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Lately there’s been a lot of splashy economic news about Kentucky with promises of new manufacturing jobs at major companies and politicians are lining up to take credit for a promise of economic prosperity.
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A judge has dismissed the most serious charges against two former Louisville police officers for a second time.
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City officials said they’ll “continue to be vigilant” after gunfire near a west Louisville bus stop two weeks in a row.
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Cities United and the Louisville Story Program team up to honor local violence interrupters and expand the conversation around public safety.
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Louisville Metro opened a new portal for people to submit complaints about Bardstown Road bars ahead of a licensing deadline in October.
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Ford will build an electric truck in Louisville, but the new assembly process requires fewer workersFord Motor Company plans to invest nearly $2 billion in the Louisville Assembly Plant to expand and build a new midsize electric truck. Its plans will require an expansion and retooling of the entire factory, but will mean fewer jobs.
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City and state officials are balancing the environmental benefits of reformulated gas with the added costs to consumers in Louisville.
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A Louisville real estate developer is suing to declare the city-county merger of 2003 unconstitutional and void.
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Louisville’s only HBCU wants to build a new $32 million campus in the West End.
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The new regulations and penalties approved by Louisville Metro Council are another tool to address copper wire theft.
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A public private partnership looks to lure big business to Louisville.
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Homeless service providers across Kentucky say new laws and increased enforcement has driven homeless Kentuckians into hiding.