LIFE LINE

SEEDS OF HOPE
Signs of progress visible at new women’s campus Page 6
NOT JUST A STATISTIC
Family shares pain of addiction and joy of recovery Pages 8-9



Lifeline supporters
Leigh Ann and Jason Siener Page 7
RECOGNITION OF RESULTS
Signs of progress visible at new women’s campus Page 6
Family shares pain of addiction and joy of recovery Pages 8-9
Lifeline supporters
Leigh Ann and Jason Siener Page 7
RECOGNITION OF RESULTS
Client success is amplified by state and national achievements Page 3
LIFELINE AWARDED $270K FROM STATE COMMISSION
MOUNTAIN MOVERS
Commitment to staff, volunteers helps Lifeline offer healing from addiction
PEOPLE-POWERED Page 4
THE VALUE OF THERAPY
Clients and staff benefit from Lifeline’s growing number of certified professionals Page 5
SEEDS OF HOPE
Signs of progress visible at new women’s campus Page 6
AN EYE-OPENING VISIT
Sieners become campaign supporters after seeing Lifeline’s work Page 7
NOT JUST A STATISTIC
Family shares pain of addiction and Joy of recovery Pages 8-9
RESPONDING TO THE CALL
Couple finds multiple blessings as Lifeline volunteers
National surveyor says Lifeline one of nation’s top 5
LIFELINE STAFF ACHIEVED COUNSELING CREDENTIALS
MENTOR AND MENTEE
New operations director expands Lifeline C Suite with help from board member
LIFELINE STAFF ACHIEVED COUNSELING CREDENTIALS
DONOR LISTINGS
January 1- December 31, 2024, Thanks to our 2024 donors!
12
“The Old Has Gone, The New Is Here.”
ANNUAL BANQUET Page 16
JOIN US SEPT 5 at Paxton Park for Lifeline’s 16th annual golf tournament. The 2024 tournament raised $44,000, one of the largest fundraisers for Lifeline. Pictured from left to right, Jennifer Quillen, Taylar Owens, Brett Neville, and Chris Hammock represented Graceland Portable Buildings in the 2024 tournament.
Client success is amplified by state, national achievements
Lifeline is all about restored lives – the clients who get sober, as well as their return to their families and to their communities.
Nothing exhibits our mission more clearly than those individuals, as shown in this issue’s story featuring Shirley Futrell and her two sons, Jeff and Josh Mohler, both of whom have completed treatment and are celebrating their recovery. (Pages 8-9)
Even our own Billie Preston, director of operations, is expanding our C suite after her own recovery. (Page 12).
Those stories are the reason we are here.
Ashley Miller
2014 Graduate of Lifeline
And they are reason enough, but it’s very gratifying when outsiders recognize the value of Lifeline, too.
Just recently:
• Lifeline received its second consecutive three-year accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities following an onsite survey. (Page 11). The surveyor sees centers like ours all over the country, but he named ours in the nation’s top 5, calling our staff “mountain movers” for their tireless work to change the lives of our clients.
• Lifeline is one of 75 Kentucky organizations to be awarded a grant for opioid treatment. (Page 11). Of $19 million awarded statewide, Lifeline received $270,474 for treatment services at the men’s and women’s campuses.
• Three staff members, including two Lifeline graduates, obtained Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor credentials; one passed Licensed Professional Counselor Associate exam and obtained Licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug Counselor license. These milestones are meaningful because they strengthen our team and reflect the heart of what we do — first, help people rebuild their lives and, then, watch them help others do the same.
This state and national recognition means your Lifeline center is not only getting results, but also performing with excellence.
We are proud of every staff member and every volunteer who works daily to achieve these recognition milestones. We also are grateful to our community who donates most of our operating funds, so we can continue this work.
Lifeline wouldn’t be here without you. And our clients would not be living new lives of sobriety without Lifeline. Thanks be to God!
Ashley Miller, Executive Director
Nineteenth-century American poet Ralph Waldo Emerson could have been speaking about 21st-century Lifeline when he famously wrote, “A house is made with walls and beams, a home is built with love and dreams.”
That sentiment is particularly meaningful today as Lifeline is building a new women’s campus – several new buildings with walls and beams. We are grateful for your response to our $13 million campaign to make this dream come true.
However, without “love and dreams,” the bricks and mortar would be hollow and meaningless. That’s why the Lifeline board’s new strategic plan is built on FIVE critical foundations: PEOPLE, PROGRAM, FACILITIES, COMMUNITY and SUSTAINABILITY.
