a12 the news-enterprise friday, october 8, 2021 cameron

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A12 THE NEWS-ENTERPRISE Friday, October 8, 2021 BY TESSA REDMOND KENTUCKY TODAY FRANKFORT — On Tuesday, the Kentucky Office of the Attorney General will argue Cam- eron v. EMW Women’s Surgical Center before the Supreme Court. “Less than one week from today, our deputy solicitor general, Matt Kuhn, will stand before the Supreme Court and advocate for the ability of this office to continue our defense of House Bill 454, which is the ban on live dismemberment abortions,” said Attorney General Daniel Camer- on in a news conference Wednesday at the Cap- itol. “Our whole team is honored to have this opportunity to represent Kentucky at the highest court in the land.” House Bill 454 passed in the General Assem- bly with bipartisan support in 2018. After being signed into law by then-Gov. Matt Bevin, it immediately was chal- lenged in court. When a federal district court blocked the law from going into effect, the Office of Attorney General was asked by Gov. Andy Beshear’s administration to defend the law before a panel of judges at the Sixth Cir- cuit Court of Appeals. But when the court ruled against House Bill 454, “the governor’s team decided to wash their hands of the case” instead of asking for a re-hearing of the deci- sion, Cameron said. “Because I made it clear that our office would defend the laws passed by our General Assembly, we asked to intervene as the repre- sentative of the com- monwealth,” said Cam- eron, a former Eliza- bethtown resident. “The Sixth Circuit said, ‘No.’ But we weren’t willing to take no for an answer.” While the Supreme Court’s ruling on the case will impact the defense of a pro-life bill, the crux of the case is state sovereignty and the ability of the com- monwealth to appoint an individual to defend state law. “If we ultimately pre- vail, the court will be saying without question that a state has a right to defend itself with the official or representa- tive of its choosing, that regardless of what other agencies or branches of government might decide, that here in Ken- tucky, the Attorney Gen- eral’s office stands as a failsafe to ensure that the commonwealth’s laws can always be defended,” said Camer- on, a Republican. Senate President Rob- ert Stivers, Rep. Joe Fischer, R-Campbell, pro-life caucus co-chair Nancy Tate of Branden- burg and former Rep. Addia Wuchner also spoke at the Wednesday press conference. Other state legislators gathered on the State Capitol steps in a show of support. “House Bill 454, the Human Rights of the Unborn Child Act, was enacted to save … lives from violence, and (it) reminds us that human rights are a privilege. They’re not conferred by government,” said Wuchner, who now serves as executive director of Kentucky Right to Life. The Supreme Court will convene to hear the case at 10 a.m. Tuesday. Live audio of the ses- sion can be accessed at supremecourt.gov. Cameron says AG staff proud to defend dismemberment law Case to be heard Tuesday before U.S. Supreme Court TESSA REDMOND/Kentucky Today Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron held a news conference to discuss next week’s appearance before the U.S. Supreme Court. BY TOM LATEK KENTUCKY TODAY FRANKFORT Supply chain issues and inflation brought on by the pandemic are causing problems in a variety of Kentucky’s econom- ic sectors including agriculture, a legislative commit- tee heard Wednesday. Agriculture Commis- sioner Ryan Quarles told the Interim Joint Appro- priations and Revenue Committee that supply chain issues are at a crit- ical point. “Our farmers, in the middle of harvest, are just one worn out part, a broken part, away from being shut down for two or three weeks,” he said. “It’s kind of ironic that a half-million-dollar piece of equipment can be shut down for a $30 part.” Quarles says this is not just a short-term issue. “We’re starting to see increases in input costs going into the spring of 2022, most notably on fertilizer and parts. We have barges that contain the parts that we need, which are not being unloaded, and of course, if you’re shipping out, there’s a shortage of shipping containers.” While net farm cash receipts from crops are expected to go up this year, Quarles says that’s not the