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Wanda Jean Bowens Richmond

Wanda Jean Bowens Richmond, age 68, of Grayson, Kentucky, went to be with the Lord on Wednesday, January 7, 2026.

She was born August 25, 1957, in Ohio, a daughter of the late Eugene and Ella Bowen Bowens.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two sisters, Patricia Copley, and Sharon Ison.

Wanda was a member of Colton Baptist Church and previously attended Stinson Church of Christ, and she loved going to church. She enjoyed her gardening, taking care of her house plants, watching westerns, reading books, watching her great-grand children on videochat, browsing the aisles at thrift stores for treasures, and spending summer days at the pool or lake.

Wanda is survived by her loving daughters, Darla (James) Clark of Ashland, Kentucky, Ashleigh Richmond (Andrew Seer) of Richmond, Kentucky; three grandchildren, Stacy (Ethan) Davis, Raileigh Bond (Alannah Mullins), Gavin Bond, and her pride and joy, Asher and Sadie Davis, her precious great-grand babies; two brothers, Lawrence (Linda) Ison of Virginia Beach, Virginia, Jimmy Bowens of Puerto Rica, she also leaves behind a special niece, Juanita Griffiths of Ashland, Kentucky and a host of family and friends who will mourn her passing.

Funeral service will be Saturday, January 17, 2026 at 2;00 p.m., at Coalton 1st Baptist Church, 2501-2799 Cr-1604, Rush, Kentucky 41168, with Brother Paul Holbrook officiating.

Friends my visit after 12 p.m., Saturday, January 17, 2026 at Coalton 1st Baptist Church until the service hour.

Family and friends will serve at Pallbearers.

Grayson Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Wanda Jean Bowens Richmond.

Baby Jasper Grayson Jordan

Baby Jasper Grayson Jordan, was carried to Heaven by angels Tuesday, January 6, 2026, from UK-King’s Daughter Medical Center in Ashland, Kentucky.

Jasper was the son of Austin Jordan and Annamaria Paisley of Grayson, Kentucky.

Jasper was preceded in death by his grandfathers, Terry “TJ” Jordan and Gabriel Paisley.

In addition to his parents, Jasper is survived by one brother, Toby Wayne Jordan; grandmothers, Rebecca Collier, Beverly Boyd; cousin, Parker Sparks; uncles, Aaron Jordan, Gabriel Paisley; aunts, Tara Jordan, Abby Jordan, Sierra Boyd, Tina Paisley, Hannah Paisley, Destinee Paisley, along with many other family and friends who will sadly mourn his passing.

Funeral services will be held 1 p.m., Wednesday, January 14, 2026, at Grayson Funeral Home and Cremation Services, 49 McCoy Road, Grayson, Kentucky, with Brother Jerry Jordan officiating.

Friends may visit after 12 noon, Wednesday, January 14, 2026, until the service hour at Grayson Funeral Home.

Grayson Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Baby Jasper Grayson Jordan.

Condolences may be sent to the family at http://www.globefc.com.

Roger Mason McDowell

Roger Mason McDowell, age 70, of Cannonsburg, Kentucky, passed away January 3, 2026, at Boyd Nursing and Rehabilitation.

He was born September 18, 1955, in Boyd County, Kentucky, a son of the late June and Marie Griffith McDowell.

Roger proudly served his country in the United States Army and was a member of VFW Post Kansas City, American Legion.

Roger is survived by one daughter, Michele Stiles; one son, Roger Jason McDowell, along with many other family and friends who will sadly miss him.

At Roger’s request there will be no service at this time but a Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.

Grayson Funeral Home and Cremation Services is honored to serve the family of Roger Mason McDowell.

Joyce Edna Runyon Holbrook

Joyce Edna Runyon Holbrook, age 81, of Olive Hill, Kentucky, passed away Friday, January 9, 2026, at her residence, surrounded by her loving family.

She was born November 21, 1944, in Kenova, West Virginia, a daughter of the late Herman and Edna Wright Runyon.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by one daughter, Mary Holbrook; one granddaughter, Kirsten Seadorf; one great-grandson, Lawson Laney.

Joyce passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by her family. She was a loving wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, cherished daughter and sister. Joyce loved spending time with her family and keeping up with classic soap operas. She loved caring for her dogs and cats, watching hummingbirds, and enjoying the farm animals while having quiet moments on the porch with her husband. Her warmth and kindness will be fondly remembered.

Joyce is survived by her loving husband of 47 years, Charles David Holbrook; two sons, Bryon (Tonya) LeMaster of Ashland, Kentucky, Chad (Victoria) Holbrook of Olive Hill, Kentucky; three daughters, Niki (Michael) Evans of Monroe, North Carolina, Kathy Taylor-Holbrook of Olive Hill, Kentucky, Karen (Randy) Hipp of Arcadia, Florida; 22 grandchildren; 31 great-grandchildren; one brother, Ralph (Mary) Runyon of Evansville, Indiana; two sisters, Shirley (John) Belba of Pataskala, Ohio, Joan (Gib) Johnson of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, along with many other family and friends who will sadly miss her.

Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m., Thursday, January 15, 2026, at Globe Funeral Chapel, 17277 West US Hwy 60, Olive Hill, Kentucky, with Brother John Gilbert officiating. Burial will follow in C & C Holbrook Family Cemetery in Elliott County.

Friends may visit after 1:30 p.m., Thursday, January 15, 2026, until the service hour at Globe Funeral Chapel.

Nathan Holbrook, Triston Holbrook, Nicholas Evans, Dennis Dees, Justin Hollon and Cameron Laney will serve 

as pallbearers.

Michael Evans, Randy Hipp, Chad Holbrook and Taylor Freeman will serve as honorary pallbearers.

Carla Williams Caudil

Carla Williams Caudill, age 64, of Olive Hill, Kentucky, passed away Thursday, January 8, 2026, at her residence.

