BANQUET & BLACKBERRIES
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Summer provides sweet reminders of Lifeline’s community support Page 3
MULTIPLICATION
God x Community = Multiple Blessings
YOUR CAMPAIGN GIFTS AT WORK
Campaign for Recovery launches construction of new women’s campus
‘CAN’T OUT-GIVE THE LORD’
Lifeline supporter believes the more he shares, the more he is blessed
‘WINNING AT LIFE’
Catering manager turns around life at Lifeline
4
A WINNING ALTERNATIVE
Clients benefit from treatment option, avoiding jail time
ANOTHER STEP IN THE WAY OUT
Education helps sober Lifeline graduates find better jobs
LIFELINE’S SECRET SAUCE
5
6
7
Volunteer says love, plus 12-step program, helps promote sobriety
LIFELINE ANNUAL BANQUET CELEBRATES RECENT GRADUATES AND CONSTRUCTION OF NEW CAMPUS
PADUCAH COMMUNITY KITCHEN
Lifeline clients enjoy fulfilling volunteer partnership with local agency
13
Employers, like Triangle, help clients meet work requirement, bridging gap between treatment and ‘real life’
SECOND CHANCES Pages 8-9

DONOR LISTINGS
Jan. 1- Sept. 10, 2025, Thanks to our 2025 donors!
14-15

Board member and golf tourney chair Todd Trimble (left) and Lifeline staff (right) celebrate another successful golf tournament, as the 16th annual event raised $50,000 Sept. 5 at Paxton Park. Thanks to all sponsors, golfers, staff and volunteers for supporting our recovery mission.
BANQUET & BLACKBERRIES
Summer provides sweet reminders of Lifeline’s community support
At a crowded dinner and, later, in the prickliness of a blackberry patch, the idea of Lifeline as community shone brightly last summer.
First, the blackberries. Clients were invited multiple times by our neighbor, Loveshack Farms, to pick berries to donate to Community Kitchen and Martha’s Vineyard to help feed the hungry.
Volunteering our labors to help community agencies help others is a trademark of the Lifeline mission. We do it regularly, also, by volunteering during Community Kitchen’s daily luncheons for the hungry (page 13).

FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Ashley Miller 2014 Graduate of Lifeline
Those are beautiful examples of our mission because, while we help in the community, we recognize daily the many ways our community helps us.
Nowhere was that more apparent than at this year’s annual banquet (page 13).
It was our largest in 21 years, with almost 500 attendees packing the room and raising $115,000, our most successful to date.
Those are the numbers.
However, the support was immeasurable.
Repeat sponsoring organizations and individuals brought first-timers with them to the event.
The smiles, the chatter, the handshakes and hugs demonstrated a love bigger than the room.
As the evening unfolded, we shared the year’s good news:
• Lifeline’s second consecutive three-year accreditation from the national Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities following an onsite survey. The surveyor, who visits centers like ours all across the country, said we were in the top 5. He called our staff “mountain movers” for their tireless work to change the lives of our clients. I knew that to be true, but it was very encouraging for our staff to hear that from an outside expert in the field.
• Lifeline’s first significant government grant – one of 75 Kentucky organizations to share $19 million designated for opioid treatment. Lifeline received $270,474 for treatment services at our men’s and women’s campuses. That kind of affirmation in a very competitive grant process is very rewarding for us all.
• And, finally, three of Lifeline’s staff members, including two Lifeline graduates, obtaining certification or licensure as counselors, advancing our commitment to provide full-time clinical services on our campuses.
Through the reaction of thunderous applause and many kind words later, our community let us know they love us and support us.
For an organization that exists for, and by the help of, the community, a banquet and blackberries were sweet reminders.

