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D
D
President
room
all
right
at
this
point
time
we're
going
to
got
three
bills
to
hear
we're
going
to
start
off
with
506.
I'm
going
to
link
us
to
chair.
Mr
freeland
is
going
to
actually
chair
this
meeting
and
we're
going
from
there.
D
All
right,
mr
chairman,
and
member
of
the
committee,
I'm
representing
phil
pratt
from
district
62,
I'm
before
you
today,
along
with
these
folks,
to
present
to
you,
your
consideration
house
bill
506..
We
passed
this
bill
our
committee
three
years
ago,
when
we
learned
very
quickly.
Various
stakeholders
had
issues
with
the
measure.
D
The
top
shelf
team
went
to
work
right
away
to
address
all
the
concerns
of
the
various
groups,
and
we
are
here
three
years
later
that
with
that,
I
am
considering
the
art
of
compromise
and
consensus
building,
I'm
going
to
allow
my
guest
today
to
discuss
details
of
the
measure.
But
again
this
is
a
good
bill.
I
hope
hope
you
will
see
this
needed
in
our
small
business
community
in
kentucky,
and
I
also
want
state
thanks
state
representative
chad,
mccoy
who
worked
tirelessly
to
make
sure
we
brought
all
the
stakeholders
together
for
this.
G
G
I'm
a
licensed
attorney
in
the
state
of
kentucky
a
sherm
certified
hr,
professional
and
I've
been
in
a
leadership
position
with
a
po
in
the
commonwealth
for
nearly
12
years.
I'm
here
to
testify
in
support
of
house
bill
506,
which
would
create
comprehensive
registration
program
and
regulatory
framework
for
peos
passage
of
house
bill.
506
will
bring
kentucky
in
line
with
the
40
other
states
that
have
passed
some
form
of
comprehensive
legislation,
addressing
specific
licensing,
registration
and
regulation
of
peos.
G
A
vast
majority
of
those
track
closely
to
the
napio
or
national
association
of
peos
model
act
on
which
this
bill
is
by
way
of
background.
Peos,
provide
a
comprehensive
human
resources
service
to
small
and
mid-sized
businesses
that
allow
their
clients
to
focus
on
their
core
competencies
and
not
have
to
be
concerned
with
compliance
and
the
administrative
function
that
goes
along
with
being
an
employer.
G
G
Because
of
these
services,
small
businesses
that
use
peos
grow
faster,
have
lower
employee
turnover
rates
and
are
less
likely
to
go
out
of
business
than
their
counterparts,
who
did
not
use
peos
house
bill.
506
would
create
uniform
standards
and
provide
clarity
on
some
key
legal
definitions
and
a
firm
foundation
for
the
peo
industry
to
continue
its
growth
in
the
commonwealth.
G
These
standards
resolve
the
most
common
legal
issues
that
can
arise
in
a
po
relationship.
One
example
are
tax
credits
when
a
peo
becomes
the
employer
of
record,
we
want
those
tax
credits
or
tax
incentives
to
remain
with
the
client
and
for
their
peo
relationship
to
not
get
in
the
way
of
that
tax
credit
incentive.
G
As
chairman
pratt
said,
we've
worked
with
several
stakeholders
outside
of
the
peo
industry,
kentucky
government
agencies
and
other
interested
parties
to
craft
legislation,
and
this
bill
that
we
think
addresses
everyone's
needs,
and
concerns
worked
hard
to
do
that.
For
these
reasons,
we
respectfully
request
you
support
house
bill
506
and
I'd
especially
like
to
thank
chairman
pratt
for
sponsoring
and
again
representative
mccoy
for
his
guidance
on
this
bill
and
thank
all
of
you
for
your
time
as
well.
Thank.
E
E
All
right,
representative
ojanowski,
I
believe
he.
H
Has
a
question:
yes,
thank
you.
So
last
night,
when
I
was
reading
this
bill
and
this
bill
went
on
and
on
and
on
I
kept
turning
the
pages.
It's
like
okay.
So
on
page
five
from
section
three,
it
specifies
that
if
an
employee
is
licensed
registered
or
certified
that
they
would
be
only
the
employee
of
the
client
as
opposed
to
the
professional
employer
organization,
can
you
explain
why
that's
necessary?
Will.
H
Sure
it's
on
page
five,
it's
in
section
3
and
it's
letter
e.
F
Thank
you
for
your
question
and
I
didn't
look
at
it,
but
I
I
think
I
know
what
the
provision
is.