whole story. Feed costs increase whenever grain prices go up, he said. A labor shortage is another problem for the agri- culture industry, according to Quarles. “There are over 10 million jobs available in America right now. It’s hard to attract folks in ag to begin with; it’s hard work and you can’t ‘Zoom’ it in,” he said. “You have to show up every day despite the weather conditions and it’s really becoming an issue.” There are other short- ages affecting agricul- ture, Quarles said. “In the dairy industry, you’re seeing various types of containers, because they are having a hard time finding plastic bottles. Our friends in the bour- bon industry are having trouble finding glass bot- tles to put bourbon into right now. There are no shipments of bourbon going to some states because you can’t find the glass to bottle it.” Tom Underwood, executive director of the Kentucky Wholesale Dis- tributors Association, said shortages also exist for a number of products at the wholesale level. As a result, he suggested any- one shopping for Christ- mas should do it now, to avoid being shut out. Legislators hear bleak forecast for farm economy “Our farmers, in the middle of harvest, are just one worn out part, a broken part, away from being shut down for two or three weeks” — Ryan Quarles Kentucky agricultural commissioner BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LEXINGTON — A for- mer Kentucky lawyer has filed a lawsuit against Face- book, accusing it of com- mitting fraud by suppress- ing his posts containing conservative viewpoints. Eric Deters, a for- mer lawyer in Ohio and Northern Kentucky, is an avid supporter of former President Donald Trump and filed his lawsuit after he said he discovered that his posts weren’t being properly displayed to the public. “Facebook’s so-called ‘community standards’ are NOT community standards,” Deters wrote in his lawsuit, according to the Lexington Her- ald-Leader. “They are WOKE, liberal progres- sive standards that are NOT consistent with the Cincinnati/Northern Ken- tucky tristate community.” Deters retired from practicing law in Ohio after his license to prac- tice in Kentucky was suspended, according to the Kentucky Bar Association. The Ken- tucky Supreme Court denied his request to reinstate his license earlier this year. Former lawyer sues Facebook, claiming it suppressed him $45 EYE EXAMS $65 SOFT CONTACT LENS EXAMS 270.351.5367 171 E. LINCOLN TRAIL BLVD., RADCLIFF, KY 40160 *Some insurance or discounts may not apply with oer. Eye exams available with independent optometrist. Your Place of A guide to local houses of worship SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Michael Harris, Pastor Sabbath School Sat: 9:30 AM Worship Sat: 11:00 AM 1226 S. Wilson Rd. • Radcliff 31 W S. right on Blackjack Rd. right on Wilson Rd. 2 blocks down on right. 352-2256 COLLEGE HEIGHTS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Don Sexton Contemporary Worship 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. TraditionalWorship 11:00 a.m. Hispanic Worship 7:00 p.m. Tuesday Night Prayer Service 7:00 p.m. 710 College St. Rd., Elizabethtown • 270-765-4284 Email: [email protected] United Methodist Seventh-Day Adventist Lutheran Non-Denominational Email: [email protected] Facebook: vvbc.church Pastor Mark Powell 501 Valley View Dr., Vine Grove, KY 40175 270-877-2150 • www.vvbc.church VALLEY VIEW BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. Curtis Woods, Lead Pastor We love God, love people, and make disciples here, near, and far by cultivating a culture of grace. 1100 Ring Road, Elizabethtown (Next to Menards) Church oce: 270-765-7822 Online campus: sv.church Sunday Worship 9am & 10:45am Small Groups 9am & 10:45am CR E’town - Mondays at 6pm Southern Baptist Southern Baptist Bishop Wilhelmina D. Jackson, Pastor Sunday School 9:00 am Worship Service 10:00 am Bible Study - Wednesday 6:00 pm 600 Shelton Road Radcli, Kentucky 270-352-3411 [email protected] FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH (WELS) Pastor Peter Martin Sunday Service: 10:30 AM Sunday Bible Study: 9:30 AM Watch Sunday Service Live on Facebook at Faith Lutheran Church, Radcliff, KY www.faithinradcliff.org 377 E. Lincoln Trail Blvd. Radcliff • 352-4545 Your place of worship could be here. Call Today 270-505-1412