Ashley Miller, Executive Director
God x Community = Multiplied Blessings MULTIPLICATION
Definitely more than subtraction or division, and even more than addition, multiplication is assuredly the most blessed idea in arithmetic.
Scripture refers to multiplication many times — in the 70x7 concept of forgiveness (Matthew 18:21-22), in the assurance of hundredfold return (Mark 10: 29-30) and blessings of grace and peace (2 Peter 1-2).
Through God’s blessings, multiplication is at work at Lifeline:
• When JP Kelly (page 8 ) hires Lifeline clients, he extends our mission while he changes lives — not just of those employees, but also their families and the community economy.
• When Lifeline clients volunteer at Community Kitchen (page 13 ), they multiply founder Sally Michelson’s gift to feed the hungry in our community.
• When you swing a golf club at Lifeline’s tournament or eat a plate at our annual banquet, you magnify the efforts of Todd Trimble (page 2) and Neil Ward (page 6 ) as they give freely of their talents to support Lifeline.
Community is key in Lifeline’s strategic plan to achieve our mission of providing a Christ-centered program for those dealing with life-controlling addictions.
We accomplish our mission through five focus areas (program, people, facilities, community, sustainability), but the community component helps make the others possible.
By partnering with individuals, businesses and other organizations in our community, we offer hope to 200 people seeking sobriety each year.
Seventy-five community volunteers teach our classes, drive our clients to appointments, organize our fundraisers and – thanks to 14 community leaders – run our board of directors.
Donations provide about 35 percent of our annual budget, so Lifeline would not be possible financially without that community involvement. In 2024, 335 individuals, including 30 who contribute each month, donated to Lifeline. Community organizations, ranging

FROM THE BOARD CHAIR
Steve Powless
Former Chair & CEO of CSI
from local churches to the United Way and Kentucky Colonels, provide additional financial support.
Thirty local employers provide jobs to our clients striving to meet their mandatory work requirement before they graduate.
On top of the regular gifts and support, the construction of a new women’s campus (page 5) is under way now because of gifts and pledges totaling more than $12 million.
We believe Lifeline blesses our community by helping reunite families and return productive citizens to work, but we also recognize fully that the community blesses Lifeline with multiplied support.
For that, dear community, we are grateful.
Community is one of five focus areas of Lifeline’s strategic plan
Goal: Grow and sustain partnerships and brand awareness.
Strategies include: Maintain communications to promote partnerships
YOUR CAMPAIGN GIFTS AT WORK
Campaign for Recovery launches construction of new women’s campus


Campaign for Recovery gifts have totaled more than $12 million, making possible the start of construction of the new women’s campus near Barkley Regional Airport. The administration building (pictured here) is expected to be completed in December, and two new dorms will open in the spring. The dining hall and chapel will follow. Administrators Billie Preston, Ashley Miller and Jennifer Demumbree are among those whose offices will be in the new administration building.

‘CAN’T
OUT-GIVE THE LORD’
Lifeline supporter believes the more he shares, the more he is blessed