She was born April 24, 1961, in Carter County, Kentucky, to the late Carl and Alberta Parker Williams.

Carla attended Carter Church of Christ. She was a beautician for 40 years and enjoyed making crafts, sewing quilts for her grandchildren and staying home with her children and grandchildren.

Carla is survived by her loving husband of 40 years, Dale Caudill; two sons, Tommy (Bobbie) Caudill, Scotty (Missy) Caudill all of Olive Hill, Kentucky; 4 grandchildren, Cameron (Jerrika), Chandler (Hayla), Marissa (Russell), Matthew; 4 great-grandchildren, Clay, Lydia, Jaxon, Opal; one brother, Jeff Williams of Carter City, Kentucky; one sister, Patsy (Richard) Slone of Grayson, Kentucky; special nephew, Adam Slone; special niece, Adrienne (Kyle) Lubert and great-niece, Mahaila Lubert, along with many other family and friends who will sadly miss her.

Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Tuesday, January 13, 2026, at Globe Funeral Chapel, 17277 West US Hwy 60, Olive Hill, Kentucky, with Brother Rick McGlone officiating. Burial will follow in Williams Cemetery in Carter City.

Friends may visit after 11:30 a.m., Tuesday, January 13, 2026, until the service hour at Globe Funeral Chapel.

Tommy Caudill, Scotty Caudill, Cameron Caudill, Chandler Caudill, Matthew Caudill and David Jesse will serve as pallbearers.

Globe Funeral Chapel is honored to serve the family of Carla Williams Caudill.

Alma “Jean” Tackett Reid

Alma “Jean” Tackett Reid, age 90, of Wapakoneta, Ohio, formerly of Olive Hill, Kentucky, passed away Wednesday, January 7, 2026, at The Gardens of Wapakoneta.

She was born March 23, 1935, in Olive Hill, Kentucky, a daughter of the late Everett and Jewell Fannin Tackett.

Jean was a strong, hard working, independent woman. She was married to her husband Fred L. Reid in June of 1961 and had two beautiful kids together Diane and David. Unfortunately, her husband had an illness in 1988 and passed.

Afterwards, she started doing little jobs here and there until her first and only grandchild, Rochelle was born. Jean was then the full time babysitter of Rochelle. As time went on they would go on Dairy Queen dates and afterwards feeding the ducks at the pond. Rochelle was her pride and joy.

Wherever they went she made it known that Rochelle was her granddaughter.

She then moved back and forth from Ohio to Olive Hill, Ky doing Gods work which seemed to be taking care of her family.

From taking care of her mom during her last years and being there for family when her daughter passed suddenly to even being there in the last years of her sons life; she was always there to help and take care of them. She had moments in her life that no one should ever have to go through, but she was strong and pushed through those times.

In her final years, she moved to Wapakoneta, Ohio to be closer to Rochelle and her husband, Jarrod and her three great-grandchildren.

Jean is going to be dearly missed by so many, she definitely left an imprint on everyone’s heart that she met.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband of 27 years, Roy Reid; one son, David Reid; one daughter, Diane Sharrock; one grandson, Barry Thomas Sharrock; one granddaughter, Cheynenne Sharrock; three brothers, Elbert Royce Tackett, Russell Tackett, William “Bill” Tackett; three sisters, Joline Furnish, Alice “Gail” Rogers and Juanita Oney.

Jean is survived by one sister, Phyllis Osborne of Winchester, Kentucky; one granddaughter, Rochelle (Jarrod) Neidemire; three great-grandchildren, Everly Neidemire, Alyvia Neidemire, Jacob Neidemire; special niece, Karen Barrett of Cincinnati, Ohio; along with many other family and friends who will sadly miss her.

Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday, January 14, 2026, at Globe Funeral Chapel, 17277 West US Hwy 60, Olive Hill, Kentucky, with Brother JC Bond officiating. Burial will follow in Garvin Ridge Cemetery in Olive Hill.

Friends may visit after 11:30 a.m., Wednesday, January 14, 2026, until the service hour at Globe Funeral Chapel. Family and friends will serve as pallbearers.

Globe Funeral Chapel is honored to serve the family of Alma “Jean” Tackett Reid .

Connie Boggs

Connie Boggs, age 66, of Olive Hill, Kentucky, passed away on January 4, 2026, at UK King’s Daughters Medical Center in Ashland, Kentucky.

She was born July 20, 1959, in Carter County, Kentucky, a beloved daughter of the late Thurman Boggs and Maxine Bryant Boggs.

In addition to her parents, Thurman and Maxine Boggs, Connie was preceded in death by her brother, Carl Boggs, and her sister, Carolyn Louise Lawson.

Connie was one of the most caring and genuine people you could ever meet. She had a servant’s heart and spent her life taking care of others. While she was incredibly kind and loving, Connie was also strong-willed and stood her ground when needed a trait those close to her admired and respected.

She was an amazing cook and loved preparing meals for her family, a way she showed love better than words ever could. Although Connie was not a grandmother by title, she treated her nieces and nephews as if they were her own children and grandchildren, and many of them saw her exactly that way.

Connie worked for many years as a seamstress at Cintas, where she eventually retired. Through her work, she formed lifelong friendships — a true testament to the kind of person she was. Those friendships remained strong well beyond her working years.

Connie also took great pride in honoring her family’s history. She devoted much of her time to preserving the memory and legacy of her parents, Thurman and Maxine Boggs, ensuring their lives were remembered with care, dignity, and love.

She is survived by her sisters, Cathy Hanshaw (Dave Campbell) of Olive Hill, Kentucky, who—alongside Xenia Marshall—lovingly cared for Connie in her final days; Charlene Ratcliff of Ashland, Kentucky; and Dana Riffe of Russell, Kentucky; along with many nieces, nephews, extended family members, and dear friends who will forever cherish her memory.

