Hart County
Community Profile
Hart County is located in south-central Kentucky, within the Barren River Area Development District (BRADD). Formed in 1819 and named for Captain Nathaniel G. S. Hart, the county encompasses approximately 412 square miles of predominantly rural landscape. According to the 2020 U.S. Census, the county had a population of about 19,288 residents; recent estimates place it near 19,900. The county seat is Munfordville.
Hart County’s economy is shaped by agriculture and small business, with tourism playing a role as well—portions of Mammoth Cave National Park are located in the county, and cave systems (such as the Fisher Ridge Cave System) are present. The geography includes karst terrain, forested uplands, and both river and tributary systems.
The county is exposed to a wide range of natural and human-caused hazards common to south-central Kentucky, including flooding, severe storms, tornadoes, winter weather, drought, extreme temperatures, landslides (in certain terrain), hazardous materials incidents, sinkhole/karst issues, and emerging infectious disease events.
How Hazards are Examined
Each hazard in this multi-hazard multi-jurisdiction mitigation plan is examined through 6 specific lenses as required by FEMA. These include: the nature of the hazard, location, extent, historical occurrences, probability of future events, and impacts. Additionally, each participating jurisdiction reviews existing mitigation measures for each hazard, and creates additional mitigation actions to address any gaps.
Background:
A description of the hazard, including frequency, intensity, and duration
Location:
Geographic areas affected by the hazard; specific locations or features
Extent:
The severity or magnitude of the hazard
Past events:
Historical Occurrences involving the hazards
Probability of Future Events:
The likelihood of the hazard occurring in the future.
Impacts:
Potential consequences of the hazard both direct and indirect
Hazards in Hart County
Baseline Data
The following data points are used as baseline data to track trends across all 10 counties in the BRADD footprint. Data points are sourced from U.S. Census Bureau and 2019 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates.
Dam Failure in Hart County
Dam Failure
Dam failure is the uncontrolled release of impounded water due to structural, mechanical, or hydraulic causes.
Types of Dams
There are two primary types of dams: embankment and concrete. Embankment dams are the most common and are constructed using either natural soil or rock or waste material from a mining or milling operation. They are often referred to as “earth-fill” or “rock-fill” based upon which of those two types of materials is used to compact the dam. Concrete dams are generally categorized as either gravity or buttress dams. Gravity dams rely on the mass of the concrete and friction to resist the water pressure. A buttress dam is a type of gravity dam where the large mass of concrete is reduced and the force of water pressure is “diverted to the dam foundation through vertical or sloping buttresses.”
The Energy and Environment Cabinet, authorized by KRS 151.293 Section 6 to inspect existing structures that meet the above definition of a dam, further notes three classifications of dams:
- High Hazard (C) – Structures located such that failure may cause loss of life or serious damage to houses, industrial or commercial buildings, important public utilities, main highways or major railroads.
- Moderate Hazard (B) – Structures located such that failure may cause significant damage to property and project operation, but loss of human life is not envisioned.
- Low Hazard (A) – Structures located such that failure would cause loss of the structure itself but little or no additional damage to other property.
High- and moderate-hazard dams are inspected every two years. Low-hazard dams are inspected every five years.
Quality of Dam Infrastructure
The American Society of Civil Engineers gave Kentucky a D+ on dam infrastructure, which is only slightly better than the national average. The average US dam is 60 years old, and most dams in Kentucky are over 50. As of 2019, 80 dams in the state are classified as two-fold risks, meaning that they are both high hazards and in poor or unsatisfactory condition. 47% of these 80 dams received that rating partially because they cannot hold enough rain during catastrophic storms. 89% of high hazard dams in Kentucky do not have complete emergency action plans on file with the state. 74% have simplified draft plans, but these are not widely shared and have not been adopted by local officials.
Types of Dam Failure
There are three types of Dam Failure:
- Structural: This common cause is responsible for nearly 30% of all dam failure in the United States. Structural failure of a dam occurs when there is a rupture in the dam or its foundation.
- Mechanical: Refers to the failure or malfunctioning of gates, conduits, or valves.
- Hydraulic: Occurs when the uncontrolled flow of water over the top, around, and adjacent to the dam erodes its foundation. Hydraulic failure is the cause of approximately 34% of all dam failures.
Extent
Dam failure in Hart County could result in localized to significant downstream flooding, depending on the size and location of the dam involved. The county contains a mix of small agricultural impoundments, private farm ponds, and several NRCS flood-control structures designed for stormwater management and erosion control. While these dams are relatively small compared to regional high-hazard dams, failure could still produce rapid downstream inundation, erosion of roadways, damage to culverts and bridges, and flooding of agricultural lands, homes, or outbuildings located in narrow valleys.
Because Hart County borders the Green River and relies on a network of tributaries—such as Lynn Camp Creek, Bacon Creek, and Cub Run—dam failure could exacerbate preexisting flood conditions, particularly during heavy rainfall. Failure of even a low-hazard dam during high-flow periods can increase inundation depth, accelerate flow velocity, transport debris, and temporarily alter stream channels. In steep or confined terrain, warning time would be extremely limited, making downstream areas particularly vulnerable.
History of Dam Failure
Hart County has no record of catastrophic dam failures, but the county has experienced dam-related issues consistent with rural Kentucky, including:
- Erosion, piping, and seepage at aging agricultural dams,
- Localized overtopping during high-intensity rain events,
- Maintenance deficiencies documented in periodic NRCS and Division of Water inspections, and
- Emergency drawdowns or repairs to alleviate pressure on small impoundments.
While these incidents have not resulted in major downstream flooding, they demonstrate the county’s vulnerability to structural deterioration, extreme precipitation, and limited maintenance resources.
Regional dam-failure events—such as impacts along the Green River basin in nearby counties, statewide overtopping incidents during the 2010 and 2021 flood years, and emergency actions taken at small farm ponds during heavy storms—provide relevant context for Hart County. These events show that prolonged rainfall, soil saturation, and undersized spillways are recurring stressors for older dams across the BRADD region.
Hart County’s risk is heightened by its concentration of small, privately owned dams, many of which were constructed decades ago and may not meet current design standards or inspection frequency. Because private dams fall outside routine oversight unless classified as high-hazard, their vulnerabilities may remain unnoticed until severe weather exposes structural weaknesses.
Probability
The probability of a dam failure in Hart County is considered low, but the potential consequences warrant continued monitoring and mitigation. Most dams within the county are small agricultural or private impoundments, which generally present a lower failure consequence but may have a higher likelihood of structural issues due to age, limited maintenance, and lack of formal inspection requirements. These smaller dams are more susceptible to problems such as seepage, erosion, spillway blockage, and overtopping during periods of intense rainfall.
Hart County does not contain large high-hazard dams, but the county’s hilly terrain, narrow valleys, and drainage characteristics mean that failure of even a small structure could result in rapid downstream flow with little warning. Climate trends indicating more frequent extreme precipitation events also increase stress on embankments and spillways, modestly raising the long-term likelihood of failure or overtopping.
Based on historical patterns in the region, continued aging of private dams, and projected increases in heavy rainfall, Hart County should plan for a low-probability but persistent risk, with the potential for occasional dam-related incidents or near-failures during severe storm seasons.
Impact
Built Environment:
A breach can produce rapid inundation that damages or destroys buildings, blocks roads with debris, disrupts traffic and emergency services, and threatens water/wastewater systems—especially if a reservoir supplies drinking water.
Natural Environment:
Floodwaves can scour channels, mobilize debris and contaminants, and disrupt aquatic habitats and riparian systems.
Social Environment:
Fast-arriving floodwaters elevate life-safety risk, particularly for people living/working in low-lying downstream areas with limited warning or evacuation options.
Climate Impacts on Dam Failure:
Increasingly intense rainfall, longer wet periods, and more frequent extreme storm events can raise hydraulic loading on dams, heighten the risk of overtopping, accelerate erosion of embankments and spillways, and reduce warning/response time. Climate-driven shifts can also stress aging infrastructure and complicate reservoir operations (e.g., balancing flood control with drought storage), making proactive maintenance, updated hydrologic/hydraulic studies, and EAP exercises even more critical.
Hart County’s vulnerability to dam failure is moderate, shaped by the county’s large number of small, privately owned agricultural dams and the prevalence of rural residences, farms, and local roadways located downstream of these structures. Many of the county’s dams were built decades ago and may not meet current engineering standards, especially if maintenance has been deferred or ownership has changed over time. Because most small dams are not classified as high-hazard, they are not subject to frequent regulatory inspection, which increases the likelihood that structural deterioration or spillway obstructions go undetected.
Downstream areas most at risk include narrow valleys, creek corridors, rural road crossings, and low-lying farmsteads, where even a limited breach could cause rapid flooding with little warning. Manufactured homes, older structures with low elevation, and homes located near small impoundments face elevated exposure. Roadway embankments, culverts, and small bridges are also vulnerable to washout during sudden releases of water.
Emergency-response challenges—such as the county’s rural topography, limited ingress and egress routes, and long travel distances between communities—increase the consequences of a failure event. Additionally, Hart County’s reliance on regional recreation, small businesses, and dispersed agricultural operations means that even localized damage can have broader community impacts.
Vulnerability centers on downstream settlements and critical routes that could be cut off. Even moderate failures can deposit debris that blocks access and delays emergency services. Adoption and exercising of EAP elements
with local responders can mitigate life-safety risks despite the low frequency of events.
Drought in Edmonson County
Description
Drought is a prolonged period of below-average precipitation that reduces soil moisture, surface water, and groundwater, stressing ecosystems, agriculture, and water supply systems. In Hart County, drought can be meteorological, agricultural, hydrological, or socioeconomic, with severity influenced by both climate conditions and community demand on limited water resources.
Types of Drought
The Palmer Drought Severity Index is the most widely used measurement of drought severity. The following indicators demonstrate drought severity by comparing the level of recorded precipitation against the average precipitation for a region.
- A meteorological drought is defined by the degree of dryness and the duration of a period without precipitation.
- Agricultural drought ties attributes of meteorological drought with agricultural impacts, often focusing on the amount of precipitation and evapotranspiration, which is the transference of water from the land to the atmosphere via evaporation. The magnitude of this type of drought is often conceptualized as the difference between plant water demand and available soil water. Because of this, the definition of agricultural drought accounts for the susceptibility of crops at the various stages of their development cycle
- Hydrological drought refers to below average water content in surface and subsurface water supply. This type of drought is generally out of phase with meteorological or agricultural drought.
- Socioeconomic drought focuses more on the social context that causes and intensifies drought conditions. This type of drought links meteorological, agricultural, and hydrological drought to supply and demand.
Location/Extent
Drought affects the entirety of Hart County, with especially significant consequences in rural agricultural areas that rely on dependable irrigation and livestock water. During extended dry periods, Barren River Lake levels can drop, affecting recreation and municipal supply. Historical droughts have driven soil-moisture deficits exceeding ~50% and reduced viability of staple crops such as corn and soybeans.