(architectural rendering)
For 47 years, Neil Ward has been serving up burgers and goodwill on Paducah’s south side, as the owner of Bob’s Drive-In and, since 1998, Neil’s Catering.
His reputation is legendary, starting when he became one of the area’s youngest restaurateurs at 19 when he dropped out after two years of college to buy his favorite high school hangout, Bob’s, home of the Fiesta Burger.
“It’s one of the few places I ever ate,” he told The Paducah Sun in 1978. “Why, my girlfriend (now wife Ronna) didn’t know anything but hamburgers from Bob’s because that’s the only place I ever took her.”
He and Ronna have made a life at Bob’s. More importantly, they have shared that life with others – of course, the many loyal patrons who still stop for a Fiesta Burger and a $1 cone; but also the neighbors and the community.
“I’m not supposed to be here still. Neil,” he said of himself, “just ain’t that good. But the Lord has continued to bless us.”
A long-time member of Rosebower Baptist Church, Neil believes in putting his faith in action. For Lifeline, that
means each year the 500 or so guests at the annual banquet eat a full plated meal – meats, vegetables and cake – without cost to Lifeline, courtesy of Neil’s Catering.
Former executive director Terrye Peeler said from the first time she asked, Neil has always helped. “Just one year,” Terrye said, “during COVID, I think, he hadn’t had a very good year and said he might have to charge us, but he’d give us a good deal. By the time the banquet rolled around, he said, no, he could still provide it for us without charge, allowing the banquet to save that cost for our programming. He’s done it every year.”
(architectural rendering)
Neil said Lifeline’s success with men and women seeking sobriety convinced him to support it. “The bottom line is they are changing lives,” he said, “and that success tells me the Lord is in it.”
He supports other local organizations, especially those involving youth. Whether donating food or hiring people who need a second chance (see Mallory Matthews, page 7), he believes his gifts are multiplied.
“The more I do, the more I am blessed,” he said. “You just can’t out-give the Lord.”
‘WINNING
AT LIFE’
Catering manager turns life around at Lifeline
For anyone who’s ever tasted the cheesy hashbrown casserole or other goodies from Neil’s Catering, you should know the story behind the person responsible.
Catering manager Mallory Matthews has worked with owner Neil Ward (see story, page 6) since 2017, growing in experience and expertise to become Neil’s right hand.
Before 2017, her life was different.
“I started using drugs in my early teens,” said Mallory, 41-year-old native of Paducah.
She dropped out of high school and had three children when, at 22, she found herself addicted to pain pills. Mallory remembers the first time she got high. “Oh, wow!” she said. “I felt like I belonged. I was the kind of kid who didn’t want to be seen, I was always insecure.”
In her 20s, she had been with a new boyfriend just three months when they were both arrested on drug charges. Her father bonded her out of jail and took her straight to rehab, but a second arrest left her feeling suicidal. “I couldn’t go on living like I’d been living,” she said. “I didn’t believe in God, I didn’t believe in anything.”
While in jail, a Lifeline volunteer prayed with her during a visit. Mallory said she felt an immediate, almost indescribable physical reaction, growing warm in her chest and finally breaking into tears. “I finally realized there’s something bigger than me,” she said.
She entered Lifeline in April 2015 and got a job at Bob’s Drive-In until her treatment ended in January 2016, when she began a prison sentence for parole violation. When she was released in April 2017, she went back to Bob’s and has never left.
“Neil is so compassionate,” Mallory said. “He has given me more than one chance.”
Neil said he tries to help people in trouble, being a strong believer in Jesus’ words in Matthew 18:21-22 to forgive 70 times seven. “And that doesn’t mean 490,” Neil said, “it means as many times as it takes.”
In the last eight years, Mallory has mended relationships with her three children and remarried, now living a happy life. “I look back at that other person and think, ‘Did I really do that?’ ”

Mallory Matthews prepares for a Neil’s Catering event.
She credits Lifeline with helping her turn her life around. “They provided a safe environment while I learned to live a ‘normal’ life,” she said, “and I’m grateful. I was always thrilled to see someone winning at life. And now, I am that someone.”
SECOND CHANCES
Employers, like Triangle, help clients meet work requirement, bridging gap between treatment and ‘real life’

As a young man, JP Kelly worked occasionally at his grandfather’s business and noticed how some of the older men would work awhile and then disappear.
“I realize now they were struggling with addiction,” said JP, now president/CEO of that company, Triangle.
JP, a well-known local pianist in his time off, decided against a career in music to join the family business. “I had a professor who said if the piano weren’t your daily job,” he said, “you could enjoy it more.”
At the family business, he learned the two guiding principles from his grandfather, Poncho. “Help those in need,” he said, “and treat others as you would like to be treated.”
About 10 years ago, a high school friend, Casey Harris, contacted JP to see if he could work at Triangle to
meet the work requirement of his treatment at Lifeline Recovery Center.
“It had always been part of our fabric to reach out and help others,” JP said, “so, of course, we said yes; and we have begun a mutually beneficial partnership.”
Casey is still there, promoted to insulated blanket supervisor, and Triangle provides jobs for about a dozen other Lifeline workers at any given time. Many, like Casey, stay after they fulfill their recovery requirement.
“It’s a great place to work,” Casey said, “because it’s such a safe environment for workers’ stability and responsibility. We feel comfortable here because we share a deep faith and work at a faith-based business.”
Triangle is one of 25 to 30 local companies providing jobs for Lifeline clients. JP said it’s an arrangement that
benefits not just the employees, but also the employer.
“They are dependable and accountable, and when they’re all in, they’re all in,” he said, “And I want to emphasize: This is not charity, this is smart business.”
JP said the Lifeline workers are good employees. “They’re some of the best we have,” he said. “They show up early. They work hard. They lead by example. They bring humility, gratitude and a deep sense of purpose to their work.”
The Lifeline workers, mostly all women, work in the company’s insulated blanket division, sewing heat conservation blankets for mechanical installation systems, used in Triangle’s business and sold to other manufacturers. They are paid well and receive competitive benefits.
“We value our employees and treat them with respect,” JP said, “so the compensation should reflect that.”
Lifeline executive director Ashley Miller agreed. “Clients consistently tell us they enjoy working there because it’s a healthy, supportive environment where they feel respected and valued. They aren’t judged for being in recovery—instead, they’re given a real second chance, and that makes all the difference.”
Ashley is grateful for JP and other local employers who help Lifeline clients on the way to recovery. “The work requirement at Lifeline is unique in the world of recovery treatment,” she said.
“It helps bridge the gap between treatment and real life, teaching responsibility, structure, and purpose. We’re incredibly grateful for local employers who believe in second chances and open their doors to our clients— they play a vital role in their long-term success.”

