
Headlines Around Kentucky (6/25/2024)
Clip: Season 3 Episode 17 | 2m 54sVideo has Closed Captions
Headlines Around Kentucky (6/25/2024).
A first-of-its-kind facility could be coming to western Kentucky and encouraging new numbers on a deadly form of cancer that's common in Kentucky.
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Kentucky Edition is a local public television program presented by KET

Headlines Around Kentucky (6/25/2024)
Clip: Season 3 Episode 17 | 2m 54sVideo has Closed Captions
A first-of-its-kind facility could be coming to western Kentucky and encouraging new numbers on a deadly form of cancer that's common in Kentucky.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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A first of its kind facility could be coming to western Kentucky and encouraging new numbers on a deadly form of cancer that is common and Kentucky details as we look at headlines around Kentucky.
♪ >> Western Kentucky City could be the home of the first commercial facility that would enrich uranium by vibrating it with lasers, according to local leaders, Australia known company global Laser enrichment signed an agreement recently that allows them to acquire a plot of land near the former Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant site in far western Kentucky.
Wk MS reports the company has had to deal with the U.S. Department of Energy since 2016 to enrich the uranium tails or leftovers that are in storage at the former plant site.
This new process to enrich the uranium could turn depleted uranium stores into fuel for nuclear power plants.
The University of Kentucky study says deaths from colorectal cancer in Appalachian, Kentucky have declined over a 21 year period.
The Advocate Messenger reports from 1999 to 2020 were tallied.
The rates fell from 31 deaths per 100,000 to 24 per 100,000.
That includes 54 counties served by the Appalachian Regional Commission in other parts of Kentucky.
The rate dropped from 27 to 17.
A new study suggests that bird flu could survive through pasteurization.
But health experts say retail milk is still safe to consume earlier this year, bird flu was found in cows for the first time.
Will public media says the FDA is attempting to reduce the sale of raw milk by encouraging states that approve it to stop sales.
The Federal Drug Administration said months ago that commercial milk is still safe because the pasteurization process feels any living virus.
Christian nonprofit is building homes in eastern Kentucky counties damaged by floods.
Appalachia service project has built 24 new homes and repaired 40 homes and bres it.
Harland, not Leslie mug often.
And Perry counties, Kentucky Lantern reports the service project has 12 homes currently under construction and he's fixing up.
24 more.
They say they expect to finish 45 new homes and repair 65 homes by the end of 2024.
And that's a look at headlines around Kentucky.
I'm she left.
♪
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