At Lifeline, our people power the recovery process. Attracting, supporting, and retaining best-in-class staff and volunteers support our overall excellence.
You can see in this issue of Lifeline magazine the importance of people – the Mohler brothers’ recovery stories, volunteer support from the Cardins, financial support from the Sieners and leadership from director of operations Billie Preston and board member Bonnie Schrock.
First and foremost, Lifeline is about people. People helping other people heal and live their best lives.
To support people, our plan includes these strategies:
• Routinely review and maintain a competitive staff compensation and benefits structure.
• Annually solicit feedback from staff and volunteers.
• Provide development and growth opportunities for staff and volunteers.
• Outline pathways for staff career advancement and long-term engagement opportunities for volunteers.
• Develop an executive-level/C-suite management team.
• Create and review an emergency and nonemergency succession plan for the Executive
Steve Powless Former Chair & CEO of CSI
Director and other key staff positions.
• Maintain a structured onboarding process for new staff and volunteers.
• Maintain a structured exit interview process for staff and volunteers.
• Plan strategically for board officer succession. All of those actions will help Lifeline continue to meet its mission – faith-based recovery for those suffering from addiction.
Brothers Jeff and Josh Mohler, with the support of each other and the Lifeline staff, now celebrate that sweet recovery personally. “Jeff told me, ‘You’ve got to get your life together,’ ” Josh said. “I saw him change his life, turn his life around, so I had to at least try.”
Josh, that’s just what our people are here to help you do.
People is one of five focus areas of Lifeline’s 2025 strategic plan.
Goal: Attract, develop and retain staff and volunteers.
Strategies include: Develop an executive-level C suite management team.
Clients and staff benefit from Lifeline’s growing number of certified professionals
People in recovery share many issues – struggles with self-worth and identity. Many have been defined by their addiction, their mistakes and their trauma. They often express feelings of hopelessness, fear of failure and deep shame.
Helping our clients reframe their self-perception and recognize their value are vital in the therapy provided by the Lifeline clinical staff.
Since 2021, our clinical staff has grown to seven certified counselors, two case managers, a nurse and myself, the director. In addition, two employees are pursuing certification as counselors. These professionals are on our campuses full-time, compared to just four years ago, when clinical staff was here only part-time.
I joined this staff in 2022, after becoming sober in 2019 following 20 years in addiction. Since earning my first degree in 2020 from West Kentucky Community and Technical College, I have earned a bachelor’s degree from Murray State University and a master’s degree from University of the Cumberlands, and achieved two certifications – Licensed Professional Counselor Associate and Licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug Counselor. I became the clinical services director in March, succeeding our esteemed first director Robbie Sewell.
Our growing full-time clinical staff works hard to achieve the highest standards and provide the best care, making a difference for our clients and for our entire staff.
Recently, a 40-year-old man came to us after multiple failed attempts at sobriety. This time was going to be different, he said, because he was desperate and willing to do anything to get sober.
Not only is he celebrating two years of sobriety, but also he has built a life from which he no longer feels the need to escape. His journey demonstrates the power of surrendering to both clinical structure and
DIRECTOR, CLINICAL SERVICES
Ashley Pyles, LPCA,
LCADC
faith – an incredible transformation we are honored to witness.
However, his outcome is not always the case, especially when we have clients who quit or relapse.
Staff, many of whom are in recovery themselves, take the struggles of those clients personally. Staff may have their own struggles with difficult cases, self-doubt and feeling overwhelmed. Our clinical staff is here to help them, too.
In fact, this staff constantly pursues higher levels of education and certification to benefit themselves personally and to strengthen the quality of care provided at Lifeline. Their success is a testament to the power of teamwork, mentorship and a workplace culture to guide the next wave of aspiring professionals.
Their commitment shows that our center isn’t just a treatment facility – it’s a place where faith and clinical experience come together to build lives, empower futures and help people walk in God’s plan for them.
“Helping our clients reframe their self-perception and recognize their value are vital in the therapy provided by the Lifeline clinical staff.”
This summer, seeds are sprouting on Lifeline’s property near the airport. Seeds of hope.
Since the men’s Ballard County campus was purchased in 2022, dreams of a new women’s campus have blossomed. First, in 2023, Lifeline purchased 45 acres at 8650 Old Highway 60 with plans to develop a women’s campus similar in scope to the 45-acre men’s campus.
Last year, Lifeline announced a $13 million fundraising campaign to fund both campuses and provide for staffing and long-term financial sustainability.
This spring, those seeds of hope took root, as construction of the women’s campus began with the first two buildings – the chapel and the administration buildings.