It's
regarding
so,
for
instance,
a
peo
picks
up
a
liquor
store.
The
liquor
store
obviously
has
to
comply
with
other
licensure
regulations
via
the
the
state
of
kentucky.
That
would
just
say
that
the
liquor
store,
for
instance,
is
responsible
for
that
licensure
and
not
the
peo.
The
peo
wouldn't
have
to
get
licensed
as
a
liquor
store.
Okay,.
E
E
H
D
C
E
E
F
H
I
D
E
E
Yes,
all
right,
hb
506
passes
with
favorable
expressions,
so
congratulations
and
chairman
pratt
you're,
just
going
to
stay
seated.
Is
that
correct.
E
A
Steve
del
bianco,
with
net
choice,
a
trade
association
in
washington
dc.
D
Okay,
this
is
a
bill
you
all
have
heard
two
years
ago.
Actually,
last
year
we
actually
passed
out
a
committee
passed
down
the
floor
of
the
house,
passed
it
out
of
the
senate,
went
to
the
governor.
He
vetoed
it,
even
though
we
had
the
support
of
the
economic
development
cabinet,
it
was
vetoed
so
we're
back
at
it
again
again.
This
is
something
you've
already
seen
or
should
have
seen
in
this
committee.
D
A
Thank
you,
mr
chairman.
Members
of
committee,
net
choices.
Members
include
apple
amazon,
facebook,
ebay,
google
interest
pits
pinterest
and
twitter.
These
are
the
companies
that
all
of
us
use
in
america
to
to
do
our
research
collect
information
to
connect
with
each
other
to
create,
and
also
to
store
precious
memories,
the
videos,
the
documents
photographs
we
have
our
families
and
friends
and
data
centers
are
what
enable
that
to
happen.
Speaking
of
pictures,
this
is
the
inside
of
a
data
center.
A
This
one
here
is
a
data
center
just
outside
of
columbus
ohio.
It's
almost
a
million
square
foot
built
by
facebook,
750
million
dollar
cost
over
two
year
period,
employing
1200
construction
workers
who
made
about
80
million
dollars
in
wages
and
right
across
the
street.
Google
has
a
similarly
sized
data
center
on
440
acres.
A
So
typically,
these
data
centers,
which
are
about
the
size
of
an
aircraft
carrier,
sit
on
multiple
hundred
acre
tracts
of
land
where
there's
easy
access
to
reliable
electricity,
water
supply
somewhere
close
to
an
interstate
where
you
can
get
access
to
the
the
right-of-way
for
high-speed
fiber.
Now
this
facility
is
in
ohio,
which
is
booming
right
now,
virginia
where
I'm
from
is
the
number
one
data
center
location
in
the
entire
world
and
even
alabama
has
a
major
google
data
center.
A
But
unfortunately,
I
have
no
pictures
like
this
of
any
data
centers
in
kentucky
and
that's
because
these
other
states
have
extended
to
data
center
equipment,
the
very
same
sales
tax
treatment
that
kentucky
gives
today
for
the
equipment
that
I
buy
in
agriculture
in
mining
or
manufacturing.
In
other
words,
the
equipment
I
buy
for
those
enterprises
in
kentucky
is
not
subject
to
sales
tax.
These
other
states
that
have
attracted
data
centers
extended
that
treatment
to
data
center
equipment.
A
So,
as
you
consider
chairman
pratt's
bill,
I
I'd
invite
you
to
see
it
that
there
are
incremental
benefits
to
kentucky
of
being
here
versus
not
being
here,
and
if
I
can
make
that
as
clear
as
I
can,
it
would
be
there.
The
data
centers
bring
incremental
economic
benefits.
A
So
if
we
are
here
in
kentucky,
you
are
going
to
realize
additional
income
and
spending
by
those
who
do
the
construction,
those
who
work
at
the
data
center,
the
contractors
that
service
them
and
every
three
years
these
major
data
centers
from
google,
facebook
and
amazon,
replace
nearly
all
of
the
servers
with
newer,
faster
cooler
servers
that
have
a
higher
capacity.
So
every
three
years
is
a
cycle
of
replacement
and
it's
about
half
the
capital
cost
of
the
data
centers.
It's
going
to
improve
kentucky's
attractiveness
to
high-tech
employment
and
it'll,
diversify
your
economy
as
well.
A
The
same
can
be
said
on
tax
benefits.
There
are
incremental
tax
benefits
of
being
here
versus
not
here.
There
are
no
data
centers
in
kentucky
today
of
its
enterprise
scale,
and
if
we
do
arrive,
there
is
incremental
taxes.