Sensitivity is elevated for row-crop and pasture lands, small public water systems or systems with leakage/limited storage, and surface-water/groundwater users lacking redundant sources. BRADD’s Water System Vulnerability to Drought resource further highlights system-level considerations for the region.
Past Events
Notable events include the 2012 drought, when much of Kentucky—including Hart County—reached D3 (Extreme Drought) on the U.S. Drought Monitor, with widespread agricultural losses, elevated fire risk, and water shortages. From 2000–2025, Hart County experienced ~53 weeks of D2 (Moderate) and ~8 weeks of D3 (Severe/Extreme) drought; USDA issued drought disaster declarations in 2022 and 2023 for documented production losses.
Probability
Long-term monitoring indicates drought is a recurrent hazard. Hart County experienced 597 total weeks of drought over the last 25 years—about a 46% chance that any given week features drought conditions. Projections suggest drought likelihood may increase with climate change as rising temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns extend dry periods.
Impact
Built Environment:
Lower reservoir and well levels can strain municipal water systems, increase infrastructure operating costs (e.g., pumping/energy), and trigger usage restrictions for businesses and institutions; prolonged deficits can reduce fire-flow availability for rural systems.
Natural Environment:
Drought reduces streamflow and aquatic habitat quality, stresses forests and grasslands, and can degrade water quality as lower volumes concentrate pollutants.
Social Environment:
The largest local effects are economic losses in agriculture (crop failures, livestock stress, higher irrigation costs) and secondary risks such as increased wildfire potential; households and small businesses can face water shortages and higher costs.
Climate Impacts on Dam Failure:
Rising temperatures increase evapotranspiration and soil‐moisture loss, while shifting precipitation patterns can produce longer dry spells punctuated by intense storms that do little to recharge groundwater. Hotter summers elevate water demand, stress crops and livestock, worsen algal blooms and other water-quality issues in low flows, and compound risks when heat waves coincide with drought—intensifying health, agricultural, and infrastructure impacts across Edmonson County.
Drought Vulnerability in the BRADD Region
Soil Susceptibility
Soil’s susceptibility to drought varies due to a myriad of factors. The map below depicts vulnerability to drought based on soil type from a moisture retention and availability perspective. For example a shallow fragipan limits the depth of the soil making it more vulnerable to moisture loss. Grey areas indicate that no soil data was available due to lakes, heavily urbanized areas, or strip mining. Susceptibility to Drought Scores were established using the criteria of infiltration, water movement, and water supply for the soils defined in the NRCS Soil Surveys that encompass the state.
Hart County’s drought vulnerability is moderate to low, shaped by its rural character, widespread private wells, and reliance on pasture-based and small-scale agricultural operations. Older adults and medically vulnerable residents face elevated heat risk during drought periods. Agricultural producers—particularly livestock and hay operations—are highly susceptible to economic losses during extended dry spells. Rural water associations and households using private wells may face capacity limitations or costly maintenance during prolonged drought. Limited redundancy in some rural water systems and the county’s dispersed population increase response challenges during severe drought events.
Hart County’s public water system demonstrates low to moderate vulnerability to drought.
The soil susceptibility map indicates that large swaths of Hart County’s soil experience moderately high susceptibility to drought.
Overall, Hart County has a moderately high vulnerability to drought. Because drought is a non-spatial hazard, this same analysis can be applied to its respective cities – Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville.
Earthquakes in Hart County
Description
An earthquake is a sudden release of energy in the Earth’s crust that produces ground shaking capable of damaging buildings, lifelines, and critical services. In south-central Kentucky, risk is influenced by regional seismic zones (notably New Madrid and Wabash Valley) and by local site conditions that can amplify shaking—especially softer soils over bedrock and saturated valley deposits. Building code provisions and seismic design values are informed by the USGS National Seismic Hazard Model.
Location/Extent
Kentucky is affected by nearby seismic zones—New Madrid (most active east of the Rockies) and Wabash Valley (capable of M5.5–6.0 damage near population centers). Potential shaking in Butler County ranges from weak/noticeable (MMI II–IV) during distant events to light–moderate (MMI V–VI) in rarer, larger scenarios; secondary effects can include nonstructural damage, minor slope instability, and utility disruptions. The eastern U.S. crust transmits shaking efficiently, so distant earthquakes can be widely felt.
Severity is commonly expressed by earthquake magnitude and by shaking intensity (Modified Mercalli Scale). Butler County’s worst-case consequences depend on regional event size/distance and local amplification/liquefaction potential.
| Intensity | Verbal Description | Witness Observation | Maximum Acceleration (cm/sec2) | Corresponding Richter Scale |
| I | Instrumental | Detectable on Seismographs | <1 | <3.5 |
| II | Feeble | Felt by Some People | <2.5 | 3.5 |
| III | Slight | Felt by Some People Resting | <5 | 4.2 |
| IV | Moderate | Felt by People Walking | <10 | 4.5 |
| V | Slightly Strong | Sleepers Awake; Church Bells Ringing | <25 | <4.8 |
| VI | Strong | Trees Sway; Suspended Objects Swing; Objects Fall off Shelves | <50 | 4.8 |
| VII | Very Strong | Mild Alarm; Walls Crack; Plaster Falls | <100 | 6.1 |
| VIII | Destructive | Moving Cars Uncontrollable; Masonry Fractures; Poorly Constructed Buildings Damaged | <250 | |
| IX | Runious | Some Houses Collapse; Ground Cracks; Pipes Break Open | <500 | 6.9 |
| X | Disastrous | Ground Cracks Profusely; Many Buildings Destroyed; Liquefaction and Landslides Widespread | <750 | 7.3 |
| XI | Very Disastrous | Most Buildings and Bridges Collapse; Roads, Railways, Pipes, and Cables Destroyed; General Triggering of Other Hazards | <980 | 8.1 |
Past Events
Hart County has experienced no recorded damaging earthquakes ≥M3 within its boundaries, but residents have periodically felt mild shaking from events originating in nearby seismic zones. Small earthquakes associated with the East Tennessee Seismic Zone (ETSZ) and Wabash Valley Seismic Zone (WVSZ) have produced weak, widely felt tremors across south-central Kentucky, occasionally reported by residents in Hart, Edmonson, Green, and Barren Counties.
Regionally, the New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ) remains the most significant historical influence. The 1811–1812 New Madrid earthquakes generated strong shaking across Kentucky, including the area that would become Hart County, though no detailed local accounts exist due to sparse settlement at the time. More recent moderate regional events—such as earthquakes in central Tennessee (M4.4 in 2017), western Kentucky and southern Illinois, and small ETSZ events during the 2010s—were felt across the BRADD region due to the efficient transmission of seismic waves through eastern U.S. bedrock.
Although Hart County has not experienced structural damage from past earthquakes, the consistent pattern of regionally felt events reinforces the county’s exposure to low-probability but potentially high-consequence seismic hazards linked to the larger NMSZ, WVSZ, and ETSZ systems.
Probability
The probability of a damaging earthquake in Hart County is considered low, but the probability of felt seismic activity is moderate due to the county’s proximity to three major regional seismic zones: the New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ) to the west, the Wabash Valley Seismic Zone (WVSZ) to the northwest, and the East Tennessee Seismic Zone (ETSZ) to the southeast. Small, weak earthquakes originating in these zones occur regularly and may be felt in Hart County every few years, typically producing MMI II–IV shaking.
Moderate shaking (MMI V–VI) is possible within a 50-year planning horizon, primarily from events in the ETSZ or WVSZ. A large New Madrid earthquake—while a low-probability, high-consequence event—could produce widespread impacts across the region, including Hart County, despite the distance from the epicenter.
Climate change does not influence earthquake probability, but increasing rainfall variability and flood-soil saturation may indirectly affect slope stability or soil response during shaking. Overall, Hart County should plan for occasional felt events and maintain readiness for rare but potentially consequential regional earthquakes.
Impact
An earthquake could result in structural damage to older buildings, critical facilities, and infrastructure not designed to modern seismic codes. Bridges, utilities, and water systems could sustain significant damage, leading to service disruptions. Secondary impacts might include landslides in certain areas, hazardous material spills, and challenges in emergency response due to blocked roads and damaged communication systems. Economic losses could be substantial, particularly for uninsured property owners.
Built Environment:
Shaking can damage homes and business structures, collapse unreinforced elements, and disrupt roads/bridges, power, water/wastewater, and telecom. Post-event debris and utility outages can hinder emergency response.
Natural Environment:
Secondary effects—liquefaction, landslides, fires, and hazmat releases—can degrade soils, waterways, and habitats.
Social Environment:
Transportation disruption, hospital surge, power/water interruptions, and communications overload elevate life-safety risk and complicate reunification and care for vulnerable groups (children, older adults, LEP populations).
Climate Impacts on Earthquakes:
While climate change does not drive tectonic earthquakes, hydrologic extremes (prolonged drought, heavy precipitation, groundwater withdrawal/recharge) may alter subsurface stresses in limited contexts. The BRADD region has an overall low earthquake risk, so any climate influence on local frequency/severity is likely minor relative to tectonic controls.
Earthquake Vulnerability in Allen County
Butler County is mapped in a “high perceived shaking” zone for high-magnitude regional scenarios and contains significant local fault lines. Because earthquakes are non-spatial at the county scale, this vulnerability characterization applies countywide (including Morgantown, Rochester, and Woodbury). Key sensitivity factors remain older/unnretrofitted buildings, critical facilities, bridges, and lifelines on softer soils or in potential liquefaction areas.
Hart County’s vulnerability to earthquakes is low to moderate, shaped by its rural building stock, presence of older homes, and limited seismic design in structures built prior to modern building codes. Unreinforced masonry buildings, older brick structures in small communities, and long-span roofs (gyms, warehouses, barns) are particularly susceptible to shaking-related damage. Manufactured housing, while lighter in weight, may shift or sustain anchoring failures during moderate ground motion.
Critical facilities constructed before current seismic standards—such as schools, first-response buildings, and water/wastewater infrastructure—may experience nonstructural failures (ceiling collapses, broken piping, equipment damage) even during lower-intensity shaking. Underground utilities may also be vulnerable to joint separation or service disruption.
Populations most vulnerable include older adults, residents in older or poorly anchored structures, and households with limited resources for retrofitting or repairs. Rural road networks, located in karst terrain and along creek valleys, may experience localized slope instability or shoulder failures that complicate emergency response. While catastrophic impacts are unlikely, even moderate earthquakes could produce disruptive, system-wide effects due to the county’s reliance on regional healthcare, utilities, and emergency-services support.
Hart County is within the “light” perceived shaking zone for a high magnitude earthquake and does not contain significant fault lines.
Because of these factors, Hart County experiences low vulnerability to earthquakes. Because earthquakes are non-spatial hazards, it can be assumed that this analysis should be applied to Hart County’s respective cities – Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville.