Funeral services will be held at 12 noon, Thursday, January 8, 2026, at Globe Funeral Chapel, 17277 West U.S. Hwy 60, Olive Hill, Kentucky, with Brother Mike Bryant officiating. Burial will follow in Boggs Cemetery in Grahn, Kentucky.

Friends may visit after 11 a.m. Thursday until the service hour at Globe Funeral Chapel.

Devin Hanshaw, Dave Campbell, Xaver Marshall, Xenia Marshall, Atreyu Arthur, and Thomas Breedon will serve as pallbearers.

Connie will be remembered for her warmth, her strength, her generosity, and the love she freely gave to so many. Her presence will be deeply missed, but her legacy of care, devotion, and remembrance will live on.

The strangest things

black dice in tilt shift lens
Photo by Nika Benedictova on Pexels.com

By Robert Dean
Guest Columnist

As we’re culturally reeling from the finale of Stranger Things, it’s hard not to point out how weak the writing was. Many of the show’s flaws sat right on the surface. The story was bogged down in a convoluted plot and over-explanation of every nuanced movement of a paper-thin villain who, when put to the test, lasted about ten minutes. Then Joyce Byers went shogun after years of abuse. It was one of the only comforting scenes in the ending.

Poor writing seems to be at the core of the start of 2026. Prior administrations at least came up with fanciful stories—Demogorgons in faraway lands ready to attack people, Iraq, weapons of mass destruction. But when the Trump administration stormed into Venezuela, they didn’t bother with creative storytelling. They gave the ugly truth: this is about oil and taking resources from a sovereign nation weaker than ours.

Nicolás Maduro didn’t preside over a virtuous resistance or a misunderstood revolution. He ran an authoritarian, corrupt regime that oversaw rampant repression, arbitrary detentions, and a catastrophic economic collapse that drove millions into exile. At the same time, his inner circle allegedly enriched itself through collusion with drug cartels and narco-terror networks. Now that his grip has slipped, the U.S. isn’t swooping in to liberate Venezuela so much as to carve off its oil wealth for private profit.

What no one seems to understand is that the regime is still in place. Delcy Rodríguez, Maduro’s second banana, remains in command, as does the entire cabinet he assembled. This isn’t a victory for human rights. When Trump acts as the boss of the country, it’s for a regime change friendly to United States oil interests—that’s it. As the Epstein files keep coming, the economy continues to flounder, and the jobs numbers stagnate, this was the answer: to flex muscle and take. Much like Vecna, stealing children from their classrooms and using them to feed a one-man vision for a better world, where the darkness matches the light.

Open theft of another country’s resources is precisely what Vladimir Putin did in Ukraine, just as Xi will eventually do with Taiwan, though the moral grandstanding will be different. None of these actions are OK. If the United States wanted intervention, why now? The guise of drugs is bogus, and we all know it. They’re not making movies and television shows about Venezuela; they’re about Mexico. The ingredients to make fentanyl come from India and China.

Who wins in this case? Oil companies. The thick, sludgy oil the country produces—oil that the big brands already have the machinery to refine. Exxon, Shell, BP. The producers are the ones who will eventually benefit. This isn’t about liberation, nor ridding the world of a villain. It’s another act of lining the pockets of the rich, while the idea of saviorism is splashed across Fox News like a warm hug wrapped in an American flag, because the villain at home needed a win.

Venezuela controls almost one-fifth of the world’s proven oil reserves, yet produces less than 1% of global crude today, a product of systemic decay, sanctions, and neglect. U.S. oil stocks vaulted double-digit percentages at the mere implication of access. That tells us why real power brokers are watching. At a moment when the U.S. economy slogs through slower growth and tepid job numbers, we’re sold a blockbuster narrative that collapses under inspection—a demonstration of storytelling gone amiss, both in fiction and in the corridors of power. We’re not heroes rolling dice to see outcomes, but the bad guys spreading the Upside Down, covered in black tar.

Contact us at news@cartercountytimes.com

Best foot forward

Visitors to Olive Hill enjoy the first annual Carter County Bigfoot Festival last September. (Photo by Jeremy D. Wells, Carter County Times)
By: Charles Romans
Carter County Times

The Olive Hill Tourism Commission was established late last year, and the members of the commission have been working on the best way to promote tourism in the city. Olive Hill Tourism has funded several projects and is considering more, but tourism commission president Jeremy Rayburn said they are taking a measured approach and are not rushing the process. This is their approach, he said, in spite of the fact that the relatively new commission has little to no external regulation.

“There was supposed to be an ordinance that stated we (the tourism commission) couldn’t spend anything over $20,000 without the city’s approval,” Rayburn said. “But that resolution sort of slipped through the cracks.”

Rayburn said that he plans to let the city know everything the commission votes on anyway, regardless of whether or not that resolution is in place.

“The city needs to be kept in the loop,” he said. “I think it would be kind of shady if they weren’t. That way they know where the city’s tax money is going.”

Rayburn said the things the commission has voted for so far have mainly been sponsorships of events like last year’s Bigfoot Festival that pulled in over 5,000 people to the downtown area and other events such as the Policeman’s Block Party. The commission has also matched funds for the renovation of the caboose at the Depot, a project that is ongoing.

“We also gave money to Trail Town to build bridges for their new walking trails,” Rayburn said.

“The caboose is supposed to be done by the end of the month,” he added. “I have been in there and looked at it, and saw how they were progressing.”

The caboose project consisted of a complete restoration to its original state, Rayburn said. This included sandblasting of metal parts, replacement of some panels, and a fresh coat of paint in the originally available colors.

Rayburn joked that he wasn’t a huge fan of the yellow to be used, but at one point in the past the Caboose was yellow.

“If you go back and look at the old C&O colors,” Rayburn said, “They were blue and yellow. I would have preferred a blue caboose, but it is what it is.”

