News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Kentucky lawmakers advance ‘shell’ bill to ban sale of hemp-derived beverages until next year
Kentucky lawmakers advance ‘shell’ bill to ban sale of hemp-derived beverages until next year
by Liam Niemeyer, Kentucky Lantern
March 5, 2025
FRANKFORT — Kentucky lawmakers advanced a “shell” bill Wednesday evening to ban the sale of hemp-derived beverages in the state until summer of 2026, a move supporters say will allow time to understand how intoxicating versions of the beverages are impacting consumers.
But those involved in the hemp industry decried the proposed moratorium on the sale of hemp-derived beverages as hampering, or even crippling, small businesses trying to market, distribute or sell the canned beverages that are gaining popularity across the country and popping up in places including convenience stores.
Senate Bill 202 sponsor Sen. Julie Raque Adams, R-Louisville, said the goal of her bill is to better understand and regulate intoxicating hemp-derived beverages similar to how the state regulates other intoxicating beverages such as beer or liquor.
She spoke to lawmakers alongside Rep. Matthew Koch, R- Paris, with a line of cans on a desk featuring various flavors and amounts of infused non-intoxicating cannabidiol, known as CBD, and cannabinoids, which can include intoxicating tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC.
“We are simply placing a moratorium on their sale until such time as we can establish robust regulations that protect Kentucky consumers and, most importantly, Kentucky children,” Adams said. “We have a real, I think, consumer protection issue going on right now. We need to make sure that Kentucky gets this right.”
Legislative concerns about regulating hemp-derived beverages sprang into public view on the 22nd day of this year’s 30-day session. The deadline for filing bills in the Senate was Feb. 18.
Senate Bill 202 originally made minor technical corrections in Kentucky law but was rewritten Wednesday through a substitute bill adopted by the Kentucky Senate’s Licensing and Occupations Committee.
The practice of rewriting seemingly unimportant bills, known as “shell bills,” with little notice in order to make significant changes to state law has been criticized by the Kentucky League of Women Voters, along with other legislative maneuvers that the League says exclude the public from participation in the legislative process. Lawmakers have argued “shell” bills allow them more time to work on legislation and advance it beyond the deadline to file bills each legislative session.
What would Senate Bill 202 currently do?
Under SB 202, the ban on the sale of hemp-derived beverages would begin immediately upon the legislation becoming law and continue until July 1, 2026. The bill also directs the Cabinet for Health and Family Services to create regulations specifically for beverages containing non-intoxicating cannabidiol, known as CBD, and cannabinoids, which can include intoxicating THC.
Additionally, SB 202 would direct the University of Kentucky Cannabis Center to study the testing, manufacture, distribution, sales and effects on consumers of such beverages and present a report to the Legislative Research Commission by January 1, 2026.
Adams said given the “chatter” the bill has created among the state’s hemp industry, the version of SB 202 is likely just a “starting place” with the end goal of finding appropriate regulations for a nascent industry. She said she ultimately wants to engage stakeholders on how it should be regulated.
SB 202 advanced from the Senate Licensing and Occupations Committee with seven Republicans voting in favor, two Republicans voting against and the two Democrats on the committee voting to pass on the legislation. Both Republicans and Democrats on the committee were concerned about the impacts a moratorium could have on businesses in the state, though some Republicans voted to advance the bill with the understanding it would be changed.
“By having a total prohibition in July of 2026, we’re punishing the good players as well,” said Sen. Stephen Meredith, R-Leitchfield, who voted to advance the bill. “It’ll shut down their revenue stream and, probably, they won’t exist.”
Various people representing the hemp products industry strongly opposed the current version of the legislation implementing a moratorium, though those who testified to lawmakers disagreed over how the beverages should be regulated — whether there should be a cap on the amount of milligrams of intoxicating THC in each beverage and what that cap should be.
Jim Higdon, the co-founder of the Kentucky company Cornbread Hemp which makes various hemp-derived balms, gummies and oils, told lawmakers the moratorium would put his growing company “at risk” by undercutting a THC-infused beverage product launch the company has planned for April.
“I don’t understand how a moratorium is different from a ban,” Hidgon said. “If, as a small business, we are forced into a moratorium, it will kill our growth. And as a small business that’s growing and being successful — successful in Kentucky — we would like to help the General Assembly to continue to grow and employ Kentuckians.”
Higdon said his company has spent a little more than $1.2 million to launch the planned beverage, featuring fruity flavors and about five milligrams of THC in each can. He told the Lantern that canceling the product launch would take a toll on his staffing, hemp farmers and more.
Sen. Jimmy Higdon, R-Lebanon, the father of the Cornbread Hemp co-founder, voted against the bill advancing out of committee. The Republican said the bill was detrimental to small business and that such beverages were already regulated by the state.
Where hemp-derived beverages go from here
The rise of hemp-derived beverages and other products proliferating across Kentucky began with federal lawmakers legalizing the cultivation of hemp in the 2018 Farm Bill. That federal legislation also removed the prohibition of the production of intoxicating Delta-8 THC, a hemp-derived version of the THC found in marijuana that can give a user a similar “high.”
