UPDATED 2/18/21 @ 5:05AM Organization Status Type Abell Eyes - Lexington Opening Late at 12:00PM Thursday BUSINESSES Adcolor, Inc. Opening Late at 10:00AM Today Snow Plan BUSINESSES Aging With Grace - The Health Club for Seniors Closed Thursday Operating Remotely BUSINESSES All About Kids - Lexington Delayed 2 hours Thursday DAYCARES Amazon - Winchester Opening Late at 8:00AM Today BUSINESSES Anderson County Closed Thursday Non-Traditional Instruction Day SCHOOLS Animal Hospital of Danville Closed Thursday BUSINESSES Asbury Theological Seminary Closed Through Thursday COLLEGES Asbury University Closed Through Friday 2/19Virtual Learning COLLEGES Augusta Independent Closed Thursday Non-Traditional Instruction Day SCHOOLS Aunties Academy Closed Thursday DAYCARES Baby Health Services Closed Thursday BUSINESSES Bank of the Bluegrass Delayed 1 hour Thursday BUSINESSES Barbourville Independent Closed Thursday SCHOOLS Barnhill Pediatric Dentistry Closed Thursday BUSINESSES Bath Co. Memorial L
Credit Kentucky Transportation Cabinet
Drivers who use KY 594 (Red Lick Road) in Estill County will have to find an alternate route for the next few weeks, as repairs are planned that will require the road to be closed during working hours.
Daytime closures will begin on Monday, Jan. 25, to repair a major break in pavement at milepoint 4.7, which is 0.5 miles west of Horns River Road and 4.7 miles east of the Madison County line.
The road will be closed from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. each day. Those hours may be adjusted if traffic and weather conditions permit; from 8:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. The work is expected to take up to two months to complete.
Estill County Schools begin week two of in-person learning yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Midwives of Appalachia Get Organized
Despite the region’s rich history of reproductive care, birth options remain incredibly limited. A group of midwives in Kentucky want to change that.
Bill Frakes/Sports Illustrated/Getty
When Laura Browning was pregnant for the first time, she knew what she wanted from her birth experience. She wanted a home birth with a midwife, ideally, and if that wasn’t possible, she wanted a nurse-midwife (who are typically hospital-based) to deliver her baby. She associated obstetricians with “quick in-and-out appointments” that lacked personal care and warmth. “I wanted to know who’s going to be delivering my baby who’s going to be catching my baby and have a relationship with them,” recalled Browning, who is now pregnant with her fourth child.