Extreme Temperatures in Hart County
Description
“Extreme temperature” includes both extreme heat (multi-day heat waves driven by high temperature and humidity) and extreme cold (cold waves with dangerous wind chills). The National Weather Service (NWS Louisville/LMK) issues Heat Advisories when Heat Index values are around 105°F for ≥2 hours and Excessive Heat Warnings at ≥110°F (or prolonged 105–110°F). LMK’s cold guidance treats apparent temperatures ≤ −10°F in south-central Kentucky as Extreme Cold thresholds for watch/warning products. These index-based triggers better capture human health risk than air temperature alone.
Location/Extent
Location and Extent
Extreme temperature hazards in Hart County include both excessive heat and extreme cold. These conditions can affect the entire county, though the severity of impacts varies by housing quality, access to heating and cooling, and resident vulnerability.
Excessive heat typically occurs during late summer, when high temperatures combine with elevated humidity to produce heat index values exceeding 100–105°F. These events strain home cooling systems, increase energy demand, and pose severe health risks for older adults, outdoor workers, young children, and households without adequate air conditioning. Manufactured homes and older structures with limited insulation face the highest levels of interior heat buildup.
Extreme cold and dangerous wind chills occur most often from December through February. Low temperatures can freeze pipes, strain electric heating systems, and stress private well infrastructure. Rural homes—particularly those in exposed areas or with aging insulation—face increased vulnerability during cold snaps. Ice accumulation from winter precipitation can exacerbate cold-related challenges by damaging power lines and prolonging outages.
Both heat and cold events can be intensified by Hart County’s rural nature, limited access to cooling/warming centers, and the distance some residents must travel to reach services during hazardous conditions.
Historical Occurrences
Cold. Within the regional record (2010–2021), Hart County had one wind chill watch (2014) and one wind chill warning (2015); these events were issued region-wide.
Heat. Across 2010–2021, the BRADD region recorded 18 excessive heat watches and 71 excessive heat warnings; county-level breakdowns show Hart County averaged ~27.7 extreme-heat days per year (2010–2016).
Probability
Expect recurrent heat seasons with periodic advisory/warning episodes and less frequent but hazardous cold outbreaks. While year-to-year frequency varies, local planning should assume annual heat advisories are likely, with occasional excessive-heat warnings, and intermittent extreme-cold events in some winters.
Impact
Extreme heat can lead to heat exhaustion and heatstroke, particularly in outdoor workers, the elderly, and low-income households without access to cooling. It also increases energy demand, raising utility costs and the likelihood of power outages. Severe cold poses risks of frostbite, hypothermia, and infrastructure damage, including frozen pipes and malfunctioning heating systems. Both extremes can disrupt agricultural yields, livestock health, and local economies.
Built Environment:
Cold can burst buried water pipes, strain metal bridge members, and affect trucking/rail operations (e.g., diesel gelling). Heat can soften asphalt, stress vehicle cooling systems and rail operations, and increase water demand, sometimes reducing fire-flow availability.
Natural Environment:
Cold snaps threaten livestock and wildlife and can freeze ponds/streams. Heat can degrade water quality, drive algal blooms, and reduce crop yields and dairy productivity.
Social Environment:
Cold elevates exposure risks for people without adequate shelter or heat and can increase CO poisoning and fire risk; both cold and heat create economic losses (e.g., utility repair, agriculture) and can trigger business/school closures. Heat is the leading U.S. weather-related killer, with illnesses from fatigue to heat stroke.
Climate Impacts on Extreme Temperatures:
Climate change models predict and increase in overall temperature globally for the coming decades, including the BRADD region. With a potential rise of several degrees Fahrenheit, multiple services, systems, and activities face disruption and impact. Temperature increases this small may not seem threatening, but the cumulative impacts will affect weather events, human health, and ecosystem functions, along with economic and social issues related to energy use and cost of living.
Working with
AT&T’s Climate Resilient Communities Program and the
Climate Risk and Resilience (ClimRR) Portal, BRADD identified additional opportunities for hazard mitigation action items associated with climate impacts for Extreme Temperatures in the Barren River Region. To view an interactive report of these findings,
click here.
Hart County’s vulnerability to extreme temperatures is moderate to high, shaped by its rural housing stock, high proportion of manufactured homes, and dependence on electric or propane heating and cooling systems. Many older homes lack adequate insulation or weatherization, increasing indoor heat buildup during summer and heightening the risk of frozen pipes or heating failures during winter cold snaps. Households relying on private wells are particularly vulnerable during prolonged cold, as frozen pumps or loss of power can disrupt water access.
Populations at greatest risk during extreme heat include older adults, young children, outdoor laborers, and residents without reliable air conditioning or the financial means to manage high electricity costs. During extreme cold, low-income households, those using space heaters or outdated HVAC systems, and individuals with limited ability to travel to warming centers face elevated exposure. Rural isolation, long emergency response times, and inconsistent broadband coverage further complicate outreach and assistance during severe temperature events.
Essential facilities such as schools, long-term care homes, and EMS also face operational strain during prolonged heat or cold, especially when staff, equipment, or energy supply systems are stressed. Supply-chain disruptions, increased utility demand, and potential power outages add to the county’s vulnerability, as many rural areas lack redundancy in electrical infrastructure.
Since 2010, Hart County experienced one wind chill watch (2014) and one wind chill warning (2015).
At a county scale, extreme temperatures are non-spatial, so exposure is countywide. Hart County’s extreme cold vulnerability is rated moderate overall (with Munfordville noted as high) based on past watches/warnings and sensitivity to power-outage cold snaps.
For extreme heat, Hart shows moderate vulnerability, reflecting its ~28 heat-days/year baseline and sensitivity in smaller urban areas to urban heat island effects.
Unless otherwise noted, Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville reflect Hart County’s overall history of extreme temperature, and therefore experience moderate vulnerability as well.
Flooding in Hart County
Description
Flooding is the overflow of water onto land that is normally dry, driven in south-central Kentucky by prolonged or intense rainfall, saturated soils, snowmelt, or infrastructure/ground-failure conditions. In addition to river (out-of-bank) flooding, the county can experience flash flooding in small basins and urbanized areas, urban/poor-drainage flooding from impervious cover, and ground-failure/karst-related flooding where subsidence or clogged sinkholes impede drainage. These events are increasing in frequency and severity due to regional climate trends, which elevate the risk for both urban and rural communities. (See BRADD’s work with AT&T’s Climate Resilient Communities Program and the Climate Risk and Resilience (ClimRR) Portal for a more in-depth look at how flooding is expected to be impacted by climate change throughout the region.)
Location and Extent
Flooding in Hart County includes riverine flooding, flash flooding, and localized or poor-drainage flooding, with impacts shaped by the county’s mix of river valleys, steep headwater basins, and extensive karst features. The Green River, Nolin River, and numerous tributaries—including Bacon Creek, Lynn Camp Creek, Bear Creek, and Lick Creek—can rise rapidly during heavy rainfall, inundating low-lying roads, agricultural areas, and river-adjacent neighborhoods. Riverine flooding is most prominent near Munfordville, Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and rural stretches along the Green River corridor.
Flash flooding occurs frequently in narrow hollows, steep terrain, and roadway low-water crossings, where intense rainfall can quickly overtop roadways, wash out culverts, and cause bank erosion. Areas with undersized drainage systems—particularly in older developed areas—experience recurring issues during high-intensity storms.
Hart County’s widespread karst landscape introduces additional flood dynamics. Sinkholes, closed depressions, and losing streams can capture stormwater when inlets clog or soils become saturated, resulting in sudden, localized flooding even outside mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs). Agricultural lands and rural roads overlying sinkhole plains often experience recurring ponding and drainage problems.
Flooding affects the entire county, but the most severe impacts occur along river corridors, in steep or confined drainage basins, and at numerous low-water crossings typical of rural Hart County.
Repetitive-Loss & Severe Repetitive-Loss Properties
Hart County has very few repetitive-loss (RL) or severe repetitive-loss (SRL) properties under FEMA’s definitions. The unincorporated county, as well as the Cities of Bonnieville and Horse Cave, each have zero RL or SRL properties under both the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA) criteria.
The City of Munfordville, however, has one (1) property with RL/SRL history. This structure is a single-family residence. Under FEMA classifications, this property is not considered an NFIP Repetitive-Loss or NFIP Severe Repetitive-Loss property. However, under the FMA definitions, it qualifies as both a Repetitive-Loss (RL) and Severe Repetitive-Loss (SRL) property. There are no 2–4 family occupancy properties or non-residential properties in Munfordville that meet RL or SRL criteria under either definition.
This pattern indicates that although Hart County experiences widespread flood exposure, the overall number of repetitive-loss structures is extremely low, reflecting its rural development profile and the limited concentration of flood-prone residential clusters.
Historical Occurances
Hart County experienced 39 flood events over 20 years (~2 events/year). This places Hart County in the upper-range of regional flood frequency.
Exposure in Hart County is countywide, with riverine flooding along the Green River, Nolin River, and their associated tributaries; flash flooding in steep headwater basins, narrow hollows, and at rural low-water crossings; and localized or poor-drainage flooding within the Cities of Munfordville, Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and other small communities. Low-lying recreation areas, agricultural lands, and river-adjacent facilities also experience periodic inundation during high-water events. Hart County’s extensive karst terrain—particularly in areas surrounding Horse Cave, Cave City, and broad sinkhole plains—can concentrate stormwater, leading to sudden, localized flooding when sinkhole inlets clog, depressions fill, or soils become saturated.
Click Here to view a summary of all past Disaster Declarations in the BRADD Region.
Below you will find a listing of past NOAA Flood and Flash-Flood Events from 2000-2020 for Hart County.