Trail Town was the organization to originally spearhead the caboose restoration project, Rayburn said. The organization was able to secure funding via a donation from McDonald’s, and then the Olive Hill Tourism Commission agreed to match the funds contributed by that corporation. The project, he said, began last summer and is now nearing completion.

Rayburn said there have been other things the commission has contributed to as well, such as city Christmas lights which, he said, will be an annual expense. Something  the commission will be voting to address in the future (possibly the spring of 2026) is the downtown area.

“We need to get that area situated and cleaned up,” Rayburn said. “We didn’t get to it last year because we ran out of time.”

The Olive Hill Tourism Commission is open to ideas and projects that will encourage people to visit Olive Hill, Rayburn said.

“You always want to leave something better than the way you found it,” he said.

But there is a way to go about it, and people and organizations need to be aware that any idea they bring to the commission for funding will need to be voted on by commission members at regular meetings, or in some cases at special, called meetings. So, it is in everyone’s best interest, he said, to plan ahead accordingly.

Olive Hill Tourism Commission Meetings are on the first Tuesday of the month, at 5:30 pm, at the Olive Hill Police Station. All meetings are open to the public, and a time is typically set aside for public comments.

Contact the writer at charles@cartercountytimes.com

Extension Notes: Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Detected in Kentucky: Officials Urge Vigilance Among Bird Owners

flock of geese ion tilt shift lens
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com
By: Rebecca Konopka
Carter County Extension Agent

State agriculture officials have recently confirmed the presence of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) in poultry flocks in three Kentucky counties (Jessamine, Fulton & Lawrence).   This is prompting renewed warnings for poultry owners to strengthen biosecurity and monitor their flocks closely.

HPAI is a highly contagious viral disease that poses a severe threat to domesticated birds, including chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese, quail, pheasants, and guinea fowl. While wild migratory waterfowl—such as ducks, geese, and shorebirds—often carry the virus without appearing ill, the disease can spread rapidly and prove fatal once it reaches backyard or commercial poultry operations.

According to the Kentucky Department of Agriculture, the virus spreads through direct bird‑to‑bird contact, respiratory droplets, and contaminated droppings. People can also inadvertently carry the virus on clothing, shoes, equipment, or by transporting infected birds.

Despite the seriousness of the outbreak for poultry, federal health officials emphasize that the current detections do not pose an immediate public health risk. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that properly cooked poultry and eggs remain safe to eat, as heating food to an internal temperature of 165 degrees kills viruses and bacteria.

Bird owners are urged to watch for signs of infection, which may include sudden unexplained death, respiratory distress, decreased appetite or water intake, and a drop in egg production. Soft‑shelled or misshapen eggs may also indicate illness.

State officials are asking residents to take simple but critical steps to help contain the spread. These include keeping backyard flocks separated from wild birds, avoiding unnecessary visits to other bird owners, and thoroughly washing clothing and footwear after any contact with poultry. Sharing information with neighbors and fellow bird enthusiasts is also encouraged.

Anyone who suspects their birds may be sick is urged to call the state’s Sick Bird Hotline at 866‑536‑7593 for immediate guidance.

As monitoring continues, officials stress that community awareness and responsible flock management remain the strongest tools for protecting Kentucky’s poultry industry.

For more information about HPAI contact the Carter County Extension Office.   Educational programs of the Cooperative Extension Service serve all people regardless of economic or social status and will not discriminate on the basis of race, color, ethnic origin, national origin, creed, religion, political belief, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expressions, pregnancy, marital status, genetic information, age, veteran status, or physical or mental disability.

Upcoming Events:

  • Little Sandy Beekeepers – January 6th @ 6:30 PM – Topic – Brainy Bees: Using Honey Bee Brains to Understand Shifts in Behavior
  • Extension District Board – January 13th @ 10:00 AM
  • Livestock Predator Control Program – January 22nd @6:00 PM – Boyd County Extension Fairgrounds

Could the Venezuelan adventure become another disaster like Afghanistan?

gray helicopter on gray road
Photo by Somchai Kongkamsri on Pexels.com

  

          

By: Keith Kappes
Columnist
Carter County Times

  As a student of history, I was greatly surprised Saturday morning when President Donald Trump announced to the world that U.S. military forces had invaded Venezuela to capture that country’s president and his wife to bring them to this country to answer federal indictments as accused narco-terrorists.

            But I was shocked when he also said that the U.S. would be “running” that South American nation until a new national government could be established and the nation’s oil-based economy could be rebuilt.

            More than 100 persons have been killed in American attacks on suspected drug smugglers based in Venezuela but those actions happened on the high seas.

            Trump said military intervention was ordered to assist U.S. law enforcement with the arrests of Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia.  He also made passing reference to the 203-year-old Monroe Doctrine, a U.S. foreign policy announced by President James Monroe in 1823.

That bold declaration warned European powers against further colonization or interference in the Americas, declaring the Western Hemisphere a separate sphere of influence for the U.S.

            Trump noted several times in his press conference that Venezuela had nationalized the property of American oil companies 25 years ago but had let its “stolen” oil industry infrastructure deteriorate, losing its strong position in the global economy, despite having the largest oil reserves in the world.

            He promised that U.S. oil companies would rebuild the country’s oil industry for the benefit of the Venezuelan people.

            Shortly after the press conference in Florida, Maduro’s newly-appointed vice president, Delcy Rodriguez, said Maduro was the country’s legitimate leader. She also called on the nation to take up arms to resist the Americans.

            In another surprise, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio hinted that Cuba could be America’s next liberation target since its economy is failing because of poor leadership.

            U.S. congressional leaders were not told in advance of the pre-dawn military operation and no declaration of war had been approved, as required by federal law.