“This summer, we hope to have them both under roof,” said contractor Kenny Hunt, long-time Lifeline board member, “and well on our way to framing the two dormitories and the dining hall.”
When completed in 2027, the women’s campus will include a chapel, housing, dining, educational, counseling and administrative space.
Hunt, the retired founder of A&K Construction, said the new campus provides space to meet future needs of Lifeline. “We were totally landlocked on Morgan Lane,” he said.
Women will move to the new campus within two years from Morgan Lane, the site of the original men’s campus. At that time, the board will determine use for the old campus, considering needs ranging from a men’s sober living campus to outpatient services.
If a picture paints 1,000 words, then a visit to Lifeline surely is worth many more.
That was the experience of Jason and Leigh Ann Siener, when they visited the men’s and women’s campuses.
As potential donors to “A Campaign for Recovery: Breaking the Cycle of Addiction, One Life at a Time,” they were mostly unfamiliar with Lifeline. They had heard of it, and they knew some board members; but they didn’t know the extent of the recovery center’s services or of the local need.
“I didn’t realize they stay at capacity all the time,” said Jason, entrepreneur and former owner of Beltline Electric, “and many who need the service can’t be accepted. They need funds to grow, to offer the service to more who need it. That was the biggest surprise to me.”
He and Leigh Ann have been community supporters of United Way and Baptist Health’s Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. “We focus on a few areas where we can have the biggest impact,” he said. They decided Lifeline was a good fit for their giving goals.
“We want our contribution to make our community stronger,” Leigh Ann said, “and the faith-based focus is important to us.”
As members of Heartland Church, they appreciate the Scripture’s illustration of many parts in the church making up one body. “The Bible says (in I Corinthians 12:12-27) that each of us has a different part to play,” she said. “As we support our community, some choose to give to one organization, while we support another one. Together, we can all use our different gifts to help our community be stronger.”
Lifeline clients often worship at Heartland. “It is beautiful to see their transformation (on their sobriety journey),” she said. “We love the courage and strength it takes for them to go through recovery.”
Leigh Ann said they are fortunate to share their blessings with them. “We both come from strong,
stable families,” she said, “and if we hadn’t, we might not be where we are today. We believe God calls us to use that strength to help others who didn’t have the same opportunities we had. We see the impact on generations in addiction, and we want to use our blessings to help break that cycle.”
Jason and Leigh Ann, now supporters of the capital campaign, encourage others to visit Lifeline to see for themselves the difference they can make in the lives of the clients and their families. “Addiction could happen to any one of us,” Jason said. “The impact of this disease hurts not just the individuals and their families, but our whole community. There is clearly a need for us to do what we can to change that.”
If you’re interested in a tour or more information on ways you can help, phone 270.443.4743.
Sadly, Shirley Futrell is in the majority.
Like most Americans, her life has been affected by substance abuse. According to a 2023 Axios poll, two-thirds of Americans have a personal or family connection to addiction.
“I had a brother who was always into drugs, in and out of jail,” the Murray woman said, “but I was too big a chicken to ever try anything myself.”
Shirley, a 68-year-old retired hospital worker, steered clear of the ill effects of addiction until the father of her three young sons suffered drinking problems, leading to their divorce.
When those little boys became teenagers, Shirley once again suffered the all-too-familiar impact of substance abuse.
“When the boys got older,” she said, “they’d go to (their) daddy’s. That’s where the drugs got started.”
Her son Jeff, now 43, remembers it well. “My (late) dad was always a drinker,” he said. “He kind of allowed us to use at home because he thought he was helping us by giving us a safe place to do it, so we wouldn’t be out and get hurt or hurt someone else. Was it helping, or enabling?”
Jeff and brother Josh, now 44, began using drugs in their late teens. Soon DUIs and jail time followed, then felony possession charges and stiffer prison sentences.
Both of Shirley’s sons spent the next 20 years in serious addiction. “I feel for anyone dealing with drugs in the family,” she said. “It’s life-changing.”
Both sons eventually ended up at Lifeline – Jeff first, in 2022. “I told the judge I’ve done the same thing over and over my whole life,” Jeff said, “and ‘if you’ll give me a chance to do something different, I want to change my life.’ ”
Jeff said Lifeline’s faith-based recovery program finally helped him make that change. “I had been raised in church, but I’d lost track of my relationship with God,” he said. “Lifeline helped me get spiritually fit while I was getting sober.”
With his success, he encouraged brother Josh to try Lifeline in 2024, after Josh had not found successful treatment in a half-dozen other recovery programs.