Hart County Flood Events
| EVENT_ID | CZ_NAME_STR | BEGIN_LOCATION | BEGIN_DATE | BEGIN_TIME | EVENT_TYPE | DEATHS_DIRECT | INJURIES_DIRECT | DAMAGE_PROPERTY_NUM | DAMAGE_CROPS_NUM | EVENT_NARRATIVE | EPISODE_NARRATIVE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EVENT_ID | CZ_NAME_STR | BEGIN_LOCATION | BEGIN_DATE | BEGIN_TIME | EVENT_TYPE | DEATHS_DIRECT | INJURIES_DIRECT | DAMAGE_PROPERTY_NUM | DAMAGE_CROPS_NUM | EVENT_NARRATIVE | EPISODE_NARRATIVE |
| 5,596,583 | HART (ZONE) | 03/01/1997 | 1,500 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Widespread flooding and/or flash flooding occurred as a result of 4 to 8 inches of rainfall in less than 24 hours. Numerous roads were water covered and closed across these counties and many homes and businesses were effected. All of these counties were declared federal disaster areas eligible for financial aid. Damage estimates include flash flooding from early March 1 through early March 2. | ||
| 5,596,822 | HART (ZONE) | 03/01/1997 | 1,800 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 to 9 inches of rain fell in less than 24 hours causing widespread flooding and/or flash flooding resulting in numerous water covered and closed roads, evacuations and rescues. Most of these counties were declared disaster areas and given federal assistance. The exceptions were Clinton, Cumberland, Garrard, Green, Lincoln, Madison and Marion. Many homes and businesses were effected during the flooding and flash flooding. Damage amounts include flooding and flash flooding totals over the 2 day period. | ||
| 5,597,013 | HART CO. | COUNTYWIDE | 03/01/1997 | 2,100 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Over 2 inches of rain fell on top of 24 hour totals from 4 to 8 inches which resulted in widespread flash flooding with many roads water covered and closed. | |
| 5,596,801 | HART (ZONE) | 03/02/1997 | 400 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 1,000,000 | 0 | The Green River crested at 30.7 feet at Rochester at 1000 am est on March 7 (flood stage is 17 feet). This is the second biggest flood next to January 1950. Many homes were flooded out in Rochester and Woodberry along the river. In Woodberry, the river crested at 48.9 feet (flood stage is 33 feet) at 11 am est March 5. At Brownsville, the river crested at 33.8 feet (flood stage is 18 feet) at 4 pm est on March 5. This caused mainly bottomland flooding. At Munfordville, the river crested at 43.9 feet at 10 pm est March 3 (flood stage is 28 feet). This caused significant bottomland flooding. 25 families were cut off by the water there. These three counties received federal disaster aid. | ||
| 5,597,037 | HART CO. | COUNTYWIDE | 03/05/1997 | 1,230 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 to 3 inches of rain fell on top of already saturated grounds leading to widespread flash flooding with many roads water covered. | |
| 5,597,245 | HART (ZONE) | 03/20/1997 | 100 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Green River at Munfordville crested at 28.6 feet (flood stage is 28 feet) at 3 am est on March 20 producing minor flooding. | ||
| 5,627,741 | HART (ZONE) | 01/08/1998 | 1,900 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Rolling Fork of the Salt River at Boston crested at 36.4 feet (flood stage is 35 feet) at 4 pm est January 10. Some minor agricultural bottom flooding resulted. The Green River at Munfordville crested at 28.9 feet (flood stage is 28 feet) at 11 pm est on January 8. A city park was flooded. Minor cropland flooding resulted along the Licking River at Blue Licks Spring as the river crested at 26.5 feet (flood stage is 25 feet) at 11 pm est January 8. Finally, Stoner Creek at Paris crested at 19 feet (flood stage is 18 feet) at 3 am est on January 8. Only minor flooding resulted. | ||
| 5,639,032 | HART (ZONE) | 04/17/1998 | 1,800 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Significant rainfall caused flooding along the Green, Rough and Ohio Rivers and the Rolling Fork of the Salt River. Minor flooding occured along low-lying county roads and agricultural bottomland. The following are crests and dates: Rolling Fork of the Salt River at Boston: 36.7 feet (flood stage is 35 feet) at 0900 am est on April 18; Dundee along the Rough River: 25.4 feet (flood stage is 25 feet) at 100 pm est on April 17; Munfordville along the Green River: 28.2 feet (flood stage is 28 feet) at 4 pm est on April April 17; Brownsville along the Green River: 19.7 feet (flood stage is 18 feet) at 3 pm est on April 18; Woodbury along the Green River: 36.5 feet (flood stage is 33 feet) at 130 pm est on April 19; Rochester Ferry along the Green River: 19.6 feet (flood sstage is 17 feet) at 1 pm est on April 20; Tell City along the Ohio River: 39.4 feet (flood stage is 38 feet) at 4 pm est on April 25. | ||
| 5,249,990 | HART CO. | HORSE CAVE | 06/04/2001 | 626 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 12,000 | 0 | Highway 218 was closed due to high water. Three cars had to be pulled from a low lying portion of Highway 218. | |
| 5,285,977 | HART CO. | COUNTYWIDE | 03/20/2002 | 1,000 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Several roadways were closed by high water. | |
| 5,286,113 | HART (ZONE) | 03/21/2002 | 1,000 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| 5,343,101 | HART (ZONE) | 02/16/2003 | 1,430 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| 5,386,589 | HART (ZONE) | 02/06/2004 | 2,235 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| 5,446,892 | HART CO. | SOUTH PORTION | 05/20/2005 | 10 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Roadways were flooded in the Munfordville and Horse Cave areas. Two to four feet of water covered a four mile stretch of Highway 218 near Horse Cave. | Thunderstorms ahead of an advancing cold front caused wind damage over much of Central Kentucky, mostly in the form of downed trees and power lines. There were also widespread reports of large hail, and a few more reports of non-severe hail in other locations. Flooding of low-lying areas, and streams flowing out of banks, also resulted from the thunderstorms. |
| 5,520,658 | HART CO. | LINWOOD | 08/10/2006 | 1,738 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Water covered Power Mills Road, or State Highway 569. | |
| 71,909 | HART CO. | HORSE CAVE | 01/10/2008 | 1,500 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Highway 218 was closed for a half hour by high water. | A warm front acted as a focus for some heavy rains over parts of central Kentucky. Along with this, an upper level system set off some severe thunderstorms. |
| 80,761 | HART CO. | LOGSDON VLY | 02/07/2008 | 830 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Green River at Munfordville crested at 28.5 feet around 4 PM EST on February 7. Flood stage at Munfordville is 28 feet. Minor flooding occurs at this level, with flooding at the city park under the U.S. 31W bridge. | Heavy rains on the night of February 5th to 6th caused minor flooding on many area rivers and streams. |
| 98,468 | HART CO. | MUNFORDVILLE | 04/04/2008 | 2,110 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Green River at Munfordville crested at 30.5 feet around 1245 PM CST on April 5. Flood stage at the site is 28 feet. Minor flooding occurs at this level, with the city park flooded under the U.S. Highway 31W bridge. | A frontal system and upper level low brought widespread heavy rains and flooding to central Kentucky. |
| 151,428 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 01/29/2009 | 2,220 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 5,000 | 5000 | Ice melt from a recent ice storm coupled with heavy rain created minor flooding along the Green River near Munfordville. The river crested at 32.73 feet, 4.73 feet above flood stage, on January 30th at 1945 local time. | Melting from an ice storm on January 27th combined with rain on the 28th created minor river flooding along the Barren and Green Rivers in South Central Kentucky. Minor flooding was also reported on Stoner Creek in Bourbon County in the Bluegrass Region of North Central Kentucky. |
| 236,205 | HART CO. | ROWLETTS | 05/02/2010 | 643 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Kentucky 335 between the 2 and 3 mile markers was closed due to high water. | A stalled cold front over the Mississippi Valley spawned thunderstorms producing heavy rain from northern Mississippi through middle Tennessee and central Kentucky into southern Indiana. With little movement of the front, training of storms produced record or near-record 2-day rainfall totals from 8 to 10+ inches in many locations across central Kentucky. Major flooding occurred in at least 40 Kentucky counties, washing out roads and inundating municipal water treatment plants. Four lives were lost in Kentucky - three in vehicles and one in a home, where the resident was apparently electrocuted in high water. Over the following days, most area rivers were in flood, including some flooding along the main stem of the Ohio River. |
| 234,741 | HART CO. | HINESDALE | 05/02/2010 | 1,350 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 50000 | The Green River at Munfordville crested at 51.9 feet around 5 AM EST on May 4. Flood stage at Munfordville is 28 feet. Moderate flooding occurs at this level, with the city park below the U.S. 31W bridge flooded, and most agricultural bottom land flooded. | A stalled cold front over the Mississippi Valley spawned thunderstorms producing heavy rain from northern Mississippi through middle Tennessee and central Kentucky into southern Indiana. With little movement of the front, training of storms produced record or near-record 2-day rainfall totals from 8 to 10+ inches in many locations across central Kentucky. Major flooding occurred in at least 40 Kentucky counties, washing out roads and inundating municipal water treatment plants. Four lives were lost in Kentucky - three in vehicles and one in a home, where the resident was apparently electrocuted in high water. Over the following days, most area rivers were in flood, including some flooding along the main stem of the Ohio River. |
| 295,546 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 04/12/2011 | 1,545 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Green River at Munfordville crested around 34.6 feet at 5 PM CST on April 13. Flood stage at Munfordville is 28 feet. Minor flooding occurs at this level with the city park covered by water. | A cold front brought heavy rains to the area, causing river flooding over much of south central Indiana and central Kentucky. Additional heavy rains later in April kept the Ohio River at Tell City above flood stage through the end of the month. |
| 304,751 | HART CO. | KESSINGER | 04/24/2011 | 1,735 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | A spotter reported about 6 to 7 inches of water on roads in Western Hart county due to runoff. | Multiple episodes of severe weather affected the region on April 24. During the morning storms moved in from the south producing a couple of damaging wind gusts. Later in the afternoon the atmosphere became unstable once again with some dry air intruding at the mid levels. The strongest storms during the afternoon hours produced marginally severe hail. In addition, more storms training along the stalled boundary along the Ohio River exacerbated ongoing flooding and flash flooding. |
| 315,510 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 05/04/2011 | 420 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Green River at Munfordville crested around 29.6 feet at 345 PM CST on May 4. Flood stage at Munfordville is 28 feet. Minor flooding occurs at this level, with the city park under the US 31W bridge flooded. | Area streams were running at high levels after flooding in April. A slow moving frontal boundary set off more heavy rains on May 2nd and 3rd. This caused renewed flooding on area streams. |
| 351,322 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 11/29/2011 | 540 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Green River in Munfordville flooded due to heavy rain over the previous several days. The river crested at 30.66 feet. Flood stage is 28 feet. | On Saturday, November 26th, a deep full latitude trough across the Central Plains slowly moved east toward the Lower Ohio Valley. Light to moderate rain begin across central Kentucky around midnight Sunday morning and continued without interruption through late Monday as the southern portion of the trough developed into a closed low over the Tennessee Valley. Over a 36- to 45-hour period, 2 to locally as much as 4.5 of rain fell over all of central Kentucky. The greatest rainfall totals occurred within a broad band stretching from the Lake Cumberland Region northwest through Louisville into southwestern Indiana. Widespread minor flooding of fields and streams developed in Kentucky, with the closings of numerous low water crossings. Several larger rivers such as the Green, Rolling Fork and the Rough experienced minor flooding. |
| 462,390 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 07/06/2013 | 2,025 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Heavy rains from the 4th through the 6th of July led to minor flooding on the Green River at Munfordville. Flood stage is 28 feet. The river crested at 31.8 feet during the early evening of July 7th. | An anomalous upper air pattern developed July 3rd as a deep trough over the Lower Ohio Valley became cutoff and essentially retrograded westward over the lower Missouri Valley. As this trough moved westward, southerly flow between it and strong high pressure off the mid-Atlantic seaboard brought tropical moisture northward across the Tennessee and Lower Ohio Valleys. Despite widespread cloudiness and cool temperatures, repeated tropical showers from July 4th through the 6th brought several episodes of localized flash flooding across the Commonwealth. Some river flooding developed during subsequent days on the Rolling Fork and Green Rivers. |