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Page 1: A12 The News-eNTerprise Friday, October 8, 2021 Cameron

A12 The News-eNTerprise Friday, October 8, 2021

BY TESSA REDMONDKENTUCKY TODAY

FRANKFOR T — On Tuesday, the Kentucky Of fice of the Attorney General will argue Cam-eron v. EMW Women’s Surgical Center before the Supreme Court.

“Less than one week from today, our deputy solicitor general, Matt Kuhn, will stand before the Supreme Court and advocate for the ability of this office to continue our defense of House Bill 454, which is the ban on live dismemberment abortions,” said Attorney General Daniel Camer-on in a news conference Wednesday at the Cap-itol. “Our whole team is honored to have this opportunity to represent Kentucky at the highest court in the land.”

House Bill 454 passed in the General Assem-b ly wi th b ipar t i san suppor t in 2018. After being signed into law by then-Gov. Matt Bevin, it immediately was chal-lenged in court.

When a federal district cour t blocked the law from going into ef fect, the Of fice of Attorney General was asked by Gov. Andy Beshear’s administration to defend the law before a panel of judges at the Sixth Cir-cuit Cour t of Appeals. But when the cour t r uled against House Bill 454, “the governor’s team decided to wash their hands of the case”

instead of asking for a re-hearing of the deci-sion, Cameron said.

“Because I made it clear that our of fice would defend the laws passed by our General Assembly, we asked to intervene as the repre-sentative of the com-monwealth,” said Cam-eron, a former Eliza-bethtown resident. “The Sixth Circuit said, ‘No.’ But we weren’t willing to take no for an answer.”

While the Supreme Cour t’s ruling on the case wil l impact the defense of a pro-life bill, the crux of the case is state sovereignty and the ability of the com-monwealth to appoint an individual to defend

state law.“If we ultimately pre-

vail, the cour t will be saying without question that a state has a right to defend itself with the of ficial or representa-tive of its choosing, that regardless of what other agencies or branches of government might decide, that here in Ken-tucky, the Attorney Gen-eral’s office stands as a failsafe to ensure that the commonwealth’s laws can a lways be defended,” said Camer-on, a Republican.

Senate President Rob-er t Stivers, Rep. Joe Fischer, R-Campbell , pro-life caucus co-chair Nancy Tate of Branden-burg and former Rep.

Addia Wuchner also spoke at the Wednesday press conference. Other state legislators gathered on the State Capitol steps in a show of support.

“House Bill 454, the Human Rights of the Unborn Child Act, was enacted to save … lives from violence, and (it) reminds us that human rights are a privilege. They’re not conferred by government,” said Wu c h n e r, w h o n o w ser ves as execut ive director of Kentucky Right to Life.

The Supreme Cour t will convene to hear the case at 10 a.m. Tuesday. Live audio of the ses-sion can be accessed at supremecourt.gov.

Cameron says AG staff proud to defend dismemberment law

Case to be heard Tuesday

before U.S. Supreme Court

TESSA REDMOND/Kentucky TodayKentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron held a news conference to discuss next week’s appearance before the U.S. Supreme Court.

BY TOM LATEKKENTUCKY TODAY

F R A N K F O R T — Supply chain issues and inflation brought on by the pandemic are causing problems in a variety of Kentucky’s e c o n o m -ic sec tors i n c l u d i n g agriculture, a legislative c o m m i t -t e e h e a r d Wednesday.

Agriculture C o m m i s -sioner Ryan Quarles told the Interim Joint Appro-p r i a t i o n s and Revenue Commit tee that supply chain issues are at a crit-ical point.

“Our farmers, in the middle of harvest, are just one worn out part, a broken part, away from being shut down for two or three weeks,” he said. “It’s kind of ironic that a half-million-dollar piece of equipment can be shut down for a $30 part.”

Quarles says this is not just a short-term issue.

“We’re starting to see increases in input costs going into the spring of 2022, most notably on fertilizer and parts. We have barges that contain the parts that we need, which are not being unloaded, and of course, if you’re shipping out, there’s a shor tage of shipping containers.”

While net farm cash receipts from crops are expected to go up this year, Quarles says that’s

not the whole story. Feed costs increase whenever grain prices go up, he said.

A labor shor tage is a n o t h e r p r o b l e m for the agri-c u l t u r e i n d u s t r y , according to Quarles.