“Jeff told me, ‘You’ve got to get your life together,’ ” Josh said, “so I checked myself into Lifeline. I wanted to leave many times, but I stuck it out. It was a big change for me. But I was fed up with being broke, spending money on drugs, and I didn’t want to live that way any more.”
Josh said seeing his brother’s success influenced him. “I saw him change his life, turn his life around,” Josh said, “so I had to at least try.”
After treatment at Lifeline, Josh moved in with his brother in January 2025. Each has a job, a car and sobriety for the first time in their adult lives. Jeff is
When Jeff was in treatment at Lifeline, he asked his mother, Shirley, for a quilt displaying the Lifeline logo, a lighthouse of hope. Her creative response now hangs in the administrative building on the new women’s campus.
mending a relationship with his 16-year-old daughter and building a relationship with his four-year-old son. “Life’s better than it’s ever been,” Jeff said.
Each brother holds the other accountable.
“I don’t like that it took me so long to realize that was not the way I want to live,” Josh said, “but I’m just grateful I got here.” Shirley is grateful, too.
“I asked God for years to take that monkey off Jeffery’s back, and I prayed for Josh,” she said. “I am so thankful, just so proud of them, so very proud. And I’m thankful
for Lifeline – they have made my life bearable.”
They said families can help those dealing with addiction by holding them accountable, not enabling them. “It’s the hardest thing in the world not to help them when they’re asking for money,” Shirley said, “because they’re your kids. Now that I know how wonderful it is not to have to worry about them, I would never go back to helping (enable) in any kind of way.”
Gary Cardin hadn’t even retired yet, when he found God’s direction for the next phase of life – as a Lifeline volunteer.
“I was seeking God’s leadership in finding a ministry in which I could serve,” he said. “Although I had not shared this with anyone, God used a friend to steer me to Lifeline. I had virtually no knowledge of Lifeline.”
Five years ago, Gary’s fellow Sunday School friend from East Baptist Church, Bob Hill, asked if he’d considered getting involved at Lifeline, where Bob serves on the board.
“There was a need for someone to teach an early morning chapel class (which) fit my work schedule perfectly,” Gary said. “I felt confident God had led me to the place He wanted me to serve.”
Gary has since retired from his banking career and continued his weekly service at Lifeline. So has his wife, Brenda, a teacher in the women’s second-phase “Walk of Repentance” class. They also are regular donors.
Neither had any personal knowledge or experience with addiction. “I do have close friends who have children suffering from substance addiction,” Gary said. “I have witnessed them deal with the heartache in seeing their child’s life wrecked.”
Brenda has seen the same. “I saw what they went through,” Brenda said. “I’ve learned that addiction can attack anyone. It doesn’t matter how rich you are or if you grew up in a Christian home.”
Gary said he met a Lifeline client in his first class who had been a manager for a successful restaurant chain, moving here to open a new restaurant.
“Somewhere in the process, he became addicted (which) led to jail, loss of employment and numerous other problems.”
Seeing his recovery, and that of many clients since then, has affirmed Gary’s belief in Lifeline’s faithbased model. “I have found it to be a place where Christ is magnified and lives are changed,” he said, “and the impact on the clients is multiplied when
considering the impact on the lives of their families.”
Brenda said volunteering at Lifeline has had a significant impact on her own life: “I fall in love with these ladies,” she said. “Just knowing that maybe a word I say or a smile they see from me will help them recover and live a life that God intended … is a blessing every time I go.”
Both are grateful to be a part of the ministry. “I thank God for allowing me to be a part of Lifeline,” Brenda said. “My goal is to love on these ladies and help them be the ladies God intended them to be. I look forward to going every week to listen to them about their week, good or bad, and hear how God is working in their lives and in their families’ lives. I just want them to know that someone really cares about them, and that I pray for them every day.”
Lifeline Recovery Center of Paducah will receive $270,464 from Kentucky’s Opioid Abatement Advisory Commission for substance abuse treatment at its women’s campus in McCracken County and men’s campus in Ballard County.
It is one of 75 Kentucky organizations to receive $19.8 million in grants funded by more than $900 million in settlements with corporations involved in the deadly opioid crisis. This year, statewide, about $12 million was awarded for treatment and $7 million for prevention.
Executive director Ashley Miller thanked everyone – staff, board, community leaders – who advocated for Lifeline, resulting in the award of its full request. “This is such a big win for Lifeline,” she said, “for everyone who benefits from our services to get sober so they can return to their families, their jobs and their communities.”