| 499,336 | HART CO. | HAMMONVILLE | 04/03/2014 | 1,637 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | An employee reported around one foot of water over Hammonsville Road near Laton-Turner road due to an overflowing creek. | Repeated rounds of thunderstorms just north of a stalled boundary across central Kentucky brought excessive rainfall and flash flooding to many areas north and east of Louisville, including Oldham, Trimble and Henry Counties. Storms during the day on April 3rd brought around one inch of rain to many locations along and north of Interstate 64. During the late evening hours on the 3rd through early morning on the 4th, repeated storms brought another quick 2 to 3 inches, bringing 36 hour totals to over 4 inches, resulting in flash flooding during the early morning hours on April 4th. ||In addition to flooding, two elevated supercells developed April 3rd during the late afternoon and early evening hours along a boundary draped across central Kentucky. One of these storms brought golf-ball sized hail to Grayson County. |
| 562,175 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 03/05/2015 | 440 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Several inches of snow followed by 1 to 2 inches of rain resulted in the Green River at Munfordville to rise above flood stage. The river crested at 32.49 feet during the early morning hours of March 6th and then fell below flood stage late on March 6th. | An intense storm system brought flooding rains to central Kentucky, followed quickly by exceptionally heavy snow. This amount of rain, followed by such heavy snow, is practically unprecedented. The upper level pattern featured a positively tilted upper trough across the desert southwest on the 3nd of March. A tight baroclinic zone stretched northeastward through southern Indiana. Strong southwesterly flow at lower levels brought rich moisture along this nearly stationary boundary. Initially, during the evening hours on the 3nd, rain developed along this boundary and gradually overspread all of southern Indiana and central Kentucky. Steady rain continued through the late afternoon on the 4th. Two to almost 3 inches of rain fell across north central and central Kentucky before precipitation changed into snow during the late afternoon hours on the 4th. Minor areal flooding developed with several roads and low water crossings closed. ||Rain changed into heavy snow near the Ohio River around 5pm, with precipitation changeover slowly moving farther south during the evening, Rain finally changed over to snow near the Tennessee Border during the early morning hours. Intense frontogenesis and lift associated with the right rear quadrant of a powerful jet led to the development of several intense snow bands where snow fell at a rate of 2 inches per hour. One band developed from near Breckenridge County and stretched through Bullitt County and across the northern Bluegrass. Under this nearly stationary band, snow totals ranged from 15 to locally over 20 inches. One reliable snow report from near Radcliff, Kentucky measured 25 inches, which is one inch short of the all time Kentucky storm total snowfall record. Snow diminished from west to east during the mid-morning hours on the 5th. Snow totals across south central Kentucky, adjacent to Tennessee, ranged from 5 to 8 inches. |
| 564,413 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 04/14/2015 | 700 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | County officials reported that several roads had water flowing across them. | After a very wet start to April 2015, another slow moving system brought widespread heavy rain to portions of central Kentucky. Widespread amounts of 2 to 4 inches fell across central and southern Kentucky. Isolated 5 inch amounts were reported. This rain fell on top of already saturated ground and swollen rivers, creeks and streams and as a result, many rivers went into flood for a period of time. |
| 569,500 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 04/15/2015 | 350 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Approximately 3 inches of rain fell on top of saturated ground and brought the Green River at Munfordville into flood. The river crested at 32.08 feet on the evening of April 15th. | After a very wet start to April 2015, another slow moving system brought widespread heavy rain to portions of central Kentucky. Widespread amounts of 2 to 4 inches fell across central and southern Kentucky. Isolated 5 inch amounts were reported. This rain fell on top of already saturated ground and swollen rivers, creeks and streams and as a result, many rivers went into flood for a period of time. |
| 606,444 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 12/27/2015 | 2,000 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Several heavy rain events in late December brought 3 to locally 6 inches of rain to the area. This resulted in minor flooding on the Green River at Munfordville. The river crested at 28.27 feet on December 27th. | Several weather systems impacted the lower Ohio Valley during the last 10 days of December. Rainfall totals varied from 3 to locally 7 inches across much of the river basin, which resulted in significant rises and minor floods on area rivers, streams and creeks. |
| 626,625 | HART CO. | UNO | 05/26/2016 | 1,410 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The Hart County emergency manager reported state highway 218 was flooded east of Horse Cave. | A long lived line of thunderstorms tracked from Missouri through Illinois and Kentucky before stalling out across south-central Kentucky during the late afternoon hours on May 26. The humid air mass and slow moving storms brought excessive amounts of rainfall in a short time period. Flash flooding caused some roads to be closed along with some stranded cars. ||Multiple people visiting and touring Hidden River Cave in the Horse Cave community became trapped as water rushed into the cave system. Rescue teams were initially unable to reach the stranded people, but eventually all were safely removed from the cave system. Between 2 and 4 inches of rain fell in less than 90 minutes. |
| 626,626 | HART CO. | HORSE CAVE | 05/26/2016 | 1,411 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Broadcast meteorologists relayed reports of people trapped in the Hidden River Cave System. Initial reports indicated that search and rescue teams were dispatched. | A long lived line of thunderstorms tracked from Missouri through Illinois and Kentucky before stalling out across south-central Kentucky during the late afternoon hours on May 26. The humid air mass and slow moving storms brought excessive amounts of rainfall in a short time period. Flash flooding caused some roads to be closed along with some stranded cars. ||Multiple people visiting and touring Hidden River Cave in the Horse Cave community became trapped as water rushed into the cave system. Rescue teams were initially unable to reach the stranded people, but eventually all were safely removed from the cave system. Between 2 and 4 inches of rain fell in less than 90 minutes. |
| 687,774 | HART CO. | HORSE CAVE | 05/21/2017 | 1,656 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Local law enforcement reported that Kentucky Highway 218 was blocked by high water west of US 31W. | An extremely warm, moist, and unstable air mass resided over the lower Ohio Valley during the middle of May. As a series of strong weather systems passed through the region, rounds of strong to severe thunderstorms developed and tracked across central Kentucky. |
| 711,489 | HART CO. | HORSE CAVE | 09/01/2017 | 615 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 10,000 | 0 | The Hart County Emergency Manager reported that a water rescue was performed in Horse Cave after a vehicle stalled out in flood waters. | Powerful and slow moving Hurricane Harvey made landfall along the Texas Gulf Coast as a Category 4 hurricane. After the storm stalled along the coast, producing extreme and unprecedented amounts of rainfall along the Texas and Louisiana coasts that resulted in catastrophic flooding in the Houston metro area. The system then lifted toward the Tennessee and lower Ohio River Valleys on Friday September 1. Heavy rain spread across central Kentucky with amounts ranging from 4 to 6 inches. There were localized amounts of 7 to 8 inches across Warren, Barren, Allen, Simpson, and Logan counties. Many roads became flooded with high water and there were reports of high water rescues performed. |
| 800,092 | HART CO. | HAMMONVILLE | 02/20/2019 | 630 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Kentucky 2785 was closed due to high water between mile markers 2.5 and 2.6. | On February 19, 2019, a broad upper trough dipped south to the Gulf of Mexico and carried abundant amounts of moisture towards the Ohio Valley. Once the moisture was transport was underway, isentropic lift caused 1.5 to 3 of rainfall along the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys. The higher amounts went as far north as south central Indiana.||On the 20th, an upper trough axis and cold front pushed through southern Indiana and central Kentucky. The heaviest rain fell during the morning and into the afternoon hours before tapering off from west to east late on the 20th.||Moving into the 22nd, the upper flow amplified once again with a deep southwest flow aloft. Isentropic lift was underway resulting in widespread light rain pushing northward from Tennessee into Kentucky during the day. By that night, the ridge increased slightly across the region with a surface warm front pushing northward. More moderate to heavy rainfall fell during the night which caused localized flooding. ||On the evening of the 23rd, surface low pressure in the vicinity of the Kansas City, MO area with an arcing cold front pushed towards the Mississippi River. This cold front pushed through the region during the night and brought more moderate to heavy |rain along with some thunderstorms. ||All this rain and the saturated ground caused many flooding problems around central Kentucky. |
| 800,063 | HART CO. | PERRYVILLE | 02/23/2019 | 1,758 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Water was rushing over Lawler Bend Road. There was another road closed on KY 1140. | On February 19, 2019, a broad upper trough dipped south to the Gulf of Mexico and carried abundant amounts of moisture towards the Ohio Valley. Once the moisture was transport was underway, isentropic lift caused 1.5 to 3 of rainfall along the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys. The higher amounts went as far north as south central Indiana.||On the 20th, an upper trough axis and cold front pushed through southern Indiana and central Kentucky. The heaviest rain fell during the morning and into the afternoon hours before tapering off from west to east late on the 20th.||Moving into the 22nd, the upper flow amplified once again with a deep southwest flow aloft. Isentropic lift was underway resulting in widespread light rain pushing northward from Tennessee into Kentucky during the day. By that night, the ridge increased slightly across the region with a surface warm front pushing northward. More moderate to heavy rainfall fell during the night which caused localized flooding. ||On the evening of the 23rd, surface low pressure in the vicinity of the Kansas City, MO area with an arcing cold front pushed towards the Mississippi River. This cold front pushed through the region during the night and brought more moderate to heavy |rain along with some thunderstorms. ||All this rain and the saturated ground caused many flooding problems around central Kentucky. |
| 883,151 | HART CO. | BONNIEVILLE | 03/12/2020 | 1,713 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Running water was flowing over the CSX railroad tracks. | On March 12th, two warm fronts moved north through the Ohio Valley carrying warm moist air ahead of cold front that moved through later in the day. As the cold front moved through, it produces heavy rainfall and flooding across central Kentucky. Severe hail and severe wind storms were also observed. |
| 913,761 | HART CO. | HIGH HICKORY | 07/17/2020 | 1,351 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Water was receding but still covering several roads just south of the Larue County line near US 31 East. | Upper high pressure was parked over the southern half of the United States while a slow moving front moved through Kentucky. As warm moist air advected northward, areas of heavy rainfall along the front caused flooding in two Kentucky counties. |
| 945,153 | HART CO. | WOODSONVILLE | 02/28/2021 | 1,131 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | There was a water rescue on West Back Street. | A stalled frontal boundary brought waves of heavy rainfall to central Kentucky from February 26 through February 28. This caused record rainfall, isolated severe winds, and even a tornado. As a result, Bowling Green set a February daily rainfall record with 5.11 on the 28th. The severe winds brought down some trees and a power pole, but the most property damage came from a brief EF1 tornado. |
| 945,155 | HART CO. | HORSE CAVE | 02/28/2021 | 1,132 | Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | There was flooding near the intersection of Highway 218 and 31 West. | A stalled frontal boundary brought waves of heavy rainfall to central Kentucky from February 26 through February 28. This caused record rainfall, isolated severe winds, and even a tornado. As a result, Bowling Green set a February daily rainfall record with 5.11 on the 28th. The severe winds brought down some trees and a power pole, but the most property damage came from a brief EF1 tornado. |
| 945,084 | HART CO. | HORSE CAVE | 02/28/2021 | 1,647 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Highway 218 in Horse Cave became impassable due to flooding. | A stalled frontal boundary brought waves of heavy rainfall to central Kentucky from February 26 through February 28. This caused record rainfall, isolated severe winds, and even a tornado. As a result, Bowling Green set a February daily rainfall record with 5.11 on the 28th. The severe winds brought down some trees and a power pole, but the most property damage came from a brief EF1 tornado. |
