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Plans call for spending $14 million on early phase of Oldham County senior housing development

Plans call for spending $14 million on early phase of Oldham County senior housing development Share Updated: 8:41 PM EDT Jul 9, 2021 Louisville Business First SOURCE: Louisville Business First The latest breaking updates, delivered straight to your email inbox. Share Updated: 8:41 PM EDT Jul 9, 2021 Louisville Business First Public documents show that a group or related organizations anticipate spending about $14.4 million dollars on an early phase of a major senior housing development in Oldham County.The documents, filed with Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services, also indicate that an existing nursing facility, owned by the organizations taking on the project, plans to sell off some of its nursing bed licenses.The nursing facility Friendship Health and Rehab LLC, at 7400 Friendship Drive in Pewee Valley intends to sell at least 45 nursing facility beds to two area facilities: 15 to Seneca

Corbin, Knox Family Resource and Youth Services Centers receive state grants

Staff report 5 hrs ago FRANKFORT, Ky. – Gov. Andy Beshear and Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman awarded $15 million in grants to 150 local Family Resource and Youth Services Centers (FRYSCs) from the second round of the Governor’s Emergency Education Relief Fund 2 (GEER II) on Thursday. Grants awarded to local centers were to Corbin Family Resource Center, Corbin Middle Youth Service Center, Corbin High School Youth Service Center, and the nine Knox County Family Resource Centers and Youth Service Centers. The grants will fund educational support services needed due to COVID-19’s impact on schools, youth and families, with a focus on early childhood education and child care, as well as family crisis and mental health counseling. Local FRYSCs applied for a maximum allocation of $100,000.

NKY Schools Receive Grants for Family, Youth Services

Fri, 07/02/2021 - 19:42 RCN Newsdesk Several Northern Kentucky schools and their Family Resource and Youth Services Centers (FRYSC) benefited from a statewide allotment of $15 million in grants from the Governor s Emergency Education Relief Fund 2 (GEER II). The grants will fund educational support services needed due to COVID-19’s impact on schools, youth and families, with a focus on early childhood education and child care, as well as family crisis and mental health counseling, a news release said. Local FRYSCs applied for a maximum allocation of $100,000. “As an education first administration, we are going to make sure that Kentucky educators, students and families have the support they need as we move out of the COVID-19 crisis,” said Gov. Andy Beshear. “This funding will help parents return to work knowing their children are learning in a safe, caring place, and it will also help families bounce back from the menta

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