Lifeline board chair Steve Powless said the grant will benefit local clients through additional staffing, equipment, transportation and some startup assistance for those who complete the program.
In late 2024, Lifeline Recovery Center received its second consecutive three-year national accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities following an onsite survey.
CARF International says the accreditation indicates Lifeline conforms to treatment standards and represents a commitment to improving the quality of lives of clients battling addiction.
Executive director Ashley Miller said the three-day survey included interviews with clients and staff. “Our surveyor said he interviews 10-15 centers a year,” he said, “and Lifeline is one of the top 5.” The surveyor has been surveying recovery centers for 12 years.
A highlight of the survey’s exit interview came when the surveyor called the staff “mountain movers,” Miller said. “That is a huge compliment for our staff, who work tirelessly to change the lives of our clients.”
Lifeline met 99 percent of 1,536 standards. The CARF survey report commended the leadership and staff for their commitment to the mission of transforming lives; for empowering clients to achieve recovery; and for excellence in behavioral health services.
“This success is no accident,” Miller said. “It is the result of years of hard work and an unwavering
commitment to excellence. Five years ago, achieving even a fraction of these standards would have been impossible. But here we are—excelling across the board, from client care to safety, financials, technology, and even the upkeep of our facilities. The transformation is real.”
“Our surveyor said he interviews 20 to 30 centers a year,” she said, “and Lifeline is one of the top 5.”
CARF International is an independent, nonprofit accreditor of health and human services. Through accreditation, CARF assists service providers in demonstrating value by the quality of their services and meeting internationally-recognized organizational and program standards.
New operations director expands Lifeline C suite, with help from board member
In less than a decade, Billie Preston has gone from a Lifeline client in recovery to the new director of operations and a certified drug and alcohol counselor.
The rapid ascent is a result of Billie’s own hard work, with help from a friend, specifically, her mentor, board member Bonnie Schrock.
“Having a mentor like Bonnie has been instrumental in my growth and in helping me achieve my current position,” Billie said. “She has consistently poured into me at the moments I needed it most, pushing me to reach my full potential.”
Billie entered Lifeline in 2016, a high school dropout with 15 years of addiction. Two years after getting sober at Lifeline, she became the office administrator and then program coordinator, before being promoted to women’s campus director in February 2020, just before the COVID pandemic.
Since then, Billie passed the exam in December 2023 to become a certified drug and alcohol counselor, and in November 2024 was promoted to Lifeline’s director of operations. Her list of new duties is extensive, ranging from overseeing programs and compliance to managing operations.
“Working in this field for several years has helped me develop the leadership, clinical knowledge and operational skills to support both our staff and clients effectively,” Billie said.
Billie and Bonnie met at least monthly for more than a year, while Billie was taking night classes, gaining her counseling certification and adding work responsibilities.
Bonnie, herself a retired executive from Baptist Health Paducah and now executive director of the National Quilt Museum, found Billie to be highly-motivated and goal-oriented. “Billie
is not afraid,” Bonnie said. “She has walked through hardships most of us will never know, and it has built in her a resilience and can-do confidence that she is exactly where she is meant to be.”
As the mentor, Bonnie told Billie that executives need people to walk alongside them as they lead others. “Even the most successful need the support of a trusted friend or guide,” Bonnie said. “I certainly have mine, who have developed me, told me the hard truth
sometimes and made me a better leader along the way.” She now offers the same to Billie. “Bonnie is more than just a mentor,” Billie said. “She is a friend, a role model, and a key part of my journey,” Billie is putting her personal and professional experience to work for the success of Lifeline. “Lifeline’s growth is about deepening the relationships we have with our clients, staff and the broader community while staying true to our (recovery) mission,” she said. “I can help by bringing my leadership experience and operational insight to the table. By ensuring we have the right systems in place to support growth, we can scale up our impact without compromising the quality of care.”
Along the way, she never forgets her beginning. “I know what it feels like to struggle,” Billie said, “and to rebuild a life with purpose. That experience allows me to connect with the people we serve on a much deeper level – offering not just guidance, but also true empathy and hope.”
Three Lifeline staff members – Kim Bowers, Rachelle Puckett and Isaac Lambert – have obtained their Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor (CADC) credentials. Kim and Rachelle are Lifeline graduates, and Isaac also is in recovery – all now using their experience to serve others.
Additionally, Ashley Pyles, who has been part of our team for three years and is in recovery herself, recently passed her LPCA (Licensed Professional Counselor Associate) exam and obtained her LCADC (Licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug Counselor) license. She has now stepped into the role of Lifeline’s clinical director.