A WINNING ALTERNATIVE
Clients benefit from treatment option, avoiding jail time
Kenny Vasseur, administrative supervisor on the men’s campus, is not sure where he’d be if not for Emily Garrison.
“I’m not sure I’d be sober or at Lifeline if she hadn’t been so good at her job,” Kenny said.
Emily, alternative sentencing worker with the Kentucky Department of Public Advocacy, assists clients who struggle with substance abuse find an alternative to jail. “I’m the middle man between the court system and Lifeline,” she said. “I’m just a stepping stone.”
She meets her clients at the lowest point of their lives, when they’ve been arrested and are facing a court sentence.
“It’s so sad,” she said, “the trauma, the abuse many of them have suffered. It’s very gratifying to be able to offer them this chance. I’m always in for second chances.”
If those clients express an interest in long-term treatment using a faith-based recovery program, she works with the Admissions staff at Lifeline to get them in. “The only way many of them can avoid jail is if a judge orders their release with a treatment option,” she said.
She admires Lifeline’s methods, including the work requirement. “It helps that they can work in the second phase to prepare for the real world before they’re out in the community on their own,” she said.
Emily, representing six western Kentucky counties, is one of 53 professionals working in alternative sentencing across Kentucky. The program has been recognized by the American Bar Association and the Harvard Kennedy School Ash Center for its work.
Having known the impact of addiction in her own family, Emily finds her work rewarding. “It makes my heart feel good when I see clients doing well,” she said.
One such example is Kenny, whom she assisted during COVID, meaning she had few in-person visits with him, but just Zoom sessions to arrange his move from jail to Lifeline.

Emily Garrison, Alternative Sentencing Worker III at the Department of Public Advocacy, helps Lifeline clients avoid jail.
“Then some time later, I was touring the Lifeline campus,” she said, “and he came up to me and gave me a big hug. It’s so nice to see someone who was at his rock bottom now doing so well. Sometimes I don’t see my clients after they’re placed and I never know what happened to them, but it’s great to see him doing so well.”
Kenny said Lifeline clients coming from the jail are fortunate to have the Lifeline treatment option to get sober.
“I’m incredibly grateful for her,” he said. “She has a passion to help people. She’s very professional and quick to respond. If she didn’t love what she did, who’s to say what my life would look like?”
Education helps sober Lifeline graduates find better jobs ANOTHER STEP IN THE WAY OUT
One in five Lifeline clients has a big challenge beyond their sobriety.
They didn’t finish high school.
“Many people think dropping out of school was a choice,” said Elizabeth Howell, “but many times, it was circumstances beyond their control.”
Maybe they had to drop out to support themselves. Maybe they got kicked off the team and lost interest in school. Or, in at least one case seen recently, the family had lost everything not once, but twice in a hurricane.
“I wish people had more grace for them,” Elizabeth said, “because most of the time they were doing the best they could.”
Elizabeth, an adult education instructor for the West Kentucky Educational Cooperative, conducts weekly GED preparation classes at Lifeline’s men’s campus to give them that grace – and hope for a better future as they search for jobs in their sobriety.
“Education is liberation,” she said. “As an adult, we should find as many ways as we can to liberate ourselves from things that hold us back.”
clients to work,” she said, “and they find they can get better jobs when they have their high school diploma or equivalency.”
More Kentuckians have earned their GED since Gov. Andy Beshear waived the testing fee in 2020. Kentucky’s pass rate at 78 percent is higher than the national rate of 74 percent. The men’s campus in Ballard County qualifies for the West Kentucky Educational Cooperative class; the women’s campus offers Zoom classes for GED prep through West Kentucky Community and Technical College.
Three decades ago, leaving high school to play AAA baseball seemed like a good idea to Joe Henson, now a weekend recovery associate at Lifeline. Two years later, baseball was finished, and Joe faced a rough career path without his high school diploma. He was at Lifeline in fall 2024 when GED classes started, and he jumped in.

