A husband and father, whose own Son must forgo his Baptism this Easter Sunday, because of a horrid Virus that is attacking the State of Kentucky as Governor Andrew Beshear spoke to all our Citizens. Informing us, encouraging us and making us understand just how important it is at this time to remain vigilant with “social distancing” – which is terminology which normally I would hate, but in the predicament we find ourselves in currently MUST BE followed.

A man who must face the battle of his life after just having been elected December 10th of 2019, not even having had time to adjust to his new position before having to take on this battle. 

The State of Kentucky is lucky to have Governor Beshear. 

I cannot remember the last time I thought that way about an elected leader in the Governor’s office.  Immediately upon taking Office he restored voting rights to 156,000 Non-Violent Felony Offenders, which was a welcome move.

On this day before Easter, I want to thank Governor Beshear for everything he has done and is doing to help our people survive this war we have been thrown into – for whatever reason, from whatever source.  That is a story for another day.

Today, I just want to Thank Our Lord and Governor Beshear – for caring, and for being there when we need you most.

Trying days are ahead for all of us in this Country.   We will deal with them as they come.  We must learn to help each other and ourselves as much as possible and most of all to care and love one another.

Prayers are being said for those of us across the Country who have succumb to this illness and the families left behind.

Tomorrow is Easter Sunday.  Remember this – your home IS your Church!

“For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them.”

Keep your Children close and celebrate this day the Lord hath made, together, in peace and love.

Have a Happy Easter!

COVID-19 Hotline (800) 722-5725

What's open and closed this Easter weekend 2020 in the Halifax ...

https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/kentucky-gov-announces-mandatory-quarantine-anyone-who-attends-easter-services-n1181716

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter

https://louisvilleky.gov/news/what-you-need-know-about-coronavirus

https://nkyhealth.org/individual-or-family/health-alerts/coronavirus/

https://healthalerts.ky.gov/Pages/Coronavirus.aspx

https://govstatus.egov.com/kycovid19

https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/?v=2900029366722380&ref=notif&notif_id=1586559702458181&notif_t=live_video_explicit

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Beshear

Kentucky police guard coronavirus patient who wouldn’t self-quarantine

Beshear

By Lee Brown

A Kentucky coronavirus patient has been placed under police guard after refusing to stay under quarantine, the state’s governor has revealed.

The unidentified 53-year-old man from Nelson County recently tested positive at the University of Louisville, but left against medical advice — and also refused to self-isolate at home, Gov. Andy Beshear said at a press conference.

A local judge declared a state of emergency in order to invoke a little-known statute that allows him to force a “self-isolation or quarantine,” the Lexington Herald-Leader reported.

Law enforcement officers are now stationed outside the infected man’s home to make sure he does not leave and spread the potentially deadly virus.

“It’s a step I hoped I’d never have to take, but we can’t allow one person who we know has the virus to refuse to protect their neighbors,” Beshear said at the press conference.

Beshear also revealed that he had been tested himself — with results coming back negative — after attending a public event in Louisville where another attendee later tested positive.

“This, right now, certainly is us against the coronavirus,” he said at a press conference.

“And all we need from people — we’ve all gotta follow these guidelines,” he said. “We need everybody’s help to do it.

“We are part of Team Kentucky. We need everybody out there to be a good teammate,” he said.

With Post wires

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2 Kentucky governors, past and present, in acrid public feud

 

FILE - In this Dec. 8, 2015, file photo, Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin gives his inaugural address as former Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, lower left, listens on the steps of the State Capitol in Frankfort, Ky. Kentucky's two most recent governors are feuding and have verbally attacked each other more than any other governors in recent memory. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley, File)

 

Adam Beam, Associated Press

 

FILE – In this Dec. 8, 2015, file photo, Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin gives his inaugural address as former Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, lower left, listens on the steps of the State Capitol in Frankfort, Ky. Kentucky’s two most recent governors are feuding and have verbally attacked each other more than any other governors in recent memory. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley, File)

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky’s two most recent governors are feuding, but they can agree on one thing: the FBI is investigating.

While peaceful transitions of power are a longstanding U.S. tradition, the handoff in Kentucky from Democrat Steve Beshear to Republican Matt Bevin has been ugly. The two men have argued loudly over health care, voting rights, pensions and even the appointment of Beshear’s wife to a state commission.

Things were so tense recently that Bevin and Beshear both claimed the FBI was investigating the other. An FBI spokesman would not confirm or deny anything, preferring to stay out of the fight like many in Kentucky’s political circles.

The spat has intensified so much that Beshear has taken the extraordinary step of starting a nonprofit group that is paying for ads critical of Bevin and his policies. Bevin, in turn, has launched an investigation of the former Beshear administration, using a state law granting him subpoena power and public money to hire a private law firm to determine if the ex-governor violated state ethics and procurement laws.

