
Week 11 of the 2026 Legislative Session
Week of Monday, March 16-20
(FRANKFORT, Ky.)-“To begin, I want to express my deep sadness at the loss of Tech. Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt, a proud Kentuckian from Bardstown who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving our country overseas.
At just 34 years old, Pruitt exemplified the courage and dedication of our armed forces. Pruitt was among six airmen killed on March 12 when a KC-135 Stratotanker crashed in western Iraq during a mission supporting Operation Epic Fury.
Her sacrifice is a solemn reminder that our freedoms are protected by those willing to serve in harm’s way. We extend our heartfelt prayers and deepest condolences to her family, fellow airmen, Bardstown and Nelson County.”
Budget update
After weeks of review and deliberation, the Senate has passed its version of the two-year state spending plan. In total, the plan authorizes approximately $32 billion. The Senate’s proposal, in a lot of ways, aligned with the general approach of the state House.
I’m grateful to report that funding support has been set aside in the Senate’s plan to support my proposals related to ensuring we are supporting Kentucky’s most needy and troubled children and meeting the moment as it relates to the potential for nuclear energy development. Line items in the Senate’s budget support a high-acuity youth center and for one female youth detention center with more possible in the future. It also enables access to funding through necessary government expenditures in the case, and high likelihood, a company comes knocking on Kentucky’s door looking to invest in our commonwealth. With investments in our budget like this, Kentucky could see a return on investment of over $30 billion. That’s an unprecedented return on investment.
These are positive developments and I’m grateful to Senate leadership and colleagues for recognizing these critical needs. I will remain hopeful the funding provisions stick.
The Senate’s amended version of the bill offers a balanced and responsible state budget that protects taxpayers, strengthens essential services and positions Kentucky for long-term stability. It continues strong support for education at every level, including increased per-pupil funding, investments in school safety, continued support for student services and workforce development programs and holds harmless the funding levels of our postsecondary institutions.
In addition, the plan fully funds well above the required amount for our teachers’ and state employee pension and health obligations, while providing targeted support for state employees, law enforcement and first responders who serve our communities.
With the Senate’s changes now before the House of Representatives, lawmakers from both chambers will continue working together in the coming days to finalize a two-year budget through a conference committee that meets the needs of Kentuckians while protecting the commonwealth’s long-term financial health.
Update on my proposed legislation
One issue I’ve spent a great deal of time on is early childhood education and making sure Kentucky’s kids are truly prepared when they enter kindergarten.
That’s the focus of my legislation, Senate Bill (SB) 191, which creates a pilot program to reward childcare providers based on one thing: whether children are actually ready for kindergarten. I believe that’s a better approach than what we have today.
Right now, our primary system—the Kentucky All STARS program—relies heavily on paperwork and periodic evaluations that don’t always reflect the day-to-day quality inside a center. Providers have told me it’s expensive, time-consuming and, in some cases, not sustainable. I’ve even heard from centers that lost money participating in it. While I was proud to earn a five-star rating in my own experience, the reality is it’s not always a true measure of consistent quality.
SB 191 takes a different approach by focusing on outcomes. If a center helps children enter kindergarten ready to learn, they receive support for that success. For smaller centers, even a handful of kindergarten-ready students could mean meaningful funding they can reinvest to grow and improve.
Just as important, this proposal supports the full continuum of care—from infants and toddlers to pre-K—while also ensuring children with special needs and families outside traditional childcare settings are included. We can’t build a system that only works for part of the population. It has to work for everyone.
At the same time, I’ve been working closely with partners on House Bill (HB) 6 and engaging with stakeholders across the state. The intent is to run these efforts alongside each other and, ultimately, bring the best ideas together into one strong, workable model. We want to ensure quality, improve kindergarten readiness and expand access to childcare across Kentucky.
SB 191 is structured as a pilot so we can study what works, gather real data and build something that delivers long-term results. I’m excited about the direction we’re heading and the opportunity we have to get this right for Kentucky families.