“ T h e r e are over 10 million jobs a v a i l a b l e in America right now. It’s hard to attract folks i n a g t o begin with; i t ’ s h a r d w o r k a n d y o u c a n ’ t ‘Zoom’ it in,” he said. “You have to show u p e v e r y

day despite the weather conditions and it’s really becoming an issue.”

There are other short-ages af fecting agricul-ture, Quarles said. “In the dairy industry, you’re seeing various types of containers, because they are having a hard time finding plastic bottles. Our friends in the bour-bon industry are having trouble finding glass bot-tles to put bourbon into right now. There are no shipments of bourbon going to some states because you can’t find the glass to bottle it.”

Tom Under wood , executive director of the Kentucky Wholesale Dis-tributors Association, said shortages also exist for a number of products at the wholesale level. As a result, he suggested any-one shopping for Christ-mas should do it now, to avoid being shut out.

Legislators hear bleak forecast for

farm economy

“Our farmers, in the middle of harvest, are just one worn out part, a broken part, away from being shut down for two or three weeks”— Ryan Quarles

Kentucky agricultural

commissioner

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESSLEXINGTON — A for-

mer Kentucky lawyer has filed a lawsuit against Face-book, accusing it of com-mitting fraud by suppress-ing his posts containing conservative viewpoints.

Eric Deters, a for-mer lawyer in Ohio and Northern Kentucky, is an avid supporter of former President Donald Trump and filed his lawsuit after he said he discovered that his posts weren’t being properly displayed to the public.

“Facebook’s so-called ‘community standards’ are NOT community standards,” Deters wrote in his lawsuit, according

to the Lexington Her-ald-Leader. “They are WOKE, liberal progres-sive standards that are NOT consistent with the Cincinnati/Northern Ken-tucky tristate community.”

Deters retired from practicing law in Ohio

after his license to prac-tice in Kentucky was suspended, according to the Kentucky Bar Association. The Ken-tucky Supreme Cour t denied his request to reinstate his l icense earlier this year.

Former lawyer sues Facebook, claiming it suppressed him

$45EYE

EXAMS

$65SOFT CONTACTLENS EXAMS

270.351.5367171 E. LINCOLNTRAIL BLVD., RADCLIFF, KY 40160

*Some insurance or discounts may not apply with offer.Eye exams available with independent optometrist.

Your Place ofA guide to local houses of worship

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCHMichael Harris, Pastor

Sabbath School Sat: 9:30 AMWorship Sat: 11:00 AM

1226 S. Wilson Rd. • Radcliff31 W S. right on Blackjack Rd. right on

Wilson Rd. 2 blocks down on right.352-2256

COLLEGE HEIGHTSUNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

Rev. Don SextonContemporaryWorship 9:00 a.m.Sunday School 10:00 a.m.TraditionalWorship 11:00 a.m.HispanicWorship 7:00 p.m.Tuesday Night Prayer Service 7:00 p.m.710 College St. Rd., Elizabethtown • 270-765-4284

Email: [email protected]

United Methodist Seventh-Day Adventist

Lutheran

Non-Denominational

Email: [email protected]: vvbc.churchPastor Mark Powell

501 Valley View Dr.,Vine Grove, KY 40175

270-877-2150 • www.vvbc.church

VALLEY VIEWBAPTIST CHURCH

Dr. CurtisWoods, Lead PastorWe love God, love people, and

make disciples here, near, and farby cultivating a culture of grace.

1100 Ring Road, Elizabethtown(Next to Menards)

Church office: 270-765-7822Online campus: sv.church

SundayWorship 9am & 10:45amSmall Groups 9am & 10:45am

CR E’town - Mondays at 6pm

Southern Baptist

Southern Baptist

BishopWilhelmina D. Jackson, PastorSunday School 9:00 amWorship Service 10:00 amBible Study -Wednesday 6:00 pm600 Shelton RoadRadcliff, Kentucky

[email protected]

FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH (WELS)Pastor Peter Martin

Sunday Service: 10:30 AMSunday Bible Study: 9:30 AM

Watch Sunday Service Live on Facebook atFaith Lutheran Church, Radcliff, KY

www.faithinradcliff.org377 E. Lincoln Trail Blvd.Radcliff • 352-4545Your place

of worshipcould behere.

Call Today270-505-1412