These staff milestones in credentialing are meaningful to us not only because they strengthen our team, but also because they reflect the heart of what we do — watching people rebuild their lives and then helping others do the same.
JANUARY 1- DECEMBER 31, 2024
The following donors made gifts to Lifeline Recovery Center in 2024. 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
Ballard County Fiscal Court
Scott & Carol Berryman
Susan & Ed Bredniak
James & Brenda Brown
Jamey & Jordan Brown
Carson-Myre Charitable Foundation
Trust
Dairyman’s Supply Co., Inc.
Stan & Missy Eckenberg
Ray & Kay Eckstein Charitable Trust
Joseph & Jeane Framptom
Wayne & Sherry Golightly
Terry & Laura Haas
Ken & Beth Hunt
Bill & Teresa Jones
Keith & Kim Jones
Frank & Marisa Martire
Randy & Andrea Orr
Terrye & Glenn Peeler
Steve & Nancy Powless
Kenny & Nicki Roof
Rudolph’s Inc.
Meredith Schroeder
Charlie & Linda Shields
Jason & Leigh Ann Siener
Jeff & Heather Taylor, MD
The River Foundation
United Way of Western Kentucky
Robert & Susan Walker
Gifts of $10,000- 24,999
David & Janice Bailey
Dr. Jay & Jen Brien
David & Peggy Culbertson
Richard & Janice Fairhurst Jr.
Faith Center of Paducah
Anthony & Lucy Milliano
Steve & Nancy Powless
Todd & Pam Trimble
Gifts of $5,000- 9,999
Anonymous (1)
Teresa & Ron Beavers
Sid & Cathy Brantley
Lawrence R. & Geraldine Durbin
FNB Bank, Inc.
Mike & Debbie Gentry
Mike Gourley
Bruce & Doreen Hahn
Chuck & Cynthia Hall
Heartland Church
Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonel
Immanuel Baptist Church
Rick & Lynn Loyd
Barbara W McGinty
Neil’s Catering
Brad and Nancy Moore
Christian & Mary Orsborn
Paducah Bank & Trust Company
Sharon Pegram
Rosebower Baptist Church
Sutton Investment & Retirement
Partners
Swift & Staley, Inc.
Gifts of $2,500 - 4,999
AAA Stowaway
John & Carla Berry
Charity League, Inc.
James & Jackie Conn
Jennifer Coursey
Marshall W. Davis Drugs, Inc.
David & Ann Denton
Risa Flamm
James & Amy Garrett
Grace Fellowship Church
Cory Hicks
Jeanette Jones
Joppa Missionary Baptist Church
Mid America Machine
Nesbitt’s Docks & Lifts
Edward & Teresa Nichols
Purchase Ear Technology
R.B. & D. B. Trigg
Wayne & Mary Upshaw
Drs. Landen & Van Meeks
Gifts of $1,000- 2,499
Bacon Farmer Workman Engineering & Testing
Bandana Community Church
Baptist Health System Services
Cheryl Baugus
Kent Beckman
Jason and Becky Bell
Robert & Carol Bell
Rev. Dr. Bernice Belt
Bethel Christian Church
Brantley Family Charitable Fund
Casey & Erin Brantley, MD
George & Angela Bray
John & Mary Jo Brazzell, MD
Brookport Church of God
Bryant Law Center
Community Christian Church
Community Life Church
Community Ministries
Tony & Angela Copeland
Constantine Curris
Dan & Vicki Donaldson
East Baptist Church
Edward Jones, Inc.
Mark & Karen Edwards
First Baptist Church of Paducah
Cade & Callie Foster
John & Janet Foster
Kevin & Jennifer Gaunce
William & Susan Gilland
Gipson Farms, LLC
Gospel Mission Worship Center
Graceland Portable Buildings
Tina Griggs
Brandon Hall
H.T. Hackney Company
Reva Harper
Highland Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Jeff & Terri Holland
Hutson Inc.
Independence Bank
Wayne & Cindy Jones
LaCenter Christian Church
Leeper Family Foundation
Linwood Motors
Kerry & Melinda Lynn
M & P Remodeling
Massac Methodist Church
Mercy Health
Michael & Lori Meridith
New Hope Missionary Baptist Church
New Life Associates, Inc.
Newton Creek Baptist Church
Jim & Mindy Paxton
Pryorsburg Baptist Church
Renewed Performance, LLC
Mark & Debbie Riley
Greg Roberts
Robertson-Hill Inc.