Elizabeth, a former art teacher at high schools in Tennessee and New Hampshire, was inspired to work in adult education by two family members. “My uncle was a very successful contractor who needed a GED to get a license he needed for a particular job,” she said. “My grandmother never got her GED, but it always bothered her that she hadn’t finished high school.”
In Kentucky, the GED (General Educational Development) test is an option for adults who did not graduate from high school to earn a high school equivalency credential by passing a test covering language arts, mathematical reasoning, science and social studies. The GED Diploma is recognized by employers and colleges as the equivalent of a high school diploma.
Lifeline executive director Ashley Miller said helping Lifeline clients with their education is part of the overall key to long-term success with sobriety. “We require all of our
Joe got his GED in two-and-ahalf months and now is happy to work at the Housing Authority of Paducah. “They celebrate me, don’t just tolerate me!” he said. If he encounters anyone considering the GED, he tells them, “Get it!”
Lifeline recovery associate Jackson Evans, a 2024 Lifeline graduate, didn’t want to quit high school, but was forced to by family circumstances. After getting his GED at Lifeline, he now hopes to go to college. “I’m not 100 percent sure yet what I want to do,” he said, “but I’m looking into something like electrical or engineering.”
Even though David LaGore, peer support supervisor, had successful jobs before his alcohol and drug addiction, he realized last year he was missing his GED in his sobriety and new career.
“I wanted to get my GED to encourage other staff and clients to do it,” he said, “and I wanted to do it for myself. I want to take college classes to become a counselor.”
David said the motto he uses to encourage others in their sobriety journey at Lifeline struck him, now that he’s older and sober, regarding his own education. “You know If you want something different in your life,” he said, “you’ve got to do something different.”
LIFELINE’S SECRET SAUCE
Volunteer says love, plus 12-step program, helps promote sobriety
Cindy Jones is a believer, no two ways about it.
First and foremost, she believes in Christ. She also believes in the faith-based 12-step Celebrate Recovery program to help those working on their sobriety. And she believes in Lifeline.
“Lifeline just has that secret sauce – love,” she said. “They love on these women and help them on their sobriety journey.”
She’s part of that love, volunteering to lead up to 15 women at a time at weekly sessions of Celebrate Recovery. She usually sees a change in them after about two months.
“As we work through each of the steps,” she said, “usually it’s at the fourth step, the spiritual inventory of their lives and accountability, when that ugliness in their hearts moves out of the darkness into the light. All of a sudden, the sky gets blue and the light comes on in them. They experience joy and see that there’s hope.”
Soon celebrating 18 years sober herself, Cindy has volunteered at the women’s campus for 12 years. In fact, her own family members have benefitted from treatment at Lifeline.
“It helps me in my recovery,” she said, “and reminds me what I went through to get sober.”
Cindy experienced Celebrate Recovery in Florida before moving to Paducah, where she works as a Realtor with Exit Realty Key Group.
The program integrates Christian principles in the 12 steps developed by Alcoholics Anonymous. In fact, Lifeline residents get an AA sponsor while they’re in Celebrate Recovery.
“Every week we take a principle and study a step, starting with admitting we are powerless over addiction and compulsive behavior and that life has become unmanageable.”
Soon, the clients begin to understand their addiction. “Then they can get relief from the secrets that have made them sick,” she said, “and why they medicate
to numb the pain.”
She has seen many lives changed, none more celebrated than a woman who became addicted after losing a child in an accidental shooting.
“She had carried that bitterness for so many years,” Cindy said. “Part of our program is to forgive those who have hurt you. Years later, that young man who had accidentally shot her son walked into the restaurant where she was working, and she told him, ‘I forgive you.’ He got his healing then, after carrying around that guilt all these years. And she did, too. She’s sober today.”

