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Press release: KYTC announces speed limit reductions on KY 94 and Robertson Road

MURRAY – The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) has reduced speed limits near the intersection of KY 94 and KY 1660 [Robertson Road North] in Murray. New speed limit signs were installed today.

Following an engineering and traffic study, KYTC has extended the 35-mph zone on KY 94 westward from 17th Street to just beyond Belle Meade Drive. A 45-mph transition zone then continues from Belle Meade Drive to near Hudson Road.

In the distance, a 45 mph sign can be seen just past Belle Meade Drive. (JESSICA PAINE/The Murray Sentinel)

On KY 1660, a 35-mph zone is now in place from the KY 94 intersection north to just past College Farm Road, followed by a 45-mph transition zone stretching to KY 121.

These changes aim to enhance safety near residential areas and schools. Approximately 4,706 vehicles travel this section of KY 94 in an average day. With signs posted, the new speed limits are active and subject to enforcement.

Gone are the days of accelerating to 45 mph after Doran Road. (JESSICA PAINE/The Murray Sentinel)

Jackson Purchase Historical Society

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The Jackson Purchase Historical Society (JPHS) will meet on Saturday, May 17 at 10:30 am at Temple Israel at 330 Joe Clifton Dr, Paducah, Kentucky. Our speaker will be Society Vice President Richard D. Parker, who will discuss his research on the Bernheim and Dreyfuss families, formerly of Paducah, Kentucky and their connections to the development of the bourbon industry and major league baseball.

People associate Kentucky with bourbon, of course. Baseball typically does not come to mind when one thinks of Kentucky bourbon. Believe it or not, the two go hand-in-hand as the man responsible for baseball’s modern-day success called Paducah, Kentucky home for eight years and worked in the bourbon industry. That man, Barney Dreyfuss, would leave region and go on to create the World Series and help turn baseball into the popular sport it is today. If it wasn’t for Kentucky Bourbon, however, none of Dreyfuss’ success might have been possible. His uncle, Issac Wolfe Bernheim—who called Paducah home for 20 years—would become one the world’s most powerful “Bourbon Barrons” and helped propel the young Dreyfuss into his baseball management career. Learn the whole, fascinating story on May 17 at Temple Israel.

Richard D. Parker is a native of Paris, Tennessee and a history graduate of Murray State University and has his master’s degree from Western Kentucky University. He is Vice President of the JPHS and has written several articles and book reviews that have appeared in the Journal of the Jackson Purchase Historical Society. In 2019, JPHS received the Kentucky History Award as Volunteer Organization of the Year. Parker’s most recent contribution to the society’s Journal won the 2019 Dr. Lonnie E. Maness Award as the Most Outstanding Article. The 2019 Journal also received a Kentucky History Award for Excellence in Publications. This was the Journal’s third such award in the last six years. Parker is a former speaker for the Kentucky Humanities Council Speakers’ Bureau and has written two regional history books. He and his wife, Emily, co-own Atomic City Tours, a company focused on providing historical walking tours in downtown Paducah. Atomic City Tours has won two Kentucky Historicsl Society Awards for Excellence in Education.

In 1958, a group of historians met in Murray, Kentucky led by faculty from Murray State University and University of Tennessee-Martin and formed the Jackson Purchase Historical Society to promote interest, study, and preservation of the regional history of the territory encompassed in the Treaty of Tuscaloosa, known as the Jackson Purchase. The society holds a number of meetings each year with a speaker on Jackson Purchase history and publishes an award-winning journal on local history. Members include a wide range of people who simply share a love of history and a love of the Jackson Purchase area.

Articles are welcome for future issues of the JPHS Journal and can be sent to the editor at billmulligan@muray-ky.net  The editor also welcomes inquiries about topics for articles, books for review, or offers to review a book. Copies of the Journal are available from the Jackson Purchase Historical Society, PO Box 531, Murray, KY 42071. The cost is $15.90 including postage and sales tax. Anyone interested in Jackson Purchase history is welcome to join the JPHS. Information about membership and future programs is available on the society’s website.  Free electronic access to back issues of the Journal through 2023 is also available through the Society’s website.

Murray Board of Zoning Adjustments Regular Meeting

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The Murray Board of Zoning Adjustments will meet at 4:30 p.m. at City Hall, 500 Main Street.

Murray Planning Commission Regular Meeting

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The City of Murray Planning Commission will meet at 4:30 p.m. at City Hall, 500 Main St.

Calloway County Board of Health Regular Quarterly Meeting

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The Calloway County Board of Health will hold its regular quarterly meeting at noon.

Press release: Challenge to state’s vape law dismissed by federal court

FRANKFORT, Ky. (May 14, 2025) – Attorney General Russell Coleman announced a major victory today in upholding a Kentucky law to protect Kentuckians’ health and safety. After a months-long court battle, the challengers to Kentucky’s vaping law voluntarily dismissed their federal lawsuit before the U.S. Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit.

The dismissal effectively ends the challenge to Kentucky House Bill 11 from 2024, which established new guidelines and enforcement relating to vapor products. According to the bill’s language, manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers can sell only “authorized” vapor products. In addition, retailers cannot sell even “authorized” vapor products to those under the age of 21.

After a Kentucky federal district court dismissed the plaintiffs’ challenge the vaping law, they appealed to the Sixth Circuit in February. The Attorney General opposed the plaintiffs’ request, in part because the plaintiffs sued to continue selling products that are illegal under federal law. The Sixth Circuit unanimously agreed with the Attorney General. That opinion can be found here.

“Kentucky’s General Assembly is entrusted with the responsibility to make laws, including to promote the health and safety of our families. Our Office will continue to fight to uphold those laws in court and deliver more positive outcomes like this,” said Attorney General Coleman. 

Solicitor General Matt Kuhn and Principal Deputy Solicitor General Jack Heyburn led the Attorney General’s defense of the vaping law before the Sixth Circuit.

“Kentucky’s young people face more threats today than ever before, and I’m proud of the General Assembly’s ongoing work to protect them,” said Senator Brandon Storm, who championed the bill in the Senate. “I’m especially grateful to Attorney General Coleman for his leadership and partnership in defending Kentucky’s laws. He is an outstanding ally in our efforts to safeguard the health and well-being of Kentucky’s children and families.”

The vaping legislation was passed by the General Assembly in April 2024 and took effect January 1, 2025.

Last July, General Coleman defeated a state-court challenge to the law in before the Franklin Circuit Court. The appeal of that decision remains pending in the Kentucky Court of Appeals

CUBS Quarterly Meeting

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Calloway United Benevolent Services will meet at noon at the CFSB south branch. See more information below.

We are thrilled to invite you to a very special CUBS quarterly meeting on Wednesday, May 14th, as we celebrate 30 incredible years of connecting businesses and organizations in our community! The very first CUBS meeting took place in May 1995 — and we’re excited to mark this milestone with a BIG celebration!

During the meeting, you’ll have the opportunity to hear from Reba Celsor, the new CEO of MCCH, and we’re inviting one representative from each organization to share a brief update about your group and highlight an upcoming event. Feel free to bring flyers or handouts to place on our community table!

CUBS Quarterly Meeting

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Calloway United Benevolent Services will hold its quarterly meeting at noon at the CFSB south branch.

Murray Parks Committee Regular Meeting CANCELED

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The Murray Parks Committee regular May meeting has been canceled.

MCCH Board of Trustees Quality Committee Regular Meeting CANCELED

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The Murray-Calloway County Hospital Board of Trustees Quality Committee regular May meeting has been canceled.

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