Rotary Club
Darrin & Marie Rudolph
Sanctuary Church of God
Bonnie & Fletcher Schrock
Signet Federal Credit Union
Drs. Kathy & Kinney Slaughter
Kurt & Joni Sutton
Twelve Oaks Baptist Church
Bill & Joanie Walden
Williams, Williams & Lentz
Lee & LaVonna Willingham
Patrick Withrow, MD
Gifts of $500- 999
Danny & Renee Allen
Robert W. Baird & Company, Inc.
Beyond Uganda
Charities Aid Foundation of America
Andrew & Haley Collins
Concord United Methodist Women
Bill Conyer
Trenton Dierkes
First Assembly of God
Free Spirit Motorcycle Ministry
Grace Baptist Church
Leslie Heath
Bob Hill
Daniel & Keisha Hopkins
Jim & Denise Humphreys
Innovative Opthamology
Charles & Suzanne Johnson
Bruce & Jeanna Kimbell
Penny Knott
Kathryn Lankton
Robert & Gina Leeper, MD
Kenny Long
Bradley & Brenda McElroy, MD
Louis & Sally Michelson
Nathan & Ginny Miller
Millwork Products
Marquette Transportation Company, LLC
Olivet Baptist Church
Mark & Teresa Prude
Spencer & Bethany Romine, MD
Matt & Keisha Snow
Richard & Tammy Souder
Cameron Taleban
Pat Ellen Thompson
Trace Creek Missionary Baptist Church
Sandra Wilson
Wyatt Bell & Co.
Gifts of $1- 499
3 C’s Concrete Work, LLC
Abundant Life Worship Center
Elizabeth Adams
William & Beth Allen
Alpha Delta Kappa Lambda Chapter
American Online Giving Foundation
Brenda S. Ardebili
Cindy Bailey
Bandana United Methodist Church
Timothy & Cheryle Barenie
Wayne & Jo Ann Belt
Bethel Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Larry & Carol Beyer
Carl & Elaine Bivin
Ben & Natalie Blackmon
Blue Horizon Travel
Charlie Brantley
Randy & Carla Bridges
Willam & Julie Brigance, MD
Gregory & Paula Bugg
Rodney & Debbie Bushong
Harlan & Bobbie Calhoun
Gary & Brenda Cardin
CFSB
Carrie Childers
Christian Community Church
Christian Fellowship Church
John Mark & Mary Demetra Cohoon
Concord United Methodist Church
Larry & Carol Conway
John & Teresa Crowder
Naomi Dawson
Mason DeJarnett
Hunter DeMumbree
Jennifer DeMumbree
Janette Edwards
Nicole Edwards
Nancy Effinger
Debbie Etheridge
Chris Evans
Robert & Lauri Ezell
Fairways Management dba Paxton
Park
Faith Life Class
Fellowship of Christian Athletes
Pilar Fondaw
Four Rivers Nuclear Partnership
Funeral Directors Life Insurance
Chris & Emily Garrison
David Glass
Angie & Charley Glisson
Lisa Glisson
Don & Patti Gregory
Herb & Doris Gregory
Ricki Goode
Ronald Goode
Nathan & McKell Hillebrand
Robert & Carla Hobgood
J. William Howerton
Hilary Hunt
Brent & Pamela Hurst
I5 Design Group, Inc.
Heather Jackson
Sue James
William & Kelly Johnson
Tyler & Olivia Jones
Travis Kahre
Kelso Electric, LLC
Greg Kingston, MD
Robert Kent & Sheila Koster
Kroger Community Rewards
Labor of Love, Inc.
Dawn Lamb
Jeff & Tracy Lambert
Gerren & Crystal Lawson
Randy Lee
Jim & Susan Lewis
Jesse Lipson
Little Tractor & Equipment, LLC
Lone Oak First Baptist Church
David & Sandra Massey
Larry & Mitzi
Mason
Ronald Mays
Larry & Mary McIntosh
Madeline McIntosh
Natalie McLaughlin
Beverly Meeks
Frankie Sue Miller
Mary K. Miller
Milner & Orr Funeral Home
Mt. Zion Baptist Church
Jason & Elizabeth Neelley
New Covenant Fellowship
Elaine Oglesby
Baccus & Jennie Oliver
Don & Belinda Page
Foster Pearson
Charles Pegram
Sara Pickard
Kay Pinkley
P&L Railway
Dona Rains & Joe Tarantino
Tony & Cheryl Raspberry
Larry & Karen Reichart
Robert & Nancy Reynolds
Kathryn Riley
Greg & Traci Rodulfo
Nicole Rooyakkers
Tommy Joe Rothrock
Craig & Susan Rothwell
Matt Rule
Buddy & Ann Rushing
Allan & Nancy Sanders
Priscilla & Steve Schiff
Brittany Seibert
Steve & Donna Seltzer
James & Kay Sexton
Shady Grove Baptist Church
Thomas & Nedra Shemwell
Robert Simpson
Karen Smith
Robert & Jane Smith
Stephen & Claudia Smith
Southland Baptist Temple
Charles & Brenda Spees
Lucas Stinnett
Shaun Sullivant
Larry & Cynthia Swope
Carolyn Talbert
Sarah Talbert
Janel Tate
Otis & Melissa Thaxton
Glen & Linda Titsworth
Lee Tucker
United Way of Greater Milwaukee & Waukesha Co.