BANQUET CELEBRATES GRADUATES, CONSTRUCTION
At our annual banquet in June with more than 500 supporters, Lifeline Recovery Center had much to celebrate, including the success of 54 individuals who achieved sobriety, as well as the organization’s expansion within the last year.
Reflecting on the evening’s theme, executive director Ashley Miller said, “Truly, the old has passed away, and, behold, the new has come.”
She said the theme was chosen to mark the new lives of sobriety for the recent graduates and Lifeline’s
construction of a new women’s campus.
Lifeline board chair Steve Powless said the success inspires the volunteer board to keep dreaming bigger to serve more people. “The immeasurable joy of their new lives feeds our dreams to do more, build more, accept more, so nobody who wants to get sober is turned away.”
The banquet raised more than $115,000 to keep the residential treatment program affordable for clients and to support the fundraising campaign.

Clients volunteer help, while local dollars boost Lifeline COMMUNITY SUPPORT WORKS BOTH WAYS


While the community supports our annual banquet and golf tournament and provides regular donations to keep Lifeline affordable for our clients, our clients return the favor.
As part of their treatment program, clients are required to volunteer at community organizations, such as Community Kitchen. They give back to help others while they are receiving help others have provided for them.
It’s part of our win-win philosophy at Lifeline.
THANK YOU TO OUR 2025 DONORS
JANUARY 1- SEPTEMBER 10, 2025
The following donors made gifts to Lifeline Recovery Center in 2025 between January 1 - September 10. Your generosity is helping to change lives and transform communities and we are so very thankful for your support.
Gifts of $25,000 or more
Anonymous
Ballard County Fiscal Court
Mike and Caroline Cappock
Carson-Myre Charitable Foundation Trust
Dairyman’s Supply Co., Inc.
Ray and Kay Eckstein Charitable Trust
Faith Center of Paducah
Wayne and Sherry Golightly
Jeff and Terri Holland
Bill and Teresa Jones
Glenn and Terrye Peeler
The Paducah Bank and Trust Company
John and Kristin Williams
Gifts of $10,000- 24,999
Anonymous
Brantley Family Charitable Fund
David and Peggy Culbertson
Constantine Curris
Rodger and Cheryl Harrison
Keith and Kim Jones
Steve and Nancy Powless
Larry and Phyllis Stovesand
United Way of Western Kentucky
Gifts of $5,000- 9,999
Community Foundation of West Kentucky
Stan and Missy Eckenberg
Janice Fairhurst
FNB Bank, Inc.
Terrance and Laura Haas
Bruce and Doreen Hahn
Heartland Church
Shell Kindred
Neil’s Catering
Sharon Pegram
Todd and Pam Trimble
Gifts of $2,500 - 4,999
Marshall W. Davis Drugs, Inc.
Michael and Debbie Gentry
Grace Fellowship Church
Kenny and Beth Hunt
Immanuel Baptist Church
Darren and Lisa Jarvis
Jonathan King
Rick and Lynn Loyd
Mid America Machine
Brad and Nancy Moore
Jared Morgan
Nesbitt’s Docks and Lifts
Graceland Portable Buildings
Rosebower Baptist Church
Bonnie Schrock
Jason and Leigh Ann Siener
Sutton Investment and Retirement Partners
Triangle Enterprises, Inc.
Britton and Rayla Trigg (R.B. and D.B.)
Gifts of $1,000- 2,499
Bacon Farmer Workman
Engineering and Testing
David and Janice Bailey
Bandana Community Church
Kent Beckman
Jason and Becky Bell
