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| 8:30 - 9:00 |
Welcome
Jeff Jobe, Chair, Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center

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| 9:00 - 10:00 |
Keynote Speaker
Dr. Dan Crippen, former director, Congressional Budget Office, “The Aging of the Industrialized World”
In the United States the number of retirees will soon
double, from 40 million to 80 million. This is more than at any point in our history. At the same time, the projection
for America’s workforce growth is a mere 10%. The resulting effect is that there will be only two workers for every
retiree, putting a tremendous strain on all governmental programs and our society in general. In many other developed
countries, such as Japan, Germany and the U.K., rapid aging will be even more severe and challenging. Dr. Crippen
discusses the profound implications for the job market and retirement policies, in both the public and private
sectors. He explores how the aging of the population will cause business to reverse past policies of encouraging
early retirement; how younger workers will be harder to find and more expensive to hire; and how immigration
policy is likely to get substantially more liberal.

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| 10:00 - 10:30 |
Break

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| 10:30 - 11:45 |
Concurrent Breakout Sessions
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| AGING: Boomers Defying Conventional Wisdom Even
in Tough Times
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Dr. Graham Rowles, Professor of Gerontology, Graduate Center for Gerontology, University of Kentucky
- Michal Smith-Mello, Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research
Center
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| ENERGY-ENVIRONMENT: Fueling the Future in a Carbon-Averse
Environment
- Don Challman, Associate Director and General
Manager, University of Kentucky, Center for Applied Energy Research
- Susan Lambert, R. E. Strategies, LLC
- Mark Schirmer, Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center
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| ECONOMY: Strategies for Energizing Kentucky’s Lagging Economic Progress
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John Chowning, Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center Board Member
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Deborah Clayton, Commissioner, Department of
Commercialization and Innovation, Kentucky Cabinet for Economic Development
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Dr. Kenneth Troske, Sturgill Endowed Professor of
Economics, Director of the Center for Business and Economics Research, University of Kentucky
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| EDUCATION: Education Stakes Rising with Emerging Global Workforce
- Dr. Richard Crofts, Interim President, Council on Postsecondary Education
- Dr. Betty Griffin, Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center Board Member
- Dr. Joe McCormick, Executive Director, Kentucky College
Access Network
- Frank Rasche, Policy Advisor and Legislative
Liaison, Kentucky Department of Education
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| FISCAL CHALLENGES: Responding to Tough Times at the State and Local Level
- Greg Harkenrider, Deputy Executive Director for
Financial Analysis, Office of State Budget Director
- Temple Juett, General Counsel, Kentucky League of
Cities
- Rep. Adam Koenig, KY General Assembly and Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center Board Member
- Dr. David Wildasin, Endowed Professor of Public
Finance and Professor of Economics, University of Kentucky
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| HEALTH CARE: Getting Healthy or Paying for the Consequences
- Dr. Forrest Calico, Senior Advisor for Quality,
National Rural Health Association (Moderator)
- Dr. Shawn D. Glisson, Founder and CEO, American Cancer Repository, Inc.
- David Hoke, former Principal, The Good Health Company
- Dr. Emery A. Wilson, Director of the Office of Health Research and
Development and Dean Emeritus of the University of Kentucky (UK) College of Medicine
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| MIDDLE CLASS SQUEEZE: American Dream Becoming More Elusive
- Dr. Terry Brooks, Executive Director, Kentucky Youth Advocates
- Ron Crouch, Kentucky State Data Center, University of Louisville
- Rep. Reginald Meeks, KY General Assembly and Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center Board Member
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| TRANSPORTATION: Rethinking Old Assumptions to Build a Sustainable Future
- Ted Grossardt, Policy and Planning, Kentucky
Transportation Center, University of Kentucky
- Don Hartman, Administration, Kentucky
Transportation Center, University of Kentucky
- Dr. Lenahan O'Connell, Kentucky Transportation Center, University of Kentucky

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| Noon - 1:15 |
Lunch and Hellard Award Presentation
Al Smith, one of Kentucky’s most engaging media personalities,
offers his perspectives on the legacy of Vic Hellard and presents the 2008 Hellard Award to Sally Brown, for
her leadership as a civic activist for education and the arts, and as a national leader in environmental
protection.

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| 1:30 - 3:00 |
Big Ideas for Kentucky's Future
A number of trends and forces are affecting Kentucky’s future,
both positive and negative that require prompt and highly ambitious responses. On September 24, 2008, over 200
citizens and policymakers met at the Ali Center in Louisville to discuss transformational ideas for moving Kentucky
forward. KET’s Bill Goodman will moderate a panel to suggest and evaluate a range of big ideas
for catapulting Kentucky forward.
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Lynn Allen, founder of Capital Innovations, Inc., helps clients with the technology, know-how, and human capital to nurture new businesses and commercialize technologies to leverage their networks and relationships into new assets and capital growth.
She is a highly-accomplished capital builder who has represented organizations on both the buy- and sell-sides of institutional investing and large-scale partnerships. She has built markets and raised capital for the private, public, and nonprofit sectors and knows how these sectors think, what motivates them, and how they approach strategic relationships and capital investments.
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Bill Bishop, currently living in Austin, Texas,
coauthored The Big Sort, a critical look at how “Americans have sorted themselves geographically,
economically, and politically into like-minded communities over the last three decades” and the implications
for American culture and politics. Bishop and his wife, Julie Ardery, co-edit The Daily Yonder, a web-based
publication (dailyyonder.com) covering rural America.
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Dr. Melissa Fry Konty is a Program Associate for
Research and Policy at the Mountain Association for Community Economic Development (MACED) in Berea. Joining MACED
in August 2007, she uses policy research for achieving social justice. Her work has focused on public policy issues
ranging from childcare to education as well as mental health to race relations.
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Dr. Ricky Jones is the chair of pan-African
studies at the University of Louisville and author of What's Wrong with Obamamania? Black America, Black
Leadership and the Death of Political Imagination. His book takes a critical look at the rise of Barack
Obama and what it means or doesn't mean for black leadership in post-civil rights America.
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Kris Kimel is President and a founder of the Kentucky Science and Technology Corporation, a non-profit company with an international reputation for designing and implementing innovative and broad-scale initiatives and programs, as well as the founder of the international IdeaFestival.
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Jeffrey Manber is a successful
international entrepreneur in the technology and space arenas. He is the former CEO of Mir Corporation, the Dutch-based
company that leased the Mir Space Station, which negotiated the first tourist in space…Dennis Tito. Manber
also helped lead the creation of the first venture fund focused on space. He is currently active in global
technology initiatives principally in the U.S., China, The United Kingdom and Russia. Manber, a frequent
contributor on trade and policy issues to international publications, works out of Washington, DC.
Russ Meredith is a graduating senior from the
University of Louisville and the College of Business majoring in Management with Minors in Entrepreneurship and
Sports Administration. He is currently serving as the President of an organization he founded called the Louisville
Farmers’ Market Association and looks forward to continuing his career as a social entrepreneur.
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Dr. Melissa Walton-Shirley is a Cardiologist at
T.J. Samson Community Hospital in Glasgow, Kentucky, and was trained at the University of Louisville Medical
School. Serving on the frontlines of Kentucky’s battle with chronic disease, she strives to improve the
quality of life for her patients through effective public policy and responsible individual behaviors.

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| 3:00 - 3:15 |
Wrap-up |