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Jennifer Ginn, a spokesperson for the Kentucky Department of Education, said the Nelson County school board sent in its decision to remove Superintendent Wes Bradley. Now the commissioner must ...
Nelson County High School is a public high school located in Bardstown, Kentucky.Until 2012, it was the only high school in the Nelson County School District, and was by far the largest of the four high schools then located in Bardstown (one public and operated by the Bardstown city school district, one Roman Catholic, and one Protestant).
Thomas Nelson High School is a public high school located in an unincorporated area of Nelson County, Kentucky [3] that has a Bardstown mailing address. Operated by the Nelson County School District and named after American Revolution figure Thomas Nelson, Jr., it was opened in August 2012 to alleviate overcrowding at what had been the district's only regular high school, Nelson County High ...
The Nelson County School District serves K–12 students throughout the county, with the exception of most of the city of Bardstown and developed areas near the city limits. The district operates two K–8 schools, two elementary schools, two middle schools, an alternative school, a vocational-technical school, and two high schools.
The Kentucky District Courts are the state courts of limited jurisdiction in the U.S. state of Kentucky. ... Nelson county; Fifty-eighth District - Marshall county;
In 2019, the Kentucky Supreme Court created a Business Court Docket Pilot project in the Jefferson County Circuit Court, effective January 1, 2020. [1] Circuit judges serve in eight-year terms. There are 57 circuits, which may have one or more judges, depending on the population and docket size.
34 Nelson County. 35 Perry County. 36 Pike County. 37 Pulaski County. 38 Taylor County. ... Lawrence County Schools (Kentucky) Lee County School District; Leslie ...
The United States District Court for the District of Kentucky was one of the original 13 courts established by the Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 73, on September 24, 1789. [1] [2] At the time, Kentucky was not yet a state, but was within the territory of the state of Virginia. The District was unchanged when Kentucky became a state on June 1 ...