DOGE terminated leases for more mine safety offices in Kentucky than any other state, a move advocates say comes at the expense of miners' health.
Kentucky House Bill 196 would let coal companies reduce the number of miners trained in basic first aid at smaller mines.
The 19-year-old plays the bass drum in the Morehead State University marching band, and his late father loved playing the ...
A new report says hundreds of surface-mined coal sites across Eastern Kentucky have not been fully reclaimed as quickly as ...
Environmental protesters in Pineville are rallying against Senate Bill 89, which reduces "red tape" for coal mining and ...
Nothing says 'sustainable AI' like the burps of Appalachian industry Three companies in the US are teaming up to address the ...
An effort to lower the number of medically-trained emergency personnel required in smaller active coal mines passed a Senate ...
Despite reservations voiced by Republicans, a Kentucky legislative committee advanced a bill that would roll back a state ...
The Department of Government Efficiency has targeted seven Kentucky mine safety offices for possible closure, according to the DOGE website.
The life and musical legacy of Kentucky native Loretta Lynn is headed to Broadway. Loretta Lynn, right, and Sissy Spacek sang together at a party to celebrate the opening of "Coal Miner's Daughter ...
Growing up along the Harlan-Letcher county line in Eastern Kentucky, Landen Morris often heard from family that he reminded ...