HB 1 veto overridden
This week, both chambers quickly overrode the governor’s veto of HB 1, which made it Kentucky law. This is a defining moment in Kentucky’s future. Students, including those in our public schools, will now have access to potentially hundreds of millions of federal dollars to help meet their individual educational needs. The bill opts Kentucky into a new federal scholarship tax credit program that Americans and residents can begin contributing to starting next year. Scholarships from these funds may be used for tuition, tutoring, special needs services, books, technology, transportation and other approved educational expenses consistent with federal standards. Had the veto stood, and Kentucky had chosen not to opt in, Kentucky taxpayers could still claim the credit by donating to scholarship-granting organizations (SGOs) in other states, meaning those funds would only benefit students in states that have opted into the program, which is already almost half of the states in the nation.
HB 1 is designed with Kentucky students at the center. No public dollars are directed to any particular school. Instead, contributions go to SGOs, which then provide scholarships directly to eligible students and families, including those served by our public schools. The focus is not on institutions but on the opportunities these scholarships create. Only families with a total household income at least 300 percent above the median income can qualify, so wealthy households will not be eligible for the scholarships. Further, every Kentuckian who owes federal taxes can choose to direct their tax liability specifically to support a Kentucky student by donating to an SGO of their choice. You can write a check of up to $1,700 to an SGO, using those funds to benefit a Kentucky student who may need additional educational support. I encourage school leaders across the state to begin planning and promoting ways to support students in their districts. There are many positive opportunities ahead of us.
The following are bills that passed out of the Senate chamber this week.
SB 195 establishes clearer standards for civil liability in roadway construction projects by protecting contractors who follow approved plans while holding them accountable for defects or noncompliance.
SB 233 exempts planned communities with 14 or fewer units from financial reporting and document retention requirements, reducing administrative obligations for smaller associations.
SB 249 grants the governor, in consultation with the Kentucky Workforce Innovation Board, authority to approve eligible workforce training programs for federal Workforce Pell Grants and coordinate approvals to prevent duplicative payments. It also requires the board to establish an internal process to ensure programs meet federal requirements, without imposing standards more restrictive than federal rules. Includes an emergency clause.
SB 251 updates Kentucky law governing death penalty procedures by clarifying that the Department of Corrections is not required to adopt administrative regulations to establish execution protocols, as the death penalty is already legal in Kentucky. Instead, the department may prescribe procedures internally rather than entering into the tedious, lengthy process of administrative rulemaking review and implementation. The change is intended to address ongoing litigation and delays that have prevented Kentucky from carrying out executions under existing law.
SB 263 amends the Schools of Innovation law to give districts more flexibility to adopt innovative practices. It streamlines and clarifies the waiver process, requires the Kentucky Department of Education to review applications within 30 days, and allows expedited waivers with approval from the Kentucky Board of Education. The bill also protects districts from penalties for previously approved actions and establishes a Schools of Innovation pilot program with a dedicated fund. Participating districts must follow an application process and report on program outcomes.
SB 278 limits the types of off-duty or secondary employment permitted for certain law enforcement personnel, excluding retail establishments, weddings, and businesses that primarily sell alcohol. It allows employment related to contracts with public entities, projects involving contractors providing services to public entities (including the Transportation Cabinet), nonpublic entities receiving state funding, and ticketed events where public safety is a concern. It also requires the commissioner to establish policies and procedures governing off-duty and secondary employment, including the approval and use of uniforms, equipment, and facilities.
SB 281 updates Kentucky’s grandparent visitation law to give courts clearer standards while preserving parental rights and prioritizing the child’s welfare. The bill recognizes the vital role grandparents play in a child’s life—especially in Kentucky, where many children are supported or raised by their grandparents due to various circumstances. Under SB 281, grandparents seeking visitation when a child is in a parent’s custody must provide clear and convincing evidence. When a child is in the custody of a non-parent, a lower preponderance-of-the-evidence standard applies. The bill also outlines factors for courts to consider in determining a child’s best interests and removes the existing rebuttable presumption from the statute.
SB 289, also known as Wynter’s law, expands the criteria for issuing an AMBER Alert, including when a child is identified as missing by law enforcement, when the disappearance may not have been voluntary and the child’s safety is at risk, and when the child is abducted or missing while in the custody of the Department of Juvenile Justice, the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, or another placement.
SB 324 updates Kentucky’s film and entertainment tax incentive program. It expands the list of eligible productions to include commercials, video games, and music-related projects, and raises in-state spending requirements to ensure greater economic impact. The bill also clarifies eligible expenses, including some costs for out-of-state talent and logistics, and requires costs to be prorated when filming in multiple states. It allows unused portions of the $75 million credit cap to carry forward, assigns application review to the Kentucky Film Office, and updates the Film Leadership Council. Approved companies must also submit a certified audit within 180 days of completing production.