            Trying to force a regime change in a third world country can be disastrous, as we learned during 20 years of fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan. That adventure cost us the lives of 2,456 service members, the wounding of 20,700 more, the deaths of 3,846 civilian contractors and  total expenditures exceeding one trillion dollars.

            Contact Keith at keithkappes@gmail.com.

New Year’s Kick Off 3v3 tournament

sky sunset field sunrise
Photo by Markus Spiske on Pexels.com
Staff Report
Carter County Times

As the New Year kicks off, eight youth soccer teams will take to the court on Saturday, January 10 at KCU’s Lusby Center in Grayson. Each team will be competing for the title of New Year’s Champs in a fast-paced 3v3 futsal-style format that showcases skill, teamwork, and determination. The tournament will feature not only local teams, but also competitors traveling in from across the tristate area, with organizers noting the event is “drawing visitors and energy into the region.”

Brandon Glispie, one of the volunteers working with the event, explained that it was organized by local community members with a shared passion for youth soccer. The event, he continued, was designed to do more than crown a champion.

“The goal is to create positive opportunities for young athletes, encourage participation in sports, and introduce players to a competitive yet supportive environment that can help inspire youth, strengthen community connections, and set a positive tone for the year ahead,” Glispie said.

While registration for the event is closed, the tournament is open to spectators, he noted, with the event kicking off at 10 a.m. and running until 4 p.m.

Contact us at news@cartercountytimes.com 

Undefeated and unstoppable

(submitted photo)

By Brayleigh Boggs

Carter County Times

The West Carter Middle School Comets have cemented their place in local football history with back-to-back undefeated seasons under the guidance of head coach Chris Barker. Across 2024 and 2025 the Comets strung together 23 consecutive victories, claimed two Beckham Bowl championships, and finished the most recent campaign with a flawless 13-0 record. Barker, named EKC Coach of the Year, has built a program defined by discipline, resilience, and a winning culture that has made West Carter a force to be reckoned with. His leadership has not only produced victories but has also developed players who excel individually, as evidenced by the long list of awards and accolades earned by his athletes.

The eighth-grade team was dominant from start to finish, showcasing talent across every position. Gabe Caudill earned EKC Player of the Year honors, while Jordan Barker was named Defensive Player of the Year. Lucas Tackett stood out as Lineman of the Year and claimed the prestigious Region 3 Player of the Year award. The EKC First Team was filled with Comets, including Isaiah Roe, Landen Boggs, Gabe Davis, Grant Richards, and Kobe Stamper, each of whom played a critical role in the team’s success. Together, they formed a unit that overwhelmed opponents on both sides of the ball, defeating programs such as Raceland, Johnson Central, Nicholas County, Lewis County, Greenup County, Bath County, Rowan County, Mason County, East Carter, Powell County, and Fleming County. Each game may have tested their resolve, but Barker’s squad consistently rose to the occasion, proving themselves as the class of the conference.

While the eighth graders grabbed headlines, the seventh-grade team also made its mark. The younger Comets captured the Seventh Grade Beckham Bowl Championship, a testament to their growth and potential. Many of these athletes played up with the eighth-grade team, gaining valuable experience and contributing to the undefeated run. Kolt Inscho was named EKC Player of the Year, while Wayde Keller earned Defensive Player of the Year honors. The EKC First Team featured Tyson Hall, Eli Hanshaw, Nate Lowe, Waylin Wagoner, and Hunter Wagoner, all of whom demonstrated skill and determination beyond their years. Their success ensures that the future of West Carter football remains bright, with a pipeline of talent ready to continue the winning tradition.

Coach Barker’s influence extends beyond the scoreboard. His ability to instill confidence, foster teamwork, and demand excellence has created a culture that players embrace wholeheartedly. The back-to-back undefeated seasons are not just a reflection of talent but of preparation, leadership, and belief in one another. With the seventh graders already proving themselves, championship-caliber and the eighth graders leaving behind a legacy of dominance, the Comets have built a foundation that promises continued success. Under Barker’s guidance, West Carter Middle School football has become more than a team; it has become a dynasty in the making.

Contact the writer at news@cartercountytimes.com

Joyful Noise: Happy New Year 2026

photo of a bottle near balloons
Photo by Karola G on Pexels.com

By Pastor Naomi Mitchell

For Carter County Times

The opinion of others seems to influence us more than it should. Yes, we do care what others think of us. The real question is what does God think of you?

In the Bible, God expresses His omniscience and understanding of our thoughts through several verses. For instance, in Psalm 139:1-2, it states, “O LORD, you have searched me and known me! You know when I sit down and when I rise up; you discern my thoughts from afar.” This verse emphasizes that God knows our thoughts and is intimately aware of our innermost thoughts and intentions. Additionally, Jeremiah 29:11 reassures believers that God knows His thoughts towards them, indicating His plans for their welfare and hope. These verses collectively affirm that God is aware of our thoughts and cares deeply for our innermost concerns down to the smallest detail.

As a believer you don’t need to do more to change your life. You need to eliminate what no longer serves you. You don’t stumble into destiny; you surrender into it. The next level of your life isn’t found in doing more. It is found in removing what no longer fits who you are becoming in Christ Jesus.

God didn’t give Abraham a five-year plan. He gave him an instruction for a departure from familiarity. He told him to leave his father’s house, to leave what is familiar, to leave what’s comfortable. The promise didn’t begin where he was. It began when he was willing to walk away.

Elisha didn’t keep the plow. He burned it. He didn’t leave options open. He removed every exit and backup plan. You won’t transform your life while protecting the old one.

Jesus said, “anyone who leaves everything to follow Him will receive more now (in this life) and forever in eternity.” God never subtracts without intention to multiply, but multiplication only comes after elimination.

