KFTC Blog
Voting Rights / Democracy focus on General Assembly bills and work in new year
PSC limits utility rate increase, protects rooftop solar – for now
Justice for Breonna Taylor: Amplifying and learning from the Louisville uprising
Northern Kentucky (virtual) Sustainability Tour
Encouragement, communication and education move us forward in the fight for voting rights
KFTC is "All In" for building regional progressive power and standing with Georgians
Art Nurtures Justice auction a success for Rolling Bluegrass
What it will take to win: grassroots organizing, deep connections
Executive Committee elected at annual business meeting
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Recent News
Kentucky’s past legislative session showed alarming trend toward government secrecy
Churchill Downs takes more than it gives. That's why the Kentucky Derby is a no-go for me
‘We must never forget.’ Kentucky town installs markers for lynching victims.
Featured Posts
Protecting the Earth
TJC Rolling Out The Vote Tour – a KFTC Reflection Essay
KFTC Voter Empowerment Contractor Reflection Essay
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Sandy Holbert
"I'm a former felon," Says Sandy Holbert of Scott County," …but that's not all I am. I'm a mother of four, daughter, a sister, a Sunday school teacher, a social worker and so much more."
Like 243,000 others in Kentucky, Holbert can’t vote because of something she did wrong in her past, paired with Kentucky’s extreme felony disenfranchisement laws. Only Kentucky and Virginia take away voting rights from all former felons unless they can get a partial pardon from the Governor.
When I received notification that I could no longer vote... I opened it up and the shame and embarrassment flooded me. Even though I was the only one home I the time, I went to my room and shut the door and cried... I felt like someone had just stripped me of my voice."
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Aubrey Clemons has always valued voting. But Clemons lost his right to vote after a felony conviction in 2006. He got his right to vote back through Gov. Andy Beshear's executive order. He lives in the Smoketown community of Louisville and is a KFTC member.
As we planned this event, we communicated often, and we encouraged each other. We laughed a lot and brainstormed ideas about how to make it work. What really convinced us to continue with this project was when we started asking artists to donate art. They were almost all glad to help. Friends like Casey Papendieck of Turtle Farm Pottery in Wolfe County even met us in Lexington to hand off their donation.