There
isn't
sales
tax
on
the
servers,
but
there
is
sales
tax
on
all
the
non-exempt
items,
the
business
services,
taxes,
electricity,
communications
and
please
don't
forget
the
local
real
estate
and
property
taxes
where
I
live
in
northern
virginia,
it's
almost
400
million
dollars
a
year
in
loudoun
county
on
these
property
taxes
from
the
data
centers
alone.
A
So
the
fiscal
note
for
something
like
this
varies
from
state
to
state,
but
I
thought
I
would
share
with
you
in
closing
the
fiscal
note
in
idaho,
where
the
state
looked
at
the
incremental
benefits
from
getting
a
data
center
that
they
don't
have
today,
and
they
said
there
was
no
fiscal
note.
In
fact
it
would
be
benefit
and
sure
enough.
Last
week,
within
18
months
of
passing,
the
legislation
in
idaho
they
secured
an
800
million
dollar
data
center,
one
of
those
aircraft
carrier
size
entities.
So,
mr
chairman,
I
look
forward
to
your
questions.
E
We've
got
a
motion
and
a
second.
We
do
have
one
question
so
far:
representative
bojan,
oh
two,
okay,.
H
My
first
and
I
mean
you
said
we
don't
have
these
centers,
which
I
understand,
but
what
I
understand
is
the
cabinet
for
economic
development
already
provides
a
sales
and
use
tax
refund
for
purchases
under
this
exact
situation
and
the
cap
of
20
million
dollars
has
never
been
reached.
So
why
do
we
need
this
bill?
If
we
already
have
the
mechanism
to
not
have
the
sales
and
use
tax
provided.
A
Mr
chairman,
thank
you
representative.
It's
a
good
question.
We
researched
the
program
carefully
and
it
didn't
take
much
to
understand
why
it
isn't
competitive.
It
isn't
competitive
with
the
state
that
simply
says
that
the
equipment
that
you
purchase
in
the
data
center
is
exempt
from
taxes.
Now,
if
I
compare
that
to
a
capped
program
that
requires
a
refund,
not
only
do
we
then
have
to
pay
the
sales
tax.
H
May
I
follow
up
okay,
so
give
us
an
idea
of
what
the
cost,
so,
if
you'd
quickly
hit
20
million
dollars,
how
much
will
this
cost
the
state,
and
you
know
what
exactly
would
be
the
return
on
that
investment
and
then
just
briefly,
so
that
I
don't
have
to
ask
again
for
permission.
This
bill
doesn't
have
a
sunset
of
five
years
for
us
to
come
back
and
look
at
the
data.
I
know
that
the
businesses
get
30
years
of
the
tax
break.
H
A
Thank
you
for
the
question
so
on
an
800
million
dollar
facility
about
half
of
that
facility
are
the
the
servers
that
go
into
it
and
at
a
tax
rate
of
six
percent,
you
can
quickly
calculate
it's
24
million
dollars
and
that
kind
of
a
cost
is
significant
and
over
time,
every
three
years
we'd
be
spending
the
same
thing.
So
the
savings
on
sales
tax
is
something
you're,
considering
an
investment
from
the
state,
and
I
would
invite
you
to
consider
this
for
a
minute.
A
There
is
no
check
cut
by
this
commonwealth
of
kentucky
you,
you
need
not
provide
any
infrastructure,
you
don't
need
to
build
any
roads
or
intersections,
don't
need
to
expand
the
schools,
because
these
data
centers
typically
employ
only
about
a
hundred
people
making
about
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
a
year.
It's
a
high-tech
high-income
job,
but
it
isn't
job
that
requires
you
to
expand
your
capacity
to
have
new
workers.
A
All
of
these
taxes
that
are
listed
on
the
screen
representative
are
incremental.
New
taxes
that
kentucky
wouldn't
have
gotten
kentucky
has
no
outlay.
Now.
What
you're
suggesting
is
that,
since
we're
getting
less
sales
tax
than
we
otherwise
would
have
gotten
you're
thinking
of
that
as
an
investment
upon
which
you'd
like
to
calculate
a
return,
but
there
isn't
an
investment.
If
kentucky
doesn't
take
this
step,
there
will
not
be
an
enterprise
data
center
in
the
state.
A
H
F
H
A
Every
three
every
three
years
is
the
refresh
of
the
equipment
we
were
speaking
of
and
on
this
particular
slide,
are
they
incremental
taxes
that
you
will
receive
if
we
are
here
which
you
will
not
receive
if
we're
not?