Cycles don’t break just with effort. They break with intentional elimination. What you refuse to remove will continue to rule you. Jesus’ first message wasn’t “try harder.” It was “repent.” Change how you think, reorient your perspective. Sin isn’t just behavior. It’s a broken belief system and dysfunction via ignorance. Paul didn’t say he changed occasionally. He said, “I die daily” not physically, but to patterns, to pride, to habits that no longer serve destiny. Salvation isn’t claimed once; it’s surrender into every day.

You don’t break cycles once. You break them every morning and every day you decide what gets to live, and what must die. If it doesn’t serve your future, it cannot survive your present.

This next season (New Year 2026) isn’t about grinding harder, as a believer in Christ it’s about dying smarter each day. It is about releasing what doesn’t serve you. It is about whatever keeps you stuck. It is about letting go so God can take you further. You aren’t losing yourself but becoming what God has always meant you to be.

You may feel a different kind of pain going into this new season. But you are coming out of the hardest season maybe you have faced. You won’t regret what you are giving up following Jesus in this new season. His thoughts are to prosper you and give you an expected end!

Amen! So be it!

JOYFUL House of Prayer, 2519 Quicksand Road, (P.O. Box 856), Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Send Comments/Prayer Requests: Pastornaomi4god@gmail.com. FB: JoyfulHoprayer. Services: 10am Sunday and Joyful Kids Class at 10:30am, 6:30pm Thursdays. Radio Broadcast: WJSN 97.3 FM & WEKG 81.0 AM Sundays 1-2pm.

That’s a wrap

Members of the East Carter High School marching band perform in Grayson’s Hometown Holidays parade. (Photo by Jeremy D. Wells, Carter County Times)
By: Charles Romans
Carter County Times

Grayson Tourism wrapped up a year full of events with their Hometown Holidays celebration around the Christmas season, showcasing everything from a Festival of Trees to an ice-skating rink for Grayson residents and visitors to enjoy. Local businesses also joined in all along Main Street to add to the fun, with most offering special sales for the season. Now, as the decorations are all being packed away to await the next season, Grayson Tourism Director Lana Axtell said she would like the public to offer their views on both what went extremely well, and what could be improved in the future.

“It was a real busy event,” Axtell said of Hometown Holidays, before admitting that she, like many people, is still in the process of taking down her own Christmas décor.

“Give me until the middle of January and ask again,” she joked.

But while a lot of work went into setting everything up, and a lot of work is still left to do in breaking it all down, she said it was the time and effort.

“I think everyone had a really good time,” Axtell said of tourism’s most recent event. “We have gotten some good feedback and are always looking for more. I feel like the Festival of Trees went really well. And most of the kids’ activities went well.”

As always, Axtell said there is a learning curve. Once an event is put on, it pays to examine what went well and perhaps how things could have been done differently. The goal, she said, is to always be improving so that the residents of Grayson always have the best tourism has to offer.

“We have learned a lot this year,” Axtell said. “Like with the skating rink and the volunteer program. We had a cancellation from some of the volunteers with less than 24-hour notice, which could have put everything in a bind. Fortunately, East Carter Middle Football jumped in in a big way and covered most of the days we needed volunteers.” 

To prevent this happening in the future, she said, tourism might discuss having paid positions to run the rink on Thursday, Friday, and Sunday during the event.

Axtell said the general consensus among the people who have reached out is that the skating rink is an amazing addition to Grayson, and they hope it continues to be available. And perhaps the next season, she said tentatively, her husband Rob Axtell might be offering skating lessons for kids when the rink is set up.

“We don’t have a lot of people around Grayson that can show people how to skate,” she said. “And I think people would love having that made available to them.”

And if there are other things they’d like to see, she said, tourism wants to hear about them too.

“I’d like to know what the public liked and what they didn’t like,” Axtell said. “What do they think we could improve? Did they like the skating rink hours and the location? And what did they think about the Festival of Trees and that process?”

Those were a few potential questions people could answer, she said.

“And what did they think about the kids activities, the Santa Shack, and the train station?”

Any insight people had to offer on the Christmas Market, and the general appearance of Downtown Main Street would also be welcome, she said.

The best way for the public to offer feedback, Axtell said, was to reach out through email. That email is graysonkytourism@gmail.com. An alternative contact would be to call the Grayson Tourism office at 606-474-8740 and leave a message. But however they choose to reach out, Axtell said, they’d love to hear the feedback. Afterall, there’s only 11 months to get prepared for the next holiday season.

Contact the writer at charles@cartercountytimes.com

The damage we don’t count

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By Brandon LaVoie

For the Carter County Times

Some things don’t stay abstract when you live with their consequences long enough.

I’m a father of three boys and a small business owner here in Carter County. I work, raise my kids, and try to build something steady in the same place a lot of us are fighting to hold together. I’m not writing from theory. I’m writing from absence.

Drugs like fentanyl and meth didn’t just hurt my family. They erased it.

I’ve lost almost everyone. Some are gone to addiction. Some to the long-term damage it leaves behind. Some are dead. These aren’t statistics to me. They’re empty seats at holidays. Names my sons should know but never will.

My uncle Jimmy Blevins was my hero. He was a veteran. A hard worker. Someone I thought I’d spend my life working beside. Years ago, while working construction on a National Guard project in New Mexico, he became addicted to meth and opioids.

 He came home different. He didn’t last long. He died of a heart attack at 32.

He never met my boys. Never saw the life I’m trying to build. And there are many others who were supposed to still be here… but who aren’t.

We talk about “weapons of mass destruction” as something distant. Something overseas. Something that comes with sirens and headlines. But I’ve watched substances wipe out families and hollow out a town quietly, one person at a time, over decades. If the measure is lives lost and futures erased, then we’ve been living with mass destruction right here at home.

What makes this harder is that we didn’t ignore the problem.

In the mid-2000s, I marched in Grayson with Pastor Jim Varney and thousands of others against drugs. Churches showed up. Schools showed up. Emergency services showed up. Families walked together. There was a shared belief that if we stood shoulder to shoulder, we could interrupt what was happening.