| 945,087 | HART CO. | LEGRAND | 02/28/2021 | 1,709 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | The 700-800 block and 40-50 block of Hundred Acre Pond Road was closed due to flooding. | A stalled frontal boundary brought waves of heavy rainfall to central Kentucky from February 26 through February 28. This caused record rainfall, isolated severe winds, and even a tornado. As a result, Bowling Green set a February daily rainfall record with 5.11 on the 28th. The severe winds brought down some trees and a power pole, but the most property damage came from a brief EF1 tornado. |
| 1,082,518 | HART CO. | PRICEVILLE | 02/16/2023 | 13 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.00K | Raider Hollow Road had to be closed due to flooding. | A strong storm system moved through the Ohio Valley beginning late in the evening on February 15th and continuing through much of the day on February 16th. An amplified mid- and upper-level trough moved across the central Plains during this time period, with an associated surface disturbance transiting from the Red River Valley northeastward into the Ohio Valley. A surface warm front was located parallel to the Ohio River during the majority of the event, with large-scale moist upglide persisting across much of Kentucky and southern Indiana. During the initial northward surge of moisture early on the 16th, elevated instability was sufficient for an isolated severe storm to develop across southern Kentucky, producing quarter-sized hail in Monroe County. However, through much of the remainder of the event, flooding would be the primary hazard as convection grew upscale into widespread disorganized clusters of moderate to heavy rain with embedded thunderstorms. |
| 1,206,923 | HART CO. | PRICEVILLE | 07/30/2024 | 13 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.00K | A vehicle had to be rescued along Raider Hollow Road. The vehicle was not on the road at the time of the rescue, but had fallen into a water-filled ditch along the side of the road. | A stationary front was located over the lower Ohio Valley from July 30th into July 31st, with upper level flow oriented from northwest to southeast across the region. This upper flow pattern brought multiple waves of showers and thunderstorms across southern Indiana and central Kentucky over this two day stretch. Scattered strong to severe storms mainly produced wind damage, with localized flash flooding also being reported where there was training of multiple rounds of showers and storms. |
| 1,236,440 | HART CO. | BONNIEVILLE | 02/15/2025 | 21 | Flash Flood | 2 | 0 | 10 | 0.00K | A woman called 911 after attempting to cross a flooded bridge AT 1900 Campground Road and water began to enter the vehicle. When the Bonnieville Fire Department arrived, they noticed a car partially submerged in high water. They noticed and extradited the driver's daughter from the car, but due to rising water couldn't get extradite the driver until the next day. Both occupants drowned. | A strong storm system moved across the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys on February 15th and 16th, 2025, bringing heavy rainfall and flooding, severe weather, and winter weather to central Kentucky. The large scale upper level pattern featured deep troughing ejecting across the central CONUS, with broad southwesterly flow occurring in the low and mid troposphere. Southerly flow helped to draw rich moisture up from the Gulf of America, with unseasonably high precipitable water for the middle of February, generally between 1.1 and 1.3 inches, overspreading the Tennessee and Kentucky. A nearly stationary surface front extending from west to east across the lower Ohio Valley provided a source for lift as warm and humid air ascended over a cool near surface layer. Light to moderate rain developed across the region early on the morning of the 15th, with rainfall getting heavier across south central Kentucky by around daybreak. This resulted in instances of flash flooding occurring across south central Kentucky during the mid-to-late morning hours. As the main surface low pressure system approached from the southwest during the afternoon on the 15th, the quasi-stationary surface front lifted into north central Kentucky, bringing a brief reprieve from rain across southern Kentucky while rainfall increased across northern Kentucky. As a broken line of storms developed ahead of an approaching cold front, temperatures and dewpoint temperatures increased considerably across southern Kentucky. This allowed for enough instability for a few strong to severe storms to develop near the Tennessee border. One portion of the line of storms produced a brief tornado over Simpson County, while other reports of wind damage and hail were received from Warren, Logan, and Monroe County. Still, heavy rainfall was the predominant impact from this system, as numerous instances of flooding and flash flooding were observed across Kentucky, and river flooding would occur over the following week. February 17th, one person drove into flood water and drown in Ohio County. Precipitation ended as a band of light to moderate snow on the morning of the 16th, producing accumulations of 1 to 3 inches before ending. |
| 1,258,969 | HART CO. | DEFRIES | 04/05/2025 | 17 | Flash Flood | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.00K | State Road 566 was closed near the Green/Hart County line due to high water. | On the night of April 2nd, 2025, a cold front approached the lower Ohio Valley. Along and ahead of the cold front, numerous supercells developed over southern Illinois and western Kentucky. These storms tracked eastward and occasionally grew upscale into a QLCS with bowing segments. Storms lasted all night and into the morning hours, as the cold front began to stall over the lower Ohio Valley. These storms left behind a wake of damage in many counties in central Kentucky. Over the next few days, waves of showers and storms rode along the cold front bringing lots of rain which lead to widespread flash and areal flooding. Showers and storms came through daily, until the evening of April 6th. Later, this flooding turned into historic and near-record breaking river flooding along many river basins. |
Probability of Future Events
Flooding in Hart County is a high-probability hazard, driven by frequent heavy-rainfall events, the county’s extensive river and stream network, and its karst landscape. Historical records indicate multiple flood or flash-flood events annually, with storm frequency increasing during spring and early summer when convective systems are most active. The Green River and Nolin River corridors experience periodic high water during multi-day rain events, while smaller tributaries—such as Bacon Creek, Lynn Camp Creek, Bear Creek, and Lick Creek—respond quickly to intense rainfall, creating short-notice flash-flood conditions.
Localized flooding is also common in karst areas, where sinkholes or drainage inlets can clog, leading to temporary ponding even outside mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs). Climate projections suggesting more frequent high-intensity rainfall events—particularly storms producing one inch or more of rain in a short period—may modestly increase flood probability over coming decades. For planning purposes, Hart County should expect recurring annual flood impacts, with several events capable of disrupting transportation or affecting structures each year and more significant riverine or flash-flood events occurring every few years.
Impact
Extreme heat can lead to heat exhaustion and heatstroke, particularly in outdoor workers, the elderly, and low-income households without access to cooling. It also increases energy demand, raising utility costs and the likelihood of power outages. Severe cold poses risks of frostbite, hypothermia, and infrastructure damage, including frozen pipes and malfunctioning heating systems. Both extremes can disrupt agricultural yields, livestock health, and local economies.
Built Environment:
Flooding can cause structural damage to both residential and commercial buildings and destroy furnishing and inventory.
Flooding will causes inconvenience or stoppage to many system. Transportation systems such as roads and railways become unpassable. Large amounts of water from a flood can affect water management systems such as the backup or hiatus of drainage, sanitary, and sewer systems. As heavy rains persist during a flood event, excess water drains into the ground water system. This causes the water table to rise and cause further ground water floods. If chemicals are mixed with flood waters, this can contaminate the ground water, a common source of fresh water for communities.
Natural Environment:
As flood waters engulf the surrounding natural environment, they are saturated with chemicals and other substances associated with the manmade environment that they have also been in contact with. As these abnormal waters settle and flows through natural ecosystems they can alter and even destroy both plant and animal life. When the flow of flood waters becomes so immense, it can physically destroy or uproot naturally growing vegetation and also drive specific species of animals out of their natural habitats for good.
Social Environment:
People
People with property located in the floodplain or within areas subject to seepage are vulnerable to flooding. Stoppage to transportation systems can make it very difficult for isolated populations to receive aid or escape breeching flood waters. Vulnerable populations, such as the elderly or people who need medical attention, may be temporarily cut off from accessing life-saving resources.
Economy
Floods can affect local economies by disrupting transportation systems needed for people to get to and from work and destroying places of business and means of production. When flooding occurs in more rural areas, livestock and agricultural system will be affected. Crops can be destroyed in the growing season, or prevent from seeding in the off season. Large insurance payouts to residents or business owners who have procured flood insurance might also have an economic impact.
Climate Impacts on Flooding:
Climate change models predict and increase in overall temperature globally for the coming decades, including the BRADD region. With a potential rise of several degrees Fahrenheit, multiple services, systems, and activities face disruption and impact. Temperature increases this small may not seem threatening, but the cumulative impacts will affect weather events, human health, and ecosystem functions, along with economic and social issues related to energy use and cost of living.
Working with
AT&T’s Climate Resilient Communities Program and the
Climate Risk and Resilience (ClimRR) Portal, BRADD identified additional opportunities for hazard mitigation action items associated with climate impacts for flooding in the Barren River Region. To view an interactive report of these findings,
click here.
Hart County’s vulnerability to flooding is moderate to high, shaped by its river corridors, steep drainage basins, low-water crossings, and karst topography. Communities located near the Green River and Nolin River, as well as structures and farms located along major tributaries, face increased exposure to inundation during prolonged rainfall. Rural areas with limited drainage infrastructure, older culverts, or undersized road crossings are particularly susceptible to washouts and access disruptions.
While the number of FEMA-classified repetitive-loss structures is low, many homes—especially older residences and manufactured housing—remain sensitive to flooding due to limited elevation, low foundation heights, or proximity to drainage paths. Karst-dense areas add unique vulnerability: blocked sinkhole inlets or saturated soils can cause sudden, localized flooding that is unpredictable and difficult to map. Agricultural operations may also experience repeated impacts when fields, fences, or access roads flood during storm seasons.
Populations most at risk include households with limited mobility, limited vehicle access, or medical dependencies, as well as residents living in low-lying rural areas where emergency response and evacuation are constrained by distance and narrow road networks. Critical facilities near stream corridors or in areas prone to access disruptions may face temporary operational challenges. Continued maintenance of drainage systems, improvements to road crossings, and public education on flood safety are key to reducing vulnerability across the county.
Between 2000 and 2025, Hart County has had 39 flood events. Further, Hart County has received FEMA Disaster Declarations as a result of flooding in 2003, 2004 (2), 2008, 2009, 2010, 2015, 2020, and 2021. Overall, Hart County experiences high vulnerability to flood events. The risk for Hart County’s cities is analyzed below.
The City of Bonnieville has had one historic occurrence of flood and flash-flood events since 2000. Its vulnerability is low.
The City of Horse Cave has had seven historic occurrences of flood and flash-flood events since 2000. Its vulnerability is medium.
The City of Munfordville has had one historic occurrence of flood and flash-flood events since 2000. Its vulnerability is low.
Hazardous Material in Hart County
Background
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) defines hazardous materials as liquid, solid, contained gas, or sludge wastes that contain properties that are potentially harmful to human health or the environment. Hazardous materials are typically released in the form of spills, leaks, or vapor emission. These are known as either a point source release that can be traced back to a single origin, or a non-point source releases that occur incrementally, slowly polluting the environment.