This
is
the
economic
benefits,
so
in
every
state
where
we
have
located
these,
the
economic
development
and
legislatures
have
enthusiastically
endorsed
renewing
these
sales
tax
incentives
to
retain
and
attract
even
greater
numbers
of
data.
Centers
we're
an
awfully
good
neighbor
representative.
A
We
support
the
schools
in
a
big
way,
especially
those
high
schools
and
trade
schools
that
train
the
people
that
work
at
a
data
center.
The
local
trades
really
enjoy
the
the
synergies
that
achieve
because,
when
we
typically
put
one
data
center
in
on
a
400
acre
campus,
it's
not
long
before
another
one
goes
in,
so
the
construction,
for
instance,
in
omaha
nebraska,
has
been
almost
continuous
as
it
is
today,
just
outside
of
columbus.
So
the
benefits
are
to
answer
your
question
directly.
H
D
Chairman,
if
you
take
a
look
at
the
bill
on
page
three.
D
Starting
in
line
eight,
it
addresses
a
if
a
data
center
fails
to
meet
the
investment.
If
you
go
down
to
the
next
line
line
nine,
it
says
the
department
may
require
the
data
center
to
repay.
Why
may
in
not
shell.
A
Representative
from
the
standpoint
of
industry,
there
is
no
doubt
that
we
would
be
liable
to
have
to
repay
any
avoided
sales
tax
if
we
didn't
meet
the
thresholds,
and
the
thresholds
in
here
are
300
million
dollar
incremental
investment,
30
employees
in
the
large
populations
over
a
hundred
thousand
people.
The
numbers
are
smaller
for
districts
under
a
hundred
thousand,
so
the
incentive
here
is
only
for
incremental
new
data
centers
of
a
sufficient
size
that
they
are
not
in
kentucky
at
all.
Today.
The
word
may
in
there
is,
is
at
the
discretion
of
your
department
of
revenue.
A
It's
not
at
the
discretion
of
the
companies,
so
your
department
of
revenue,
most
likely,
would
exercise
to
claw
back
any
tax
benefits
that
had
been
earned
by
a
company
that
failed
to
meet
the
threshold.
So
if
you
well,
if
you
felt
that
you
needed
to
tell
your
dor
that
they
shall
seek
the
refund,
then
you
could
change
that
word,
but
it's
certainly
not
our
discretion.
D
D
Thank
you.
I
have
a
couple
of
questions
when
I
was
following
your
math
400
million
dollars
for
equipment,
and
that
would
be
tax
exempt,
which
which
I
support
your
bill
by
the
way,
so
the
other
400
million
for
the
structure,
their
sales
tax,
paid
on
the
material
purchase
to
build
that
structure.
A
Labor
is
a
huge
chunk
of
the
construction
and
most
of
the
construction
of
these
large
data.
Centers
is
done
through
a
general
contractor
through
multiple
fixed
price
contracts,
where
a
subcontractor
would
come
in
here
from
louisville
and
install
the
cooling
system
for
75
million
dollars
lumped
into
there
would
be
some
labor
and
equipment
and
they'd
have
to
separate
out
the
portion
that
would
have
been
subject
to
sales
tax
to
see
if
we're
eligible
for
the
credit.
D
I
Thank
you
I'm
trying
to
can
you
help
me
understand
why
this
is
not
just
a
coupon
for
facebook,
whose
parent
company
meta?
If
anybody
understands
what
that
is,
had
revenues
in
2021
of
117
billion
dollars,
which
is
10
times
the
general
fund
of
kentucky,
and
why
that
company
and
others
can't
kick
in
24
million
dollars
to
kentucky
schools
and
hospitals.
A
Representative,
these
are
incremental
investments
and
there
is
incremental
contribution.
I
mentioned
earlier
that
data
centers
contribute
400
million
dollars
a
year
to
the
property
taxes
in
the
county
where
I
live
in
northern
virginia
on
the
slider
front
of
you.
All
of
these
are
incremental
taxes,
so
the
taxes
are
incremental
and
they're
large.
A
The
data
centers
will
locate
in
the
states
that
are
most
friendly
to
their
businesses,
but
they
will
serve
all
of
us.
So
there
is
no
natural
magnet
to
kentucky.
There
is,
at
this
point
a
natural
magnet
to
ohio
and
indiana
to
idaho
and
even
to
alabama,
and
I'm
just
inviting
you
if
you'd
like
the
industry,
to
be
here,
I'm
inviting
you
to
do
one
small
thing
and
when
act,
379
and
kentucky
will
be
in
the
race.