Joe & Tamarah Vance
Tom & Anita Vance
Jessica Waggoner
Jill Wagner
Mike Walker
Robert & Shirley Walker
Clay Wallace
Norman & Patricia Wallace
Waterfront Services, Inc.
Anita Williams
Williams Heating & Air, Inc.
Marlen Wood
Woodmen Life- Chapter 2
Dr. James & Vicki Woods
Jason Woods
Steven Wright
Marianne Yontz
Eric Ziegler
Business Donors
3 C’s Concrete Work, LLC
AAA Stowaway
Alpha Delta Kappa Lambda
Chapter
American Online Giving Foundation
Bacon Farmer Workman
Engineering & Testing
Beyond Uganda
Robert W. Baird & Company, Inc.
Ballard County Fiscal Court
Baptist Health System Services
Blue Horizon Travel
Bryant Law Center
Carson-Myre Charitable Foundation
Trust
CFSB
Charities Aid Foundation of America
Charity League, Inc.
Community Ministries
Dairyman’s Supply Co., Inc.
Marshall W. Davis Drugs, Inc.
Ray & Kay Eckstein Charitable Trust
Edward Jones, Inc.
Fairways Management dba Paxton
Park
Fellowship of Christian Athletes
FNB Bank, Inc.
Four Rivers Nuclear Partnership
Funeral Directors Life Insurance
Gipson Farms, LLC
Graceland Portable Buildings
Honorable Order of Kentucky
Colonel
H.T. Hackney Company
Hutson Inc.
I5 Design Group, Inc.
Independence Bank
Innovative Ophthalmology
Kelso Electric, LLC
Kroger Community Rewards
Labor of Love, Inc.
Leeper Family Foundation
Linwood Motors
Little Tractor & Equipment, LLC
M & P Remodeling
Marquette Transportation Company, LLC
Mercy Health
Mid America Machine
Millwork Products
Milner & Orr Funeral Home
Neil’s Catering
Nesbitt’s Dock & Lifts
New Life Associates, Inc.
Paducah Bank & Trust Company
P&L Railway
Purchase Ear Technology
Renewed Performance, LLC
Robertson Hill, Inc.
Rotary Club
Rudolph’s Inc.
Signet Federal Credit Union
Sutton Investment & Retirement
Partners
Swift & Staley, Inc.
The River Foundation
United Way of Greater Milwaukee & Waukesha Co.
United Way of Western Kentucky
Waterfront Services, Inc.
Williams Heating & Air, Inc.
Williams, Williams & Lentz
Woodmen Life- Chapter 2
Wyatt Bell & Co.
Church Donors
Abundant Life Worship Center
Bandana Community Church
Bandana United Methodist
Bethel Christian Church
Bethel Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Brookport Church of God
Christian Community Church
Christian Fellowship Church
Community Christian Church
Community Life Church
Concord United Methodist Church
Concord United Methodist Women
East Baptist Church
Faith Center of Paducah
Faith Life Class
First Assembly of God
First Baptist Church Paducah
Free Spirit Motorcycle Ministry
Gospel Mission Worship Center
Grace Baptist Church
Grace Fellowship Church
Heartland Church
Highland Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Immanuel Baptist Church
Joppa Missionary Baptist Church
LaCenter Christian Church
Lone Oak First Baptist Church
Massac Methodist Church
Mt. Zion Baptist Church
New Covenant Fellowship
New Hope Missionary Baptist Church
Newton Creek Baptist Church
Olivet Baptist Church
Pryorsburg Baptist Church
Rosebower Baptist Church
Sanctuary Church of God
Shady Grove Baptist Church
Southland Baptist Temple
Trace Creek Missionary Baptist Church
Twelve Oaks Baptist Church