EDITORIAL: CANDIDATES FOR SENATE SHOULD HOLD A DEBATE
COVERAGE OF THE INTERNAIONL FESTIVAL LIFE, PAGE B1
OPINION, PAGE A4
TTUESDAY, UESDAY, SEPTEMBER SEPTEMBER 227,7, 22016 016 > W WESTERN ESTERN KKENTUCKY ENTUCKY UUNIVERSITY NIVERSITY > VVOLUME OLUME 991,1, IISSUE SSUE 1111
Student dies in car crash on Sunday BY HERALD STAFF HERALD.NEWS@WKU.EDU A 21-year-old WKU student died Sunday, in a car crash on the Western Kentucky Parkway, the Grayson County News Gazette reports. Stephanie Campbell, of Louisville, was pronounced dead on the scene by Deputy Grayson County Coroner Howard Tomes. The first responders arrived to scene of the crash near the 106 mile marker at 3:06 p.m. Campbell’s cause of death was ruled blunt force trauma to the body, Tomes said to a News-Gazette reporter. Campbell was driving westbound on the parkway in a 2001 Nissan Xterra when she started to drift into the median, over-corrected and lost control of the vehicle, according to the Grayson County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Jarrod Mudd. It is not confirmed what caused Campbell’s vehicle to drift into the median. A witness to the incident told the Grayson County News Gazette he was traveling eastbound on the parkway when he saw Campbell’s vehicle roll across his lane. Mudd also confirmed the vehicle rolled an indeterminable amount of times before coming to a rest. Additionally, there were approximately 700 feet of skid marks on the parkway, he told a News-Gazette reporter. The WKU community responded to the Campbell’s death with an outburst of support. Many students and WKU organizations spoke about how Campbell had personally affected their lives
SEE CAMPBELL PAGE A2
Regents debate RFP for sports complex
Al Dilley, owner of Goat Browsers, a natural land enhancement service that utilizes goats for vegetation management, pets Ramesses, one of two goats working to clear the overgrown vegetation Wednesday, Sept. 21 in Covington Cemetery. Photo illustration by Jennifer King/HERALD
Goats provide vegetation management for local cemetery BY NICOLE ARES HERALD.NEWS@WKU.EDU
W
hen the Covington Cemetery became overrun with vegetation, local citizens began to complain about its unkempt nature. Answering this plea, the Bowling Green City Commission sent a small army to help control this vegetation. This was not an average army, however, but a fourlegged army of goats led by Al Dilley, owner and founder of Goat Browsers. Goat Browsers is a land enhancement service that uses goats as nutrient-recyclers. They will graze the land for approximately 12 hours a day and for 8 weeks, eating almost every plant in their path, Dilley said. “Invasive species will smother and take over everything,” he said. “You’re never going to be able to get rid of it, you’re just going to be able to manage it.” This is the third year Goat Browsers has been contracted to the Covington Cemetery. However, Goat Browsers is an idea 25 years in the making and has been implementing its practices since 2009. Since receiving training from the Tennessee Browsing Academy at Tennessee State University, Dilley has completed approximately 10 to 15 jobs including: vegetation clean-up for private individuals, cemeteries, dams and a private lake. “It started sort of as a hobby, but I want it to develop into a small business,” Dilley said. The first year Dilley was contracted to the Covington Cemetery, he brought approximately 16 goats and they finished the project in 12 days. However, since the goats have become a “tourist attraction” for the community, this year there are only two goats and they will stay longer. “The city wanted the project finished by the end of the growing season, but if I brought them all here in two
BY MONICA KAST
days it would be done. These guys will be done around Thanksgiving,” Dilley said. The 200 pound male goats are named Luke and Ramesses. They are usually kept at Dilleys’ farm with 52 other goats split into two herds. “I named him Ramesses because I enjoy Egyptian history and if you look at his head and his horns, he looks sort of like a pharaoh to me,” Dilley said laughing as he patted Ramesses’ on the head and fed him his favorite treat –– a peanut. “Give a goat a peanut and you’ll make a friend for life,” Dilley added. Goat Browsers was hired by the Bowling Green City Commission after it received control of the land in 2014. The land was previously owned by the Covington family who were a “pioneer Warren County family,” according to the sign placed in front of the cemetery.
SEE GRAVEYARD GOATS PAGE A2
Ramesses, left, and Luke eat vegetation from around gravestones Wednesday Sept. 21, 2016 in Covington Cemetery. Jennifer King/HERALD
HERALD.NEWS@WKU.EDU President Gary Ransdell’s report at the end of Friday’s Board of Regents meeting turned into a heated discussion involving the Request for Proposals for the Sports Medicine Complex. At the end of the meeting, Ransdell gave a report and announced the Sports Medicine Complex Request for Proposal was complete and was sent to Frankfort Friday morning for approval from the state. Ransdell said the RFP would be released Monday. Ransdell also said proposals were due back Oct. 10, calling it a “competitive negotiation,” and they would make a decision within a week of receiving the proposals. “We do dozens of RFP’s a year about a whole range of services, and this one is no different,” Ransdell said after the meeting. “This was on a tighter time frame because of the need to return to the Capital Projects and Bond Oversight Committee in Frankfort on Oct. 18.” WKU also currently has an RFP out for the renovation of the Garrett Conference Center. The requests for that project have been available since mid-July, and will remain open until Oct. 21, according to Gary Meszaros, assistant vice president of business and auxiliary services at WKU.
SEE REGENTS PAGE A2
U.S. Senate candidate Jim Gray visits BG BY EMMA COLLINS HERALD.NEWS@WKU.EDU Candidate for U.S. Senate, Jim Gray, visited the Warren County Democratic Headquarters in Bowling Green Saturday for a meet and greet with voters. Gray, a Democrat and the current mayor of Lexington, spoke to a crowd of around 30 people about his campaign platforms, and specifically, his ideas for improving Kentucky’s economy. Gray said he supports a thriving economy with opportunities for everyone. Gray said his economic platform has four points: build infrastructure, build American manufacturing, build small businesses and build the middle class. “I’m someone who wants to see positive change, investment in America so our country will grow, so young people have opportunities, the opportunities that I had growing up,” Gray said. “The only way we’re going to get there is for the country to make investments.” Gray used his time as mayor to illustrate his ability to improve the economy. When he was first elected as mayor in 2010, Gray said Lexington had
Senatorial candidate Jim Gray speaks to Bowling Green residents at a meet and greet held at the Democratic Headquarters on Saturday, Sept. 24. In his speech, Gray addresses the changes he hopes to make in Kentucky and the Bowling Green community. Michelle Hanks/HERALD a $30 million budget deficit and the pension system for firemen and policemen was underfunded by $350 million. In addition to the deficits, Gray said the healthcare plan for city employees was also losing around $20 million. “It was a perfect storm,” Gray said.
“We had to put a bear hug around these problems and wrestle them to the ground.” In the years following his first election, Gray said his office was able to fix the underfunded pension system, invest in public safety and affordable
SEE JIM GRAY PAGE A2