Lt. Gov. Coleman continues to push against Kentucky’s Amendment 2 in district she used to teach

NICHOLASVILLE, Ky. ( FOX 56 ) — The state’s highest-elected teacher was back in her old stomping grounds on Tuesday to campaign against Kentucky’s hotly contested school amendment , Amendment 2 .

“There is not a press conference that is long enough for me to fully litigate the case against Amendment 2,” Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman said.

Kentucky general election: View 2024 sample ballots by county

Kentucky will decide whether to adopt Amendment 2 just two weeks from now. The proposal would allow Kentucky’s tax money to be spent on students attending schools outside the public school system. Coleman, a former teacher at East Jessamine High, said she believes that would mean less in the budget for public schools, especially in rural areas.

“Here in Jessamine County that funding will go right down the road to places like Lexington who have private schools,” Coleman said.

“For us, our biggest employers are our school systems. We’re products of public education. We’re proud of public education. And it’s just not feasible that there’s going to be a vote taken on that floor that’s going to hurt public education regardless of what happens with this amendment,” Rep. David Meade (R-Stanford) told FOX 56 this week on Red, White, and Bluegrass.

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