Antelope Valley Press

Former Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll dies at age 92

- By BRUCE SCHREINER Associated Press

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Former Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll, who led efforts to improve public schools and modernize the state’s judicial system in the 1970s — and who later rekindled his political career as a state legislator — died Sunday, his family said. He was 92.

Carroll ascended to the governorsh­ip during an era when Bluegrass State governors still dominated the legislativ­e agenda, enabling him to shape a wide spectrum of Kentucky policies. But his administra­tion later became tainted by a kickback scandal that engulfed a former state Democratic Party chairman.

Carroll, a Democrat, served as governor from 1974 to 1979 and made a successful comeback in 2004 when he was elected as a state senator.

“As a family, it is with the heaviest of hearts that

we grieve the loss of our beloved father, grandfathe­r and great-grandfathe­r,” his family said in a statement. “His steadfast faith and positive outlook on life ... and

constant love for his family and his giving heart and warm embrace will forever be missed.”

Kentucky’s current Democratic governor, Andy

Beshear, said in a social media post that Carroll “dedicated his career to public service. For decades he worked to support public education and those he represente­d in Frankfort.”

In his tribute to Carroll, Kentucky Senate President Robert Stivers, a Republican, said that “few will have a career as distinguis­hed as his.” Kentucky House Speaker David Osborne, also a Republican, offered “deepest sympathies” to Carroll’s family and noted the former governor’s decades long political life.

“May his family find comfort in that service,” Osborne said in a statement.

Carroll served five terms in the Kentucky House, including a stint as House speaker from 1968 to 1970. He was elected lieutenant governor in 1971 and ascended to the governorsh­ip in December 1974 when Gov. Wendell Ford resigned to take a seat in the US Senate.

Running a year later as an incumbent, a rarity in a time when Kentucky governors were barred from succeeding themselves, Carroll easily won election to a full term of his own.

He governed during a time of prosperity. An oil embargo by Arab countries triggered a boom in the coal industry, and Carroll’s administra­tion was awash in money from the coal severance tax.

Carroll led the push to eliminate the private bail bond system and the state invested heavily in teacher salaries and provided free textbooks. He establishe­d a School Building Authority to help poor school districts build new schools. Vocational and special education systems were also bolstered.

The state parks systems expanded under his leadership, too, and Kentucky strengthen­ed fire-safety laws following the deadly blaze that tore through the Beverly Hills Supper Club in northern Kentucky.

Carroll took on a national leadership role as chairman of the National Governors Associatio­n.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll 3, 1977, in Washington. (left) talks with President Jimmy Carter at the White House Feb.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll 3, 1977, in Washington. (left) talks with President Jimmy Carter at the White House Feb.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States