These chemicals are used in industry, agriculture, medicine, research, and consumer goods. Hazardous materials come in the form of explosive flammable and combustible substances, poisons, and radioactive materials. In all its forms, hazardous materials can cause death, serious injury, long-lasting health effects, along with damage to buildings, homes, and other property.
Facilities that Contain Large Quantities of Hazardous Materials
Many products containing hazardous chemicals are used and stored in homes routinely. These products are also shipped daily on the nation’s highways, railroads, waterways, and pipelines. Varying quantities of hazardous materials are manufactured, used, or stored at an estimated 4.5 million facilities in the United States from local dry cleaning establishments, service stations, and garden supply stores to hospitals and major industrial plants. Facilities that contain large quantities of hazardous materials are regulated to reduce the risk of point source spills. These facilities are categorized as Tier II facilities, which are defined as those that are equal or exceed the thresholds of hazardous materials under Section 311(e) of Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA).
Tier II facilities are required to complete a Tier II Emergency and Hazardous Chemical Inventory report by the Kentucky Emergency Response Commission (KyERC). These facilities are also required to report to the Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC) and local fire departments. Tier II storage facilities are required to comply with federal safety requirements and are regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Title III of SARA regulates the packaging, labeling, handling, storage and transportation of hazardous materials. The law requires facilities to furnish information about the quantities and health effects of materials used at the facility, and to promptly notify local and State officials whenever a significant release of hazardous materials occurs.
Other Federal laws that regulate hazardous materials include: Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (RCRA), Hazardous Materials Transportation Act (HMTA), Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA), Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), Clean Air Act, and Norman Y. Mineta Research and Special Programs Improvement Act of 2004.
Location and Extent
The extent of a hazardous materials release is characterized by the type of substance, quantity released, state (gas, liquid, solid), dispersion behavior, and weather/terrain conditions. Releases may be constrained and local (e.g. a leaking drum or tank) or large and far-reaching (e.g. vapors spreading over multiple miles, groundwater contamination migrating). Depending on the chemical’s toxicity, volatility, and persistence, an incident could produce acute health effects, long-term environmental harm, or chronic exposure zones. In the BRADD region, credible scenarios include a small spill alongside a highway, a rail car release near populated areas, or a storage tank failure, each producing different spatial footprints and hazard zones.
Past Events
The BRADD region has a record of hazardous materials incidents, particularly associated with transportation and industrial operations. Kentucky has experienced several costly hazmat transit incidents in recent years. In rail transport, derailments involving chemical cargo have spurred evacuations and environmental response. For example, in 2007, a major derailment in Kentucky released hazardous materials and required area evacuation. Nationally and regionally, chemical spills from industrial plants have caused injury, property damage, and remediation efforts. Some incidents, such as the 1981 Louisville sewer explosions (driven by hexane vapors in sewer lines), illustrate how improper chemical disposal can lead to infrastructure destruction. These past events highlight the potential for both acute and lingering impacts of hazardous material releases.
Probability of Future Events
The probability of a hazardous materials (HazMat) incident in Hart County is considered moderate, driven by the county’s roadway network, industrial activity, agricultural chemical use, and proximity to regional freight routes. While Hart County does not have a large concentration of high-risk industrial facilities, it is bisected by major transportation corridors—I-65, U.S. 31W, KY 218, and KY 88—that carry regular shipments of petroleum products, fertilizers, corrosives, and other regulated materials. Transportation-related HazMat spills represent the most likely scenario, with minor incidents (fuel leaks, agricultural chemical releases, or small roadway spills) occurring periodically throughout the region.
Rail corridors near neighboring counties also increase regional exposure, as rail traffic can include hazardous commodities with potential impacts extending into Hart County depending on plume movement, weather, and response capacity. Additionally, the county’s agricultural sector routinely uses fertilizers, pesticides, and anhydrous ammonia, creating seasonal potential for localized releases due to equipment failure, storage issues, or transportation mishaps.
While large-scale industrial accidents are less probable, the presence of small manufacturing sites, utility infrastructure, fuel storage tanks, and commercial facilities contributes to a steady baseline of risk. Overall, Hart County should plan for occasional small to moderate HazMat incidents each year and maintain readiness for low-probability but high-consequence events, particularly along major transportation corridors.
Impact
Hazardous materials releases can produce widespread and cascading effects across built, natural, and social environments.
Built Environment
Hazardous materials releases can damage roadways, contaminate vehicles or structures, and require temporary closures of key transportation routes. Spills affecting culverts or drainage systems may require costly cleanup to prevent further environmental spread.
Natural Environment
The Green River and its tributaries are highly sensitive to chemical contamination. Fuel or fertilizer spills can produce fish kills, degrade water quality, and disrupt riparian ecosystems. Agricultural soil contamination may impact crop productivity and groundwater quality.
Social Environment
Hazardous materials incidents may require evacuation or shelter-in-place orders for households near spill locations. Impacts can include temporary school closures, disrupted commutes, or delayed emergency response. Vulnerable populations—including older adults, motorists, and individuals in vehicles involved in the incident—are at heightened risk.
Climate Impacts
Increasing temperatures and more volatile weather may heighten the risk of chemical volatilization, stress on agricultural chemical storage, and accident frequency during severe-weather periods.
Vulnerability
Hart County’s vulnerability to hazardous materials incidents is moderate, shaped by its transportation corridors, agricultural activity, dispersed population, and the proximity of critical facilities to major roadways. The highest vulnerability areas are those located near I-65, U.S. 31W, KY 218, and KY 88, where a HazMat release—particularly involving fuels, corrosives, or anhydrous ammonia—could affect travelers, adjacent businesses, schools, or residential areas. Communities such as Munfordville, Bonnieville, and Horse Cave experience elevated exposure due to their location along busy routes used for freight movement.
Agricultural operations increase vulnerability through routine use and storage of pesticides, herbicides, and nitrogen-based fertilizers, including anhydrous ammonia, which can create inhalation hazards during accidental releases. Smaller bulk fuel storage tanks at farms and commercial facilities also pose spill risks that can affect soil, groundwater, and nearby property.
Hart County’s rural nature may limit the speed of response, particularly in isolated areas where emergency services face longer travel distances. Schools, long-term care facilities, and medical offices near major roadways may also be impacted if a release requires shelter-in-place or evacuation. Additionally, the county’s karst geology can allow certain hazardous substances—especially petroleum-based products—to migrate rapidly through subsurface pathways, increasing environmental vulnerability and complicating remediation.
Populations most at risk include workers involved in chemical handling, residents living near major transportation routes, individuals with respiratory conditions, and households with limited access to timely emergency notifications. Continued coordination with regional HazMat teams, improved public awareness, and reinforcement of safe agricultural handling practices can help reduce vulnerability across the county.
Hart County is moderately vulnerable due to its location along Interstate 65 and multiple state routes that support commercial freight. Hazardous cargoes moving through the county pose risks to communities such as Munfordville
and Horse Cave, where rail and roadway infrastructure converge. The county’s karst landscape, tourism activity, and water-dependent industries amplify the potential consequences of chemical releases affecting air or groundwater
quality.
Emerging Infectious Disease in Hart County
Description
An Emerging Infectious Disease (EID) is an emerging or re-emerging virus that has not reached the level of a pandemic. EIDs may primarily infect smaller pockets within a larger community due to some population immunity or limited contact. Because it has not reached a level of pandemic and, thus, fewer people have been infected, there will be more resources available to aid in response and recovery.
The Baylor University College of Medicine defines Emerging Infectious Disease, or EID, as “infections that have recently appeared within a population or those who incidence or geographic range is rapidly increasing or threatens to increase in the near future”. Recent outbreaks that have been classified as EID were SARS, MERS, Ebola, chikungunya, avian flu, swine flu, and zika. EIDs are an important consideration for public health professionals and local elected officials because they have been the cause of some of the deadliest pandemics in history, such as the 1918 Spanish Influenza and the HIV/AIDs outbreak.
Causes of Emerging Infectious Diseases
There are four primary causes for the emergence and spread of an infectious disease per the Baylor College of Medicine:
- Previously undetected or unknown infectious agents
- Known agents that have spread to new geographic locations or new populations
- Previously known agents whose role in specific diseases have previously gone unrecognized
- Re-emergence of agents whose incidence of disease had significantly declined in the past, but whose incidence of disease has reappeared. This class of diseases is known as re-emerging infectious diseases.
How Do Emerging Infectious Diseases Spread?
There are a myriad of ways in which EIDs can spread to and throughout the population. This subsection explores them by dividing them into two categories: direct versus indirect contact.
Direct Contact
Direct contact refers to when an individual is infected by another person or an animal that has the disease.
1. Person to Person – Person to person disease spread occurs when an individual makes direct contact with someone who has already contracted the disease through kissing, hugging, touching, coughing, or sneezing.
2. Animal to Person – Animal to person transfer can occur if a person is either bitten or scratched by an infected animal. Spread can also occur by handling animal waste.
3. Mother to Unborn Child – Germs that cause infectious disease can be spread to an unborn child while it is still in the womb by passing through the placenta or it can be transmitted during birth.
Indirect Contact
Indirect infectious disease spread occurs when the infection is spread through an inanimate object or by something that has not contracted the illness, but is simply a host.
Insect Bites – Some infectious diseases, such as malaria, are carried by insects and spread through bites. The insects that act as hosts to the disease is known as a vector.
Food Contamination – Food and water may be contaminated by a germ and human consumption is the point of contamination.
Extent
Emerging infectious disease (EID) outbreaks can range from small, localized clusters to countywide or multi-county epidemics, depending on the pathogen’s transmissibility (e.g., R₀), incubation/asymptomatic period, mode of transmission (airborne, droplet, contact, vector, food/water), clinical severity, and availability of countermeasures (vaccines/antivirals). Severity is often expressed through combinations of attack rate, hospitalization and ICU utilization, case fatality ratio, and the duration/number of waves, which together determine stress on healthcare, schools, businesses, and critical services. FEMA’s planning policy expects plans to describe a hazard’s type, location, and extent and to include previous occurrences and the probability of future events; for EIDs, this typically means using qualitative scales (e.g., low/moderate/high) informed by public-health surveillance and scenario analysis.
Past Events
Hart County’s EID context mirrors the region and state: 2009 H1N1 influenza produced widespread illness and vaccination campaigns; COVID-19 (2020–2022) caused repeated surges, remote learning periods, healthcare strain, and workforce disruptions across south-central Kentucky, with lingering recovery needs. At smaller scales, seasonal influenza, gastrointestinal outbreaks, hepatitis A, and tick-borne illnesses recur and periodically challenge local public-health capacity. For hazard-mitigation purposes, these events document that infectious hazards are recurring and can escalate quickly, even when initial clusters are small.
Location
EIDs are non-spatial at the county scale: exposure is countywide and follows human activity patterns. Transmission risk is elevated where people congregate or where mobility is high, including schools and childcare sites, long-term care and healthcare facilities, workplaces and distribution/logistics hubs, correctional settings, places of worship, and events/venues. Vulnerability may be higher for neighborhoods with older adults, people with chronic conditions, uninsured/under-insured residents, or limited access to primary care, and for settings with shared housing or limited ventilation.