I
Sir,
how
dare
you
say,
there's
no
natural
magnet
to
the
commonwealth
of
kentucky.
Would
this
apply
to
cryptocurrency
mining
businesses
too?.
A
I
Okay,
I'm
just
struggling-
I
I
understand
the
pragmatic
point
of
view,
but
I
hate
to
see
kentucky
yet
again
in
an
arms
race
or
sort
of
a
giveaway
race
in
order
to
compete.
When
I
think
we
have
a
whole
lot
to
offer
and
then
there's
that
threshold
of
what
do
we
need
to
compete
versus
what's
overkill
right
and
giving
giving
away
the
most
generous
exemption
or
giveaway
that
exists
at
the
same
time
that
we
say
we're
trying
to
protect
taxpayers,
and
we
know
that
20
people
are
going
to
work
at
these
places.
Thank
you.
C
Thank
you.
Thank
you
for
the
presentation.
Thank
you
chairman.
I
have
a
couple
quick
questions.
If
I
may,
the
first
is
on
personal
property
tax
here,
so
there
would
be
no
sales
tax
on
the
purchase
of
these
servers.
Would
there
be
personal
property
taxes?
The
senate
state
would
benefit
from
moving
forward,
yes,
okay
and
then,
if
I
may,
can
you
let
me
know
on
average
how
many
full-time
employees
retain
are
retained
once
the
center
is
up
and
operational,
so
not
the
construction
to
build
it
but
full-time
employees.
Once
it's
built.
A
That
20
was
for
the
very
small
data
centers
in
the
very
rural
areas.
If
you
read
on
to
the
next
section,
the
larger
over
100
000
population
require
a
300
million
dollar
investment
and,
as
I
said
before,
typically
800
million
dollar
investment
in
a
data
center
will
roughly
bring
a
hundred
people
making
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
a
year.
We
haven't
built
too
many
lately
that
we're
in
the
lower
range,
but
the
numbers
that
are
in
hb
379
are
numbers
that
correspond
to
being
competitive,
idaho,
ohio,
indiana,
they're
50
years.
A
A
Each
state
has
their
own
approach
right,
some
states
they
will
make
it
for
a
longer
term.
Others
are
shorter
term
and
increase
the
amount
of
items
that
are
subject
to
the
exemption,
but
a
30
employee
threshold
is
designed
to
attract
not
just
enterprise
data
centers,
like
amazon,
apple,
facebook,
google
and
microsoft,
but
co-location
data
centers.
A
So
if
a
company
builds
a
data
center
in
which
the
banks
and
local
manufacturing
put
their
servers
well,
then
that
data
center
itself
might
only
have
15
or
20
employees
the
rest
of
the
people
that
attend
to
the
work
of
the
data.
Centers
work
for
those
kentucky
businesses
who
visit
the
data
center
to
take
care
of
their
servers.
So
it's
a
slightly
complicated
distinction.
But
if
you
want
to
make
this
eligible
for
data
centers
that
serve
multiple
companies,
you
have
to
keep
that
employee
threshold
much
lower.
C
One
more
if
I
may
so.
My
final
question
is
on
environmental
issues,
because
data
centers
are
giant
users
of
energy
and
you
stated
that
you
are
environmentally
friendly
and
you
offset
and
buy
renewable
energies.
We
don't
have
a
lot
of
those
in
kentucky,
so
would
that
be
purchased
through
carbon
offsets?
What
what
does
that
look
like
for
us.
A
The
answer-
okay,
that's
great,
so
meta
and
google.
Today
their
ceos
pledge
that
any
new
data
center
will
be
100
supplied
by
renewable
energy
and
the
way
they
do
it
is
by
incremental
renewable
energy.
So
google
puts
out
a
request
for
proposal
from
commonwealth
based
suppliers
who
will
produce
incremental
and
in
the
state
of
kentucky,
it's
going
to
be
solar,
incremental
solar
power
sufficient
to
supply
all
the
operational
needs
of
the
data
center.
So
google
doesn't
build
it,
but
google
says
if
somebody
in
kentucky
will
build
it.
A
D
I
can
tell
you:
I've
had
people
reach
out
to
me
utilities
that
want
to
provide
this
energy.
E
B
C
C
C
C
C
B
C
E
K
C
All
right,
let
you
wanna
go
sure.
J
J
J
F
Thank
you,
chairman
pratt
and
members
of
this
committee
for
allowing
us
to
testify
today.