But the legality of hemp-derived Delta-8 THC products in Kentucky wasn’t immediate, and the initial focus of Kentucky hemp production honed in on the extraction of non-intoxicating CBD products.
The Kentucky Hemp Association sued the state in 2021 after a series of police raids of Delta-8 THC products, arguing Delta-8 THC was made legal under a past federal farm bill. A Boone County Circuit Court judge sided with the association in 2022 to legalize the products in the state.
In 2023, Kentucky lawmakers passed a bill into law directing the Cabinet for Health and Family Services to regulate Delta-8 THC products. The cabinet subsequently created a series of regulations overseeing the sale of such products including restricting sales to people 21 years old or older.
The creation of intoxicating hemp-derived beverages with Delta-8 THC have followed since with state legislatures taking a harder look at the regulation of such beverages.
Higdon, the hemp products company co-founder, told lawmakers he’d prefer SB 202 to be amended to have a cap on the amount of milligrams of THC in each beverage. But Dee Taylor, the president of the Kentucky Hemp Association and an owner of a Louisville hemp business, cautioned against having such a cap.
Taylor said her husband deals with seizures and needs a higher amount of THC in such beverages, and anecdotally she’s had alcoholics come into her business who use the beverages instead of drinking alcohol.
Hidgon said the hemp industry includes people from various backgrounds, describing the industry as “an island of misfit toys.” Because of that it’s “difficult to find consensus” on how to regulate the beverages.
The thing industry stakeholders agree on: a moratorium isn’t the way forward.
“States are robustly regulating this sector, and lots of states are coming up with lots of different answers,” Hidgon said. “A moratorium is prohibition.”
Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com.
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
U.S. Senate GOP wins approval of sprawling budget blueprint, shipping it to the House
by Jennifer Shutt, Kentucky Lantern
April 5, 2025
WASHINGTON — U.S. Senate Republicans, in the early morning hours Saturday, approved their budget resolution that will aid the party in maintaining the 2017 tax cuts but also paves the way for them to add nearly $6 trillion to the deficit under an outside analysis.
The 51-48 vote sends the compromise measure to the House, where Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., hopes to adopt the tax-and-spending blueprint within the next week. No Democrats backed the bill and no Democratic amendments were accepted during an overnight marathon voting session.
Maine Sen. Susan Collins and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul were the only two Republicans who voted against the resolution, which needed only a majority vote under the complicated process being used in the Senate.
The lengthy voting session, known as the vote-a-rama, included debate on 28 amendments, with one adopted.
Alaska Republican Sen. Dan Sullivan was the only member of either party to have their change agreed to, following a 51-48 vote. His amendment addressed Medicaid, which has become a flash point in the battle over the budget this year, as well as Medicare.
Sullivan said his proposal would strengthen Medicaid, the state-federal health program for lower-income people that House GOP lawmakers are looking at as one place to cut spending, and Medicare, the health insurance program for seniors and some people with disabilities.
“We should all want to weed out waste, fraud and abuse in Medicaid and Medicare, and we must keep these programs going. We should do both,” Sullivan said.
Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden spoke against the amendment, saying it didn’t clearly define which “vulnerable people” would have their access to Medicare and Medicaid protected.
“By not defining the vulnerable, the Sullivan amendment is code for states to cut benefits or kick people off their coverage altogether,” Wyden said. “To me, the Sullivan amendment basically says if somebody thinks you’re not poor enough, you’re not sick enough, or you’re not disabled enough, we’re not going to be there for you.”
Democrats unsuccessfully offered messaging amendments dealing with everything from Social Security phone service to the minimum wage to contracts with farmers.
‘Start the game’
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said during a floor speech Friday the budget resolution will clear the way for lawmakers to extend the 2017 tax cuts permanently, bolster federal spending on border security and defense, rewrite energy policy and cut spending.
“The resolution opens up that process that will be done by the House and Senate authorizing committees,” Graham said. “So this doesn’t do anything other than start the game and it’s time this game started.”
Wyden, ranking member on the Senate Finance Committee, vehemently opposed the budget resolution, saying the tax cuts it sets up would predominantly help the wealthy.
Wyden argued the tariffs that President Donald Trump has instituted would negate any potential positive impacts of the upcoming GOP tax cuts. The tariffs sent markets diving on Friday for a second day in a row.
“People following along at home are going to hear a lot of sweet-sounding promises from Republicans about what they’re trying to accomplish,” Wyden said. “They claim their tax bill is just all unicorns and rainbows. They’ll say everybody is going to benefit from a tax cut and typical families will get the help they need. They’ll promise rising wages and a booming economy.
“It’s just not true. The reality is, unless you’re way out at the upper end of the income scale, any benefit you get from this Republican bill is going to get blown out of the water as the Trump tariffs continue to hike inflation.”
Paul said during floor debate that he was “concerned” about how his colleagues had written the measure.