Senate Joint Resolution 139 designates and renames various roads, highways, and bridges across multiple counties in honor of individuals, including memorial highways and bridges, and makes technical corrections to previously named roadways.
HB 96 updates the structure and membership of the Council on Postsecondary Education’s working group by expanding legislative representation, establishing the council president as a nonvoting chair and transitioning meeting requirements to a calendar-year cycle beginning in 2026.
HB 280 updates healthcare and school health policies by adjusting nursing licensure requirements, improving reporting and oversight, and expanding access to emergency medications in schools. It allows trained individuals to administer undesignated glucagon during diabetic emergencies with liability protections. A Senate Committee Substitute further clarifies definitions and provisions related to diabetes management plans and glucagon administration in schools.
HB 290 modernizes Kentucky’s county law library statutes by allowing funds traditionally used for printed materials to support electronic legal research resources, technology and internet access. A revision by the Senate authorizes the state to provide electronic materials in place of bound volumes and clarifies that the state law librarian may—rather than must—purchase print or electronic resources upon request. The bill updates how legal information is delivered while maintaining access for courts, attorneys and the public.
HB 459 establishes a statewide system for collecting healthcare workforce data through licensure renewals to assess workforce supply and needs in Kentucky. Licensing boards will collect information on education, employment status, practice setting, and workforce participation, while protecting privacy by prohibiting the collection of Social Security numbers and allowing opt-outs for data sharing. The bill also streamlines licensure processes and sets timelines for correcting application errors, with a committee substitute adding requirements such as date of birth and mailing address.
HB 470 updates rules for alcohol and drug peer support specialists by extending the use of qualified professionals, removing temporary classifications, and creating a work group to develop a statewide credentialing system. It sets a compliance deadline of Jan. 1, 2027, and prohibits peer support specialists from providing psychoeducational services and bars Medicaid from covering them. The bill includes an emergency clause for key provisions.
HB 503 is the biennial budget for the legislative branch. The Senate keeps the House proposal largely intact while ensuring the General Assembly has the resources to carry out its duties. It includes an annual 2 percent salary increase for legislative staff and funds a salary study to evaluate pay across the judicial branch. Overall, it maintains stable funding while supporting future planning and workforce modernization.
HB 504 is the two-year judicial branch budget. The Senate’s version maintains core judicial funding while improving efficiency and flexibility. It includes a 2 percent annual salary increase for judicial employees, fully funds nine judgeships created in 2022, and provides $1 million annually for county support services. It also increases oversight of capital projects while removing certain administrative restrictions to improve judicial operations.
HB 555 allows schools to establish student-run businesses, such as stores or food stands, to provide students with real-world business experience. Local school boards can approve and regulate these programs, including how they operate and use earnings, and remove certain limits on when food can be sold. A Senate Committee Substitute requires all food sold to meet federal school nutrition standards.
HB 562 updates Kentucky’s high school diploma system for students with disabilities by creating two pathways: an “alternate” diploma that meets federal graduation standards and a “modified” diploma that does not count toward federal graduation rates. It also directs the Department of Workforce Development to promote job opportunities for alternative diploma graduates and share participating employers by county. A Senate revision clarifies that students remain eligible for KEES funding as long as they meet the eligibility criteria.
HB 648 strengthens protections for motor vehicle dealers by establishing clearer standards for manufacturers’ reimbursement of warranty and recall work, including parts, labor, and related costs. It prohibits manufacturers from imposing unreasonable proof or overly burdensome requirements. A Senate revision extends the deadline for dealers to submit reimbursement claims from 30 to 90 days.
HB 900 allows one-time, strategic investments using the state’s Budget Reserve Trust Fund while maintaining long-term fiscal stability and strong reserves. The final version of the bill will fund targeted projects emphasizing those that can yield a return on investment, such as infrastructure, economic development, and emergency response, similar to the one-time investments in HB 1 (2024). By separating these from the operating budget, HB 900 promotes disciplined spending. The final provisions of HB 900 will depend on the final decisions in the state’s two-year budget plan.
Please feel free to contact my office if you have any concerns or suggestions. My office can be reached at 502-564-8100 or by email at Danny.Carroll@kylegislature.gov.






