Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kentucky Commissioners of Agriculture (8 P) Pages in category "State cabinet secretaries of Kentucky" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total.
The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet headquarters in Frankfort, Kentucky. KYTC maintains 63,845 lane miles (102,749 lane kilometers), [ 4 ] or over 27,600 centerline miles (44,400 centerline kilometers), [ 5 ] of roadways in the state.
[1] [20] The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet redesignated a 0.696-mile-long (1.120 km) portion of KY 1416 as KY 3230 after the construction of Taylorsville Lake through a January 17, 1984, official order. The agency transferred the portion of the highway west of its current length to Spencer County via a January 31, 1991, official order.
Kentucky Route 183 is a 1.284-mile-long (2.066 km) rural secondary highway in central Edmonson County. The highway begins at KY 70 and KY 259 on the north side of the city of Brownsville. KY 183 follows Lock Road, which heads west and curves south and east to pass under KY 70 and KY 259's bridge across the Green River. The highway heads east to ...
[1] [2] The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet established KY 400 through a March 30, 1987, official order. The route was added as a rural secondary highway; however, the highway was reclassified as a supplemental road at an unknown date, returned to the rural secondary system through an October 26, 2004, official order, and returned to the ...
The cabinet system was introduced in 1972 by Governor Wendell Ford to consolidate hundreds of government entities that reported directly to the governor's office. [5] Other elected offices in the Kentucky Constitution include the Secretary of State, Attorney General, Auditor of Public Accounts, State Treasurer, and Commissioner of Agriculture.
KY 878 meets the southern end of KY 919 (Davidson Road) and turns east at a T-intersection with KY 1164 (Cedar Grove Road) just north of that highway's junction with KY 1544. The highway intersects KY 505 (Dan Road) and crosses Caney Creek, a tributary of the Rough River , at Olaton , east of which the route crosses the Ohio–Grayson county line.
[1] [13] [12] The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet established KY 2713 as a rural secondary highway in Butler County through an April 8, 1987, official order. [14] KY 2713 in Ohio County had existed earlier as a supplemental road, but that portion of the highway was reclassified as a rural secondary highway via a March 30, 1987, official order.