“What worries me is that so many things in Washington are smoke and mirrors,” Paul said. “On the one hand, it appears as if all of this great savings is happening. But on the other hand, the resolution before us will increase the debt by $5 trillion.”
Paul offered an amendment that would have changed those instructions to set up a three-month debt limit extension, but it was not agreed to following a vote of 5-94.
Framework for tax hikes and policy bill
Congress’ budget isn’t a bill but a concurrent resolution, meaning it never goes to the president for a signature. Its various provisions take effect once both chambers vote to adopt the same version.
The budget resolution also doesn’t include any real money, just plans for the next decade.
But it does lay the groundwork for the GOP to use the complex reconciliation process to extend the 2017 tax law, much of which was set to expire at the end of this year.
Republicans plan to use that reconciliation bill to boost spending on border security and defense by hundreds of billions of dollars and make changes to energy policy.
The budget resolution also includes instructions to raise the debt limit by between $4 and $5 trillion later this year.
The reconciliation instructions give a dozen House committees and 10 Senate committees targets for how much they can increase the deficit or how much they need to cut spending when they draft their pieces of the package.
All of those panels are supposed to send their bills to the Budget committees before May 9, so they can be bundled together in one package and sent to the floor.
The House GOP set a minimum of $1.5 trillion in spending cuts, while Republicans in the Senate set a floor of $4 billion in funding reductions. Those vast differences foreshadow an internal GOP struggle to achieve a final deal.
Nearly $6 trillion deficit increase
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office will ultimately calculate the deficit impact of the reconciliation bill once it’s written, but several outside organizations have said they disagree with how Republicans are moving forward.
The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget released an analysis Friday showing the reconciliation bill would increase deficits during the next decade by nearly $6 trillion.
“A $5.8 trillion deficit-increasing bill would be unprecedented,” CRFB’s analysis states. “It would add 14 times as much to the deficit than the bipartisan infrastructure law ($400 billion), more than three times as much as American Rescue Plan ($1.8 trillion), three times the 2020 CARES Act ($1.7 trillion), and nearly four times the original score of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act ($1.5 trillion). In fact, it would add more to the deficit than all four of these major laws combined.”
Sharon Parrott, president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank, wrote in a statement “the tax cuts called for in the budget plan are so expensive that deficits will rise substantially, raising economic risks associated with higher debt in service to expensive tax cuts skewed to the wealthy.”
“Policymakers need to course-correct and remember their campaign pledges to help ease families’ strained budgets, not contort the budget to the desires of the very wealthy,” Parrott wrote. “That would mean crafting a budget bill that doesn’t raise families’ health and grocery costs but instead invests in making health care more affordable and expands the Child Tax Credit to support families who face challenges affording the basics. These investments and lower deficits can be achieved by a sounder tax policy that requires corporations and the wealthy — who benefit enormously from public investments — to pay their fair share.”
An analysis from The Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, called the GOP budget resolution a “fiscal train wreck.”
Romina Boccia, director of budget and entitlement policy, and Dominik Lett, a budget and entitlement policy analyst, wrote that Republicans need to start over.
“This budget isn’t just a missed opportunity; it actively worsens our nation’s debt trajectory,” they wrote. “The resolution abandons the House’s concrete spending reductions desperately needed in today’s high-debt environment, sets a dangerous precedent by adopting a so-called current policy baseline that hides the very real deficit impact of extending tax cuts, and adds hundreds of billions in new deficit spending. The Senate should go back to the drawing b
Last updated 8:49 a.m., Apr. 5, 2025
Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com.
The post U.S. Senate GOP wins approval of sprawling budget blueprint, shipping it to the House appeared first on kentuckylantern.com
News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
JCPS 5th grader gets new type of cochlear implant
SUMMARY: Eleven-year-old DuJuan, affectionately known as “Baby Obama,” received a cochlear implant after his family discovered he had hearing loss. Initially, DuJuan was a joyful and sociable child, but his teacher noticed he struggled to hear questions in class. After testing confirmed his hearing issues, DuJuan first received a hearing aid, which did not improve his condition. Specialists at University of Kentucky Healthcare recommended a cochlear implant to prevent further deterioration. The surgery was successful, and DuJuan expressed joy upon hearing better. He encourages others facing similar challenges to embrace positivity and seek support. His journey continues with ongoing check-ups.

JCPS 5th grader gets new type of cochlear implant
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Morning weather forecast: 4/4/2025
SUMMARY: Flash flood warnings are in effect across the area this morning, continuing through the afternoon depending on rainfall. Heavier rain is concentrated south of Lexington, with warnings extending through most of the region. A flood watch remains in place until Sunday due to ongoing rain. A cold front will lift north throughout the day, bringing scattered showers and storms to central and northern parts of the state. Severe weather risk is low today, but torrential rain and flooding are concerns for the weekend. Temperatures will vary, reaching 70s in central Kentucky. Expect up to six inches of rain in some areas over the next three days.

There’s still no end in sight as Kentucky is forced to just bear down and endure another rainy assault. Flood concerns continue to grow. Stay safe and stay tuned to The Weather Authority.
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