In the period that followed, pressure increased. Arrests were made. For a while, it felt like something real had been disrupted.

Many of the people I marched beside are gone now.

Time has a way of telling the truth. Awareness alone didn’t stop it. Enforcement alone didn’t stop it. Silence didn’t stop it. Pretending it was someone else’s problem didn’t stop it. The damage resumed quietly, and it kept taking people who burned bright; the complicated, creative, stubborn souls who carried joy and conviction at the same time.

Those are the people who organize cookouts. Who stand up at meetings. Who pull others together. Who would have stood beside me and many others when our community needed defending.

We don’t just lose individuals to drugs.

We lose community infrastructure.

I’m grateful to law enforcement for doing their job. Taking dangerous substances off the street matters. But this crisis isn’t fixed by arrests alone, and it isn’t fixed by treating addiction as a private failure that only requires private recovery.

We talk a lot about rehab for people, and we should. But we rarely talk about rehab for towns.

If we’re serious about healing, we should be asking bigger questions. What does it look like to restore the places where people gathered? Where families ate together. Where kids played. Where neighbors argued, laughed, and stayed connected. Where belonging was built instead of assumed.

Recovery shouldn’t end at the clinic door. It should extend back into the communities that were hollowed out.

Imagine spaces designed to bring people back together; community centers with picnic tables and food trucks, places for games and music, rooms for church groups, recovery groups, family gatherings, and town meetings. Places that replace what was lost instead of just naming it.

We owe that much to the people we buried.

And to the kids growing up now who deserve more than silence and memory.

If we don’t take this seriously – not as a headline or a talking point, but as a long-term responsibility – the cost won’t show up on a balance sheet.

It will show up as absence.

Again.

Ask Daryl – Your Professional Organizer: A new year!

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By Daryl Ashley

Confusion Solution

Here it is! 2026! It’s a brand new year with all its opportunities for renewal. It is calmer now, giving us breathing room to make decisions about how we want to move forward. Be grateful for this chance to explore and allow for new adventures to unfold. 

This is the time to ask ourselves what we want in this new year. It’s the time to ask ourselves how we can make a difference, not only in our homes but in our behavior toward ourselves and others. It’s a time to reflect on the past year in order to improve and then put the past behind us with a new outlook for this new beginning.

Reflection will bring about ways we can adopt new ideas and processes for growth, and that may require changes to our ways of doing things. Since we are creatures of habit, it can be difficult to examine our habits to see if changes may be warranted. We have to want to be open to creating new ways to move through our lives by considering changing our behavior. 

Try to let the word ‘change’ be positive and to let it be the effort we use for a positive outcome. Even if change is difficult and attacks our hearts, we must go through those times to get to the other side where possibility lies waiting. If we look at change as an opportunity, we can set goals that are not so rigid that as changes arise – and they will – we will be able to cope. \

We have a wonderful new year ahead with 365 days of life that can be rewarding no matter what comes our way. Live in the moment and be open to the amazing changes ahead.

It’s as simple as that!

Send your questions and comments to me at info@confusionsolution.com

Weekly Arrests: 1/7/25

The following individuals were arrested and booked into the Carter County Detention Center over the past week. This list includes local arrests only. It does not include federal inmates being housed at or transported through the detention center.

  • Eddie Kennedy, 70, of Webbville, arrested by Grayson PD, on charges of failure to produce an insurance card, driving on a DUI suspended license – first offense (aggravating circumstances), first degree possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine), operating a motor vehicle under the influence of a substance, possession of an open alcoholic beverage container in a motor vehicle, tampering with physical evidence, operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol, and possession of drug paraphernalia, arrested and booked December 30.
  • Angela Stapleton, 39, of Grayson, arrested by Grayson PD, on charges of operating motor vehicle under the influence of a controlled substance, failure to produce an insurance card, no registration receipt, arrested and booked December 30.
  • Robert Carroll, 36, of Olive Hill, arrested by Kentucky State Police, on two counts of failure to appear, arrested and booked December 31.
  • Garriet Greer, 19, of Grayson, arrested by Grayson PD, for non-payment of court costs, fees, or fines, arrested and booked December 31.
  • William Sloas, 54, of Olive Hill, arrested by Kentucky State Police, on charges of first degree possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine), possession of drug paraphernalia, and four counts of failure to appear, arrested and booked December 31.
  • Stephanie Brown, 39, of Olive Hill, arrested by Olive Hill PD, on charges of theft by unlawful taking – shoplifting, three counts of failure to appear, two counts of non-payment of court costs, fees, or fines, and one count of contempt of court – libel/slander – resistance to order, arrested and booked December 31.
  • Wendell Adams, 35, of Ashland, arrested by Kentucky State Police, on a charge of contempt of court – libel/slander – resistance to order, arrested and booked January 2.
  • David Phillips, 38, of Olive Hill, arrested by Grayson PD, for failure to appear, arrested and booked January 2.
  • Dale Kitchen, 69, of Grayson, arrested by Grayson PD, on charges of public intoxication on a controlled substance (excludes alcohol), resisting arrest, non-payment of court costs, fees, or fines, and failure to appear, arrested and booked January 2.
  • William Yeager, 65, of Olive Hill, self-surrender, weekender, arrested and booked January 2.
  • Brayan Hernandez, 24, of Mount Sterling, self-surrender, weekender, arrested and booked January 2.
  • Joseph Jordan, 33, of Grayson, arrested by Kentucky State Police, for failure to appear, arrested and booked January 3.
  • Brittany Jordan, 37, of Ashland, arrested by Kentucky State Police, for failure to appear, arrested and booked January 3.
  • Tami Hay, 35, of Grayson, arrested by Carter County Sheriff, on a charge of fourth degree assault (domestic violence) with no visible injury, arrested and booked January 3.
  • Jeffery Hay, 41, of Grayson, arrested by Carter County Sheriff, on a charge of fourth degree assault (domestic violence) with no visible injury, arrested and booked January 3.