It
is
a
great
honor
and
privilege
to
be
testifying.
Alongside
of
my
daughter,
lindsay
and
deb
mcgrath
of
epilepsy
foundation
of
kentuckiana,
my
daughter
lindsay
was
diagnosed
with
epilepsy.
Eight
years
ago,
in
28,
in
2018,
at
the
age
of
16,
lindsay
passed
the
first
seizure,
safe
school
legislation
in
kentucky
known
as
the
lindsay
crunk
act
because
of
her
courage
and
bravery.
F
F
F
K
Thank
you,
chairman
pratt
and
members
of
the
committee
for
allowing
me
to
present
to
you
today.
My
name
is
deb
mcgrath
and
I
am
with
the
epilepsy
foundation
of
kentuckiana,
I'm
the
co-founder.
My
daughter
was
diagnosed
with
epilepsy
33
years
ago,
so
I
know
what
it's
like
for
cindy
and
members.
You
also
might
have
a
family
member
with
epilepsy
as
well,
so
you
might
know
where
our
hearts
are
coming
from.
K
K
I
applaud
lindsay
for
her
continued
bravery,
as
she
has
become
the
face
of
epilepsy
to
members
of
the
general
assembly
for
advocating
for
the
seizure,
safe
schools
like
cindy
said,
which
passed
in
2018
and
has
become
model
legislation
for
our
country
now.
So
please
take
pride
in
that,
knowing
that
the
work
that
you've
done
has
helped
lindsay,
and
so
many
other
kentucky
students
with
epilepsy
and
knowing
that
you
know
leading
the
charge
we
we
are
here
to
continue
that
charge.
K
She,
along
with
every
other
kentuckian
with
epilepsy,
earning
a
living,
should
have
reassurances
that
their
employer
and
co-workers
know
the
appropriate
seizure
first
aid
protocols
to
respond
quickly
to
in
the
event
of
a
seizure.
This
is
paramount
to
their
safety
and
well-being,
not
only
for
them,
but
for
anyone
having
a
seizure
who
is
a
patron
of
any
place
of
business
in
kentucky.
K
It
is
so
important
because
epilepsy
is
the
fourth
most
common
neurological
disease
in
the
united
states
and
affects
an
estimated
3.4
million
people.
Approximately
1
in
10
will
have
a
seizure
within
their
lifetime,
and
1
in
26
will
be
diagnosed
with
epilepsy.
The
impact
this
condition
has
occupationally
cannot
be
ignored.
K
K
However,
patients
with
epilepsy
have
more
emergency
department
visits
than
the
general
population,
13
of
adults
and
22
percent
of
children
with
epilepsy.
Take
a
trip
to
the
emergency
department
each
year
displaying
seizure.
First,
aid
signs
could
reduce
ems
calls
and
associated
emergency
department
costs.
K
K
A
person
could
get
hurt
during
a
seizure
or
a
seizure
could
last
too
long
or
could
cluster
for
most
seizures,
knowing
how
to
help
someone
with
basic
seizure.
First
aid
is
all
that
is
needed
and
can
make
the
difference
and
save
a
life
having
signage
visible
in
the
workplace
is
a
quick
and
effective
way
to
convey
to
employees
how
to
help
someone
in
the
event
of
a
seizure
occurs
as
well
as
alerting
them
on
what
not
to
do,
which
is
just
as
important
prominently
displaying
the
seizure.
First.
K
Aid
signage
is
a
simple
act,
but
no
doubt
would
have
a
far-reaching
impact
and
would
complement
the
work
of
kentucky's
seizure.
Smart
schools,
legislation,
the
national
epilepsy
foundation,
believes
the
public,
posting
and
accessibility
of
these
signs
is
crucial
to
post
to
help
the
epilepsy
foundation
is
providing
the
seizure
first,
aid
signs
which
cindy
displayed
and
you
have
in
your
packet
in
front
of
you
in
14
different
languages
for
free
through
the
links
through
a
link
on
their
websites.
K
The
epilepsy
foundation
of
kentuckiana
supports
seizure,
safe
signage
bill.
We
urge
you
to
do
the
same
by
voting
yes
to
sen,
to
house
bill
404
and
joining
representative
hart
in
sponsoring
this
bill
to
ensure
all
kentuckians
living
with
epilepsy
or
seizures.
Seizure
disorders
are
able
to
work
safely
and
successfully
in
whatever
position
or
field
they
choose,
as
well
as
to
ensure
the
safety
of
the
general
public.