GREENVILLE — In recent years, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has spent tens of millions of dollars to improve the emergency communications systems across Kentucky.
All it took was one ice storm last week to knock out electricity and phone service, isolating desperate communities in Western Kentucky.
In different counties, police and firefighters lost the radios connecting them to dispatch centers; county leaders couldn't use telephones to call Frankfort for aid; and emergency officials scrambled to connect themselves to the outside world by any means available, relying on ham radio operators or relaying messages to friends in nearby Tennessee who remained online.
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