Also nipping at Bevin’s side is Democratic Attorney General Andy Beshear, Steve Beshear’s son. The younger Beshear has already taken Bevin to court — twice — over his policies. The result is an old-fashioned clash in this Appalachian state pitting one of Kentucky’s most powerful political families against a Republican outsider intent on upending a power structure in which Democrats have controlled things for decades.

“This has got the makings of a real Hatfield and McCoy feud,” former Democratic Gov. John Y. Brown Jr. said. “I don’t think it’s good for Kentucky.”

The harsh talk from both sides — with Bevin accusing Beshear of telling a “straight-out lie” and Beshear calling Bevin “a bully” — is surprising to some. Bevin had repeatedly promised on the campaign trail to change the political tone in Frankfort if elected.

Yet the hostilities emerged before Bevin took office when he called Beshear “an embarrassment” for appointing his wife to an unpaid position on the Kentucky Horse Park Commission. He then leavened his December inaugural address with some veiled shots at Beshear as the former governor sat stone-faced just a few feet away.

In March, Bevin posted a scathing video to his Facebook page of an empty state House chamber, chiding Democratic leaders for not meeting on the budget. The legislature wasn’t scheduled to convene until 4 p.m. that day, and House Democrats were in fact meeting in their offices across the street.

“His attacks tend to be personal attacks,” Steve Beshear said. “It’s not just a disagreement over ideas. But because you disagree with me you are a bad person and I’m going to get you in some way.”

Beshear has not been blameless. Ten days after Bevin was elected, Beshear held a news conference criticizing Bevin’s plans to dismantle Kentucky’s health insurance exchange and replace its expanded Medicaid program, both cornerstones of Beshear’s legacy.

Once he left office, Beshear started a nonprofit group which — because of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling — can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money on political ads as long as more than half of its spending is on social welfare issues. The group has already paid for its first web ad, declaring that Bevin “uses fake numbers as justification for an ideological agenda.” And this week, he wrote a letter criticizing both Bevin and federal officials for negotiating “back room deals” for Kentucky’s Medicaid program.

“It’s protocol for a former governor or a former president to be gracious and let the new governor be the governor,” said Damon Thayer, the Republican floor leader of the state Senate. “It just seems to me that Steve Beshear is having a hard time dealing with the fact that he’s no longer governor.”

The feud is likely to ripple out into the fall elections as Republicans seek control of the state House of Representatives, the only legislative chamber in the South the GOP does not control. Democrats recently were clinging to a three-seat majority in the state House of Representatives, but campaigned hard against Bevin in a series of special elections, winning three out of four to solidify their majority for the rest of this year. Now Republicans are eyeing November, when all 100 seats in the House will be on the ballot.

Recently, Bevin prayed at a National Day of Prayer event at the state Capitol, where he lamented the division in the country, “some of which we seem to increasingly celebrate.” But after the event, Bevin did not appear willing to reconcile his differences with Beshear.

“For those who have their own agendas and miss their role to such a degree that they keep hanging around, God bless them,” he said. “I can’t speak for what the motivation is there. But I’m a little confused by it. It’s rather embarrassing for Kentucky, frankly.”

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Beshear pardons 201 on last day

Posted: Wednesday, December 09, 2015 12:23 AM By Jack Brammer Lexington Herald Leader

LEXINGTON – In his final hours as governor, Steve Beshear Monday night granted 201 pardons and six commutations to people sentenced for a range of offenses, including 10 women sentenced for violent crimes they committed after suffering years of domestic violence.

Throughout his eight years in office, the Democratic governor said he received more than 3,400 requests for pardons that were reviewed over several months by him and his staff.

“I spent many long days weighing the merits and circumstances of individual cases before making my final decisions,” Beshear said in a statement. “The pardon authority afforded me by Section 77 of the Kentucky Constitution isn’t something I take lightly. We are talking about action that impacts the lives of so many individuals.”

Beshear noted that his predecessor, Republican Ernie Fletcher, received more than 1,000 pardon requests and granted just over 100 pardons during his four years in office.

Of the 10 women, two are on parole and had their sentences commuted to time served. They are Barbara S. Sarabia, of Versailles, and Pearlie Sue Gambrel, of Flatlick.

Four of the women are currently incarcerated and also had their sentences commuted to time served. They are Donna Wheeler, Laurie Andrade and Judy Lee, all at Western Kentucky Correctional Complex, and Stacey Wigginton, at Kentucky Correctional Institute for Women.

Three of the women had completed their sentences and were granted pardons. They are Teresa Vincent, of Campbellsburg, Gabrielle Cecil, of Louisville, and Tamara E. Wilson, of Somerset.

Cheryl McCafferty of Fredonia, who is currently incarcerated at Western Kentucky Correctional Complex, received a pardon.

Beshear, a former attorney general, also pardoned several individuals convicted of drug offenses.

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