Rev. Dr. Bernice Belt
John And Carla Berry
Mark and Lisa Bladon
Dr. Casey and Erin Brantley
Mayor George and Angela Bray
John Brazzell, MD
Brookport Church of God
James and Brenda Brown
Brian and Rebecca Brown
Mark Bryant
Community Ministries
James and Jackie Conn
Tony and Angela Copeland
Edward Jones St. Louis
First Baptist Church of Paducah
Kevin and Jennifer Gaunce
William and Susan Gilland
Grace Baptist Church
H.T. Hackney Company
Chuck and Cynthia Hall
Reva Harper
Deanna W Henschel
Cory Hicks
Hutson, Inc.
Independence Bank
Allen Wayne and Cynthia Jones
Joppa Missionary Baptist Church
Mark and Sloan Knecht
LaCenter Christian Church
Leeper Family Foundation
Life Care, PLLC
Lone Oak First Baptist Church
Massac Methodist Church
McCracken County Fiscal Court
Mercy Health
Eric and Ashley Millerr
New Hope Baptist Church
New Life Associates, Inc.
Newton Creek Baptist Church
Blake Pendergraff
Pryorsburg Baptist Church
Purchase Ear Technology
Rotary Club
Buddy and Ann Rushing
Signet Federal Credit Union
Drs. Kinney and Kathy Slaughter
The Solvent Group
Michael and Debra Walker
Williams, Williams & Lentz
Gifts of $500- 999
Danny and Renee Allen
CCS Real Estate Holdings, LLC
Community Christian Church
Concord United Methodist Church (Methodist Women)
David and Ann Denton
Dan and Vicki Donaldson
Gipson Farms, LLC
Sara Gipson, Realtor
Gospel Mission Worship Center
Brandon Hall
Richard and Jeanna Kimbell
Kerry and Melinda Lynn
Marquette Transportation Company, LLC
Lupe McMillan
Louis and Sally Michelson
Ike and Kelly Nichols
Paducah Board of Education
Peck Flannery Gream Warren Inc.
Darrin B and J Marie Rudolph
Alan and Nancy Sanders
Jim Smith Contracting
Matt and Keisha Snow
Jeff and Heather Taylor, MD
Twelve Oaks Baptist Church
Jeremy White CPA PLLC
Sandra Wilson
Jim and Karen Wittman
Gifts of $1- 499
Alford Law Office
American Online Giving Foundation
Arcadia United Methodist Church
Phillip and Sandra Bagwell
Baptist Healthcare System, Inc.
Christopher and Nancy Black
Joseph Blagg
Blythe CPAs and Advisors
Heath Bowling
Jennie S Boyarski
Randy and Carla Bridges
Bryant Law Center
Gregory and Paula Bugg
Candy Cardin
Gary and Brenda Cardin
Danny Carroll Campaign Fund
Greg and Charissa Cates
CFSB
Keith and Marilyn Chapman
Charities Aid Foundation of America
Carrie Childers
Christian Fellowship Church
Joseph (J.W.) Cleary
Andrew and Haley Collins
Jennifer Coursey
Chris Crawford
Denton Law Firm, PLLC
Lisa and Barry Driver
Janette Edwards
Patrick and Sheri Englert
Fairways Management dba
Paxton Park
Faith Life Class
Justin C. Farris
Jean Fenwick
First Assembly of God
Ashley French
Deborah Ann Gilbert
Give Lively
Rickie Goode
Don and Patti Gregory
Tommy and Brenda Grooms
Paul and Librette Grumley
Virginia Hawthorne
Debbie Heater
Raynarldo Henderson
Erin Hendley
Bob Hill
R Jeffrey Hines
Robert and Carla Hobgood
Dann T Hughes
Ines Rivas-Hutchins
Heather Jackson
Michael and Ashley Johnson
Dr. Thomas R. and Lynda P. Kerley
Julie A Kleet
Rene M Kreps
Glenda K. Lafferty
Dawn Lamb
Kathryn Lankton
Limitless Adventures LLC
Linwood Motors
Mike and Barbara Livingston
McCracken County Board of Education
Mary Ann McIntosh
Al and Mary McKeown
Mark and Brenda Metzger
Mary K Miller
Frankie Sue Miller
Chaynne Minter
Mt Zion Baptist Church of West Paducah, Inc.