All of the charges listed are arrest charges only, and do not indicate an indictment or a conviction for the charges in question. All subjects are considered innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Information is compiled from publicly available sources, but may not be comprehensive.

Gov. Beshear: Kentucky’s Rural Health Transformation Plan Accepted In Full, $212.9 Million Secured

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FRANKFORT, Ky. – Today, Gov. Andy Beshear announced that Kentucky’s Rural Health Transformation Plan (RHTP) was accepted in full by the Trump administration, securing $212.9 million in funding to lessen the impacts of recent federal cuts and help support health care in Kentucky’s rural communities. The funding was authorized by Congress earlier this year (2025) and administered by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

“Health care is a basic human right, and it was a priority for me and my administration to submit this application and fight for funding to support our rural health communities – especially following the passage of devastating Medicaid cuts,” said Gov. Beshear. “I am proud our community-driven plan was accepted in full and now $212.9 million will help provide our fellow Kentuckians with the quality care they need and deserve.”

Kentucky’s plan was developed by the Beshear administration in partnership with health partners from across the state and will use the $212.9 million over five years to help address the unique challenges rural Kentucky faces, including high rates of chronic conditions, maternity care deserts and gaps in coverage for oral care, emergency services and behavioral health. 

“Our Rural Health Transformation Plan reflects the best of Team Kentucky,” said Cabinet for Health and Family Services Secretary Dr. Steven Stack. “We are working with local health leaders, hospitals, universities and community partners who share in the vision of a commonwealth where every Kentuckian can reach their full human potential and all communities thrive.”

The Kentucky Department for Public Health (KDPH) will lead implementation of the plan in partnership with stakeholders across the commonwealth. The Rural Health Transformation Plan addresses several of Kentucky’s most pressing rural health challenges, including:

  • Chronic disease: Seventeen percent of Kentuckians live with multiple chronic conditions, compared with 11% nationally.
  • Women’s health: Nearly 1 in 6 Kentucky women of childbearing age live in maternity care deserts, more than four times more than the national average.
  • Behavioral health: Persistent shortages of mental health professionals in rural areas place strain on emergency departments and first responders.
  • Oral health: Appalachian counties experience some of the lowest dental visit rates and highest rates of complete tooth loss among seniors.
  • Emergency response: Nearly half of Kentucky’s paramedics are concentrated in the state’s five largest counties, limiting access in rural communities.

To address these challenges, Kentucky’s plan advances five integrated care innovation models:

  1. Rural Community Hubs for Chronic Care Innovation
    Local hub-and-spoke models focused initially on obesity and diabetes prevention and management, integrating nutrition, physical activity and digital self-management tools.
  2. PoWERing Maternal and Infant Health
    Telehealth-enabled, community-based maternal care teams expanding prenatal and postpartum services in maternity care deserts and high-risk regions.
  3. Rapid Response to Recovery (EmPATH Model)
    Mobile crisis response, telepsychiatry and stabilization services connecting individuals to community-based behavioral health and recovery supports.
  4. Rooted in Health: Rural Dental Access
    Expanded dental hygiene training, externships and portable or tele-dental clinics to improve preventive oral health services.
  5. Crisis to Care: Integrated EMS Response
    Enhanced pre-hospital care and trauma coordination through treat-in-place protocols, workforce training and improved data connectivity.

“Team Kentucky’s rural communities are the heart of our commonwealth,” said Kentucky Department for Public Health Commissioner Dr. John Langefeld. “This is about strengthening local health systems, creating jobs and ensuring every family has the opportunity to live healthy and thrive.”

The application process for the Rural Health Transformation Plan was guided by input from more than 100 stakeholders across the commonwealth. Team Kentucky collaborated with key partners, including the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, the Kentucky Primary Care Association, the Kentucky Hospital Association, the Kentucky Office of Rural Health and others.

“We’ve worked for years to tackle some of Kentucky’s toughest health challenges, and we are inspired and energized to see a unified, statewide plan to bring innovation, investment and hope to our rural communities,” said Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky President and CEO Allison Adams. “This effort reflects the best of Kentucky: partnership, practicality and a deep belief that healthier communities mean a stronger commonwealth.”

“Kentucky’s Rural Health Transformation initiative reflects a simple truth community health centers have always embraced: Lasting change begins locally,” said Molly Lewis, CEO of the Kentucky Primary Care Association. “Through investments in prevention, primary care and community collaboration, this effort is creating a stronger, healthier future for rural Kentucky.”

“The Kentucky Hospital Association has been pleased to work with the Cabinet for Health and Family Services to help produce Kentucky’s application for the Rural Health Transformation Program,” said Nancy Galvagni, president and CEO of the Kentucky Hospital Association.

“Health care access improves health care outcomes. It improves lives and saves lives,” said Dr. Jason Smith, CEO of University of Louisville (UofL) Health. “UofL Health supports Kentucky’s focus on improving access in our rural communities to address chronic illness, maternity care, mental health, oral health and emergency care.”

“We were pleased to learn of Kentucky’s notice of award from CMS related to the Rural Health Transformation Program,” said Mark D. Birdwhistell, senior vice president for health and public policy at the University of Kentucky. “The University of Kentucky looks forward to partnering with the state and other stakeholders to help transform health in rural Kentucky.”

The Rural Health Transformation application process began in September 2025, with awards announced on Dec. 29. In total, the Rural Health Transformation Plan provides $50 billion nationwide over five fiscal years between 2026 and 2030. More information about Kentucky’s Rural Health Transformation Plan will be available at RuralHealthPlan.ky.gov.