New Covenant Fellowship
Nikao Institute, Inc.
Elaine Oglesby
Danny and Rudele Orazine
Doug and Sherry Orazine
Thomas and Joan Oster
PayPal Giving Fund
Foster Pearson
Don O and Martha Peck
Scott and Kattie Penick
David R and Carolyn K Perry
Mark and Teresa Prude
Dona Rains
Sherry and Michael Reagan
Greg and Heather Roberts
Nicole Rooyakkers
Tommy Joe Rothrock
Craig and Susan Rothwell
James and Kay Sexton
Shady Grove Baptist
Shiloh Baptist Church
Richie Slack
Robert and Jane Smith
Stephen and Claudia Smith
Charles and Brenda Spees
Mike and Carrie Spissinger
Otis and Melissa Thaxton
Glen and Linda Titsworth
Trace Creek Missionary Baptist Church
United Way of Greater Milwaukee and Waukesha Co.
Thomas and Anita Vance
Kenny Vasseur
Robert and Shirley Walker
Morris Wallace
Norman and Patricia Wallace
West Kentucky Memorial Group
Whitlow, Roberts, Houston and Straub, PLLC
Marlen Wood
Woodmen Life
Sharon Yates
Eric Ziegler
Business Donors
Alford Law Office
American Online Giving Foundation Anonymous
Bacon Farmer Workman Engineering and Testing
Ballard County Fiscal Court
Baptist Healthcare System, Inc.
Blythe CPAs and Advisors
Brantley Family Charitable Fund
Bryant Law Center
Carson-Myre Charitable Foundation Trust
CCS Real Estate Holdings, LLC
CFSB
Charities Aid Foundation of America
Community Foundation of West Kentucky
Community Ministries
Dairyman’s Supply Co., Inc.
Danny Carroll Campaign Fund
Denton Law Firm, PLLC
Edward Jones St. Louis
Fairways Management dba Paxton Park
FNB Bank, Inc.
Gipson Farms, LLC
Sara Gipson
Give Lively
H.T. Hackney Company
Hutson, Inc.
Independence Bank
Graceland Portable Buildings
Jeremy White CPA PLLC
Jim Smith Contracting
Leeper Family Foundation
Life Care, PLLC
Limitless Adventures LLC
Linwood Motors
Marquette Transportation Company, LLC
Marshall W. Davis Drugs, Inc.
McCracken County Board of Education
McCracken County Fiscal Court
Mercy Health
Mid America Machine
Neil’s Catering
Nesbitt’s Docks and Lifts
New Life Associates, Inc.
Nikao Institute, Inc.
Paducah Board of Education
PayPal Giving Fund
Peck Flannery Gream Warren Inc.
Purchase Ear Technology
Ray and Kay Eckstein Charitable Trust
Rotary Club
Signet Federal Credit Union
Sutton Investment and Retirement Partners
The Paducah Bank and Trust Company
The Solvent Group
Triangle Enterprises, Inc.
United Way of Greater Milwaukee and Waukesha Co.
United Way of Western Ky
West Kentucky Memorial Group
Whitlow, Roberts, Houston and Straub, PLLC
Williams, Williams & Lentz
Woodmen Life
Church Donors
Arcadia United Methodist Church
Bandana Community Church
Brookport Church of God
Christian Fellowship Church
Community Christian Church
Concord United Methodist Church (Methodist Women)
Faith Center of Paducah
Faith Life Class
First Assembly of God
First Baptist Church of Paducah
Gospel Mission Worship Center
Grace Baptist Church
Grace Fellowship Church
Heartland Church
Immanuel Baptist Church
Joppa Missionary Baptist Church
Lacenter Christian Church
Lone Oak First Baptist Church
Massac Methodist Church
Mt Zion Baptist Church of West Paducah, Inc.
New Covenant Fellowship
New Hope Baptist Church
Newton Creek Baptist Church
Pryorsburg Baptist Church
Rosebower Baptist Church
Shady Grove Baptist
Shiloh Baptist Church
Trace Creek Missionary Baptist Church
Twelve Oaks Baptist Church