The probability of emerging infectious disease (EID) activity in Hart County is ongoing and moderate, with routine outbreaks of respiratory and gastrointestinal pathogens expected annually—particularly during school terms, peak winter illness seasons, and periods of increased regional travel. As part of a highly connected region along the I-65 corridor, Hart County experiences regular population movement through Munfordville, Horse Cave, and nearby tourism centers, increasing opportunities for disease introduction and spread.
Over a 5–10-year planning horizon, the likelihood of a significant EID event—one capable of stressing healthcare resources, disrupting school operations, or triggering countywide public-health interventions—is moderate to high, based on recent regional experience with COVID-19, influenza surges, RSV waves, and norovirus clusters. Congregate settings such as schools, long-term care facilities, correctional environments, and food-processing or manufacturing workplaces increase transmission probability for both known and novel pathogens.
Probability is further influenced by vaccination uptake, healthcare access, and timeliness of detection. Lower vaccination or booster rates, limited access to primary care, and delays in testing can elevate the likelihood of sustained transmission. Conversely, strong public-health communication, rapid testing availability, and coordinated outbreak response lower overall risk. Climate-related stressors—including hotter summers, reduced air quality, and shifting vector ecology—may indirectly increase disease transmission by contributing to indoor crowding or extending seasonal activity for certain pathogens.
For planning purposes, Hart County should expect consistent annual EID activity, with the potential for periodic high-impact outbreaks that require coordinated public-health and emergency-management action.
Impact
Emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) can trigger cascading consequences across systems even when case counts are moderate, because illness, isolation, and precautionary measures disrupt people, places, and services simultaneously. Direct health impacts (morbidity, mortality) are compounded by workforce absenteeism, supply-chain delays, and surges on healthcare and public health operations. The breadth of consequences depends on the pathogen’s transmissibility and severity, the speed of detection, and the availability of countermeasures (testing, treatment, vaccination) and risk communication.
Built Environment
EIDs strain the built environment indirectly by stressing the facilities and systems people operate. Hospitals, clinics, EMS stations, and pharmacies can exceed functional capacity, requiring surge spaces and changes to ventilation and patient flow. Public buildings, schools, and workplaces may need operational adjustments (enhanced cleaning, spacing, HVAC improvements), and staffing gaps can delay maintenance for roads, utilities, and public facilities. Supply-chain disruptions can slow construction projects and limit availability of critical parts for water/wastewater, transportation, and communications systems.
Natural Environment
While EIDs primarily affect human systems, response activities can influence the environment. Increased use of medical disposables and disinfectants elevates medical and solid-waste volumes, requiring proper handling to avoid secondary environmental impacts. Wastewater surveillance—often deployed for EIDs—integrates environmental sampling into public health practice and necessitates careful lab and sampling protocols. Changes in human activity (e.g., reduced travel) may temporarily alter local air quality and traffic-related emissions.
Social Environment
EIDs most strongly affect the social environment. Illness, isolation, and caregiving responsibilities reduce workforce availability, interrupt schooling and childcare, and strain household finances—especially for hourly and small-business workers. Behavioral-health needs rise due to stress, grief, and prolonged uncertainty, while misinformation can erode trust and complicate protective actions. Impacts are disproportionate for older adults, people with chronic conditions, low-income and uninsured residents, and those in congregate or high-exposure settings (schools, long-term care, logistics and retail).
Climate Impacts on EID
Climate does not directly “cause” EIDs, but it can shape risk conditions. Hotter summers and poor air-quality days can drive indoor crowding, increasing transmission opportunities for respiratory pathogens. Shifts in precipitation and temperature can extend vector seasons (ticks, mosquitoes) and alter wildlife–human interfaces that enable zoonotic spillover. Climate stress on infrastructure and households (e.g., heat waves, severe storms) can also complicate access to care and continuity of operations, amplifying the consequences of an outbreak when it coincides with other hazards.
Vulnerability
Hart County’s vulnerability to emerging infectious diseases is moderate to high, shaped by its population distribution, workforce characteristics, healthcare access, and concentration of congregate settings. Schools, long-term care facilities, correctional environments, industrial and food-processing worksites, and tourism-driven service workplaces create conditions for rapid transmission when novel or seasonal pathogens emerge. Many residents commute along the I-65 corridor or work in settings with high interpersonal contact, increasing exposure and the potential for widespread community spread.
Healthcare access gaps—including limited local specialty care, reliance on regional hospitals outside the county, and transportation barriers for rural households—can delay diagnosis and treatment, increasing overall vulnerability. Older adults, individuals with chronic health conditions, low-income households, and residents without consistent primary care are disproportionately affected during outbreaks. Hart County also has segments of the population with limited broadband access, making telehealth or remote learning difficult during high-impact EID events.
Small businesses, schools, and essential services face operational challenges during workforce shortages or quarantine periods, and households with limited paid leave or limited childcare options experience added strain. Additionally, the county’s tourism economy—particularly in areas around Horse Cave and Mammoth Cave attractions—periodically increases population mixing, raising vulnerability to disease introduction during peak travel seasons.
Hart County’s vulnerability is moderated by mixed rural/transportation attributes. The county’s highways, visitor traffic, and local attractions may contribute to pathogen importation risk. However, the dispersed population
and fewer congregate facilities limit explosive person-to-person spread in the early phase. Nonetheless, once introduced, resource constraints may hamper containment and treatment efforts.
Karst/Sinkholes in Hart County
Description
Karst refers to a type of topography formed in limestone, dolomite, or gypsum by dissolution of these rocks by rain and underground water, and is characterized by closed depressions or sinkholes, and underground drainage. During the formation of karst terrain, water percolating underground enlarges subsurface flow paths by dissolving the rock. As some subsurface flow paths are enlarged over time, water movement in the aquifer changes character from one where ground water flow was initially through small, scattered openings in the rock to one where most flow is concentrated in a few well developed conduits. As the flow paths continue to enlarge, caves may be formed and the ground water table may drop below the level of surface streams. Surface streams may then begin to lose water to the subsurface. As more of the surface water is diverted underground, surface streams and stream valleys become a less conspicuous feature of the land surface, and are replaced by closed basins. Funnels or circular depressions called sinkholes often develop at some places in the low points of these closed basins.
Types of Sinkholes
Solution Sinkholes are formed by the weathering by dissolution of exposed soluble bedrock (limestone, dolomite, marble, and rock salt) at the land surface. Surface water collects in the natural depressions and slowly dissolves a sinkhole.
Collapse Sinkholes form when the surface materials suddenly sink into a subsurface cavity or cave. Cavities form slowly over time as groundwater moves along fractures in soluble bedrock which enlarges them through dissolution. Collapses may occur when the cavity gets sufficiently large and the “roof” becomes too thin to support the weight of any overlying rock or sediment causing the cavity to collapse; or if groundwater levels are lowered causing the overlying sediment to first erode and then collapse into the dewatered cavity.
Subsidence Sinkholes – Similar to solution sinkholes, except the soluble bedrock is covered by a thin layer of soil and/or sediment. Surface water infiltration dissolves cavities where the bedrock is most intensely fractured resulting in the overlying sediment to gradually move downward into the expanding cavity. Sinkhole collapse is the hazard most commonly associated with karst. This hazard occurs in the soil that lies on top of soluble bedrock.
Extent & Past Events
Why Do Sinkholes Collapse?
The Kentucky Geological Survey (KGS) identifies two ways in which sinkholes collapse:
- The roof of a cave becomes too thin to support the weight of the material above it and collapses.
- Limestone bedrock develops a fracture that is enlarged by water dissolving the limestone. As the limestone erodes, the soil above it slowly falls into the developing sinkhole. This type of cover-collapse is typically very slow and occurs over a long period of time. Only in rare instances will limestone bedrock dissolution cause a rapid collapse.
Location
Karst-related hazards happen quickly and without warning. However, scientists have mapped a large portion of the BRADD region to determine where these hazards are most likely to occur. A snapshot of this mapping is located above. to view a fully interactive map and explore sinkholes by jurisdiction, click on the link below.
Probability of Future Events
The likelihood of new sinkhole formation or reactivation of existing depressions is moderate under current conditions and increasing with expanding development, aging stormwater systems, and heavier rainfall patterns. While most collapses are small and isolated, their unpredictability and potential to undermine roads or utilities justify continued monitoring and maintenance of known karst features.
Impact
Built Environment
Damages to human-made structures caused by sinkholes can range from minor to severe. Office buildings, homes, roads, utility lines, and other critical facility or structure located above a sinkhole could be affected. If the sinkhole is large enough, it can affect an entire building or home when it collapses. Minor sinkholes will cause brief damage and are usually fixed with simple excavation techniques.
Drainage water runs into sinkholes during heavy rains and will affect any structures built within the flood plain of a given sinkhole. Present sinkhole vulnerability to flooding can alter the urbanization plans and other forms of expansion and commercialization.
Transportation systems are greatly affected by sinkholes since much of the BRADD’s roadways and highways are constructed over sinkholes. When these sinkholes collapse they not only destroy the road itself but the ground beneath it. Intricate and expensive excavating techniques must be utilized to repair a roadway and its ground foundation affected by a sinkhole.
Because of the vast amount of sinkholes in the BRADD region, there is an extensive groundwater network that supplies public water systems serving many residents. Groundwater essentially originates from rain or other forms of precipitation that soak into the ground and move forward to fill cracks and other openings in soils and rocks. This permeable layer is known as an aquifer. Groundwater is also an abundance natural resource making up 9% of all the freshwater in the world. This water is a direct main source for usable, fresh water for over a million residents in Kentucky, including the Barren River region. For surface streams, groundwater provides as a base flow when it is not raining. Groundwater, especially in a karst environment, is highly susceptible to contamination. Impure rain water, septic tank effluent, agricultural pesticides, and animal waste all contribute to the contamination of groundwater through seepage and runoff. However, contamination problems are aggravated in karst areas by the practice of the disposal of solid and liquid wastes into sinkholes where they may be washed directly into the aquifer.
Natural Environment
The natural environment is very vulnerable to the effects of sinkholes. Carbonic rock such as limestone is eroded away by acidic rain and water runoff. This carves out subterranean passages throughout the underside of the landscape. When the ground level clay or cohesive rock materials cannot support the weight, they cave in and fall into these passages. The result is a karst landscape. Sinkhole collapse greatly damages and alters the natural environment. Groundwater contamination can kill cave aquatic life.
Social Environment
People – Anyone living or working near sinkholes or within the drainage basin of a sinkhole is vulnerable. Karst can lead to radon-related health concerns, sinkhole collapse can lead to loss of life and property, groundwater contamination may lead to build-up of dangerous gases in homes and businesses, and flooding may cause drowning.
Economy – Cost of making repairs to property, repairing roads, preparing special foundations for large buildings, an extending public water lines to replace polluted groundwater.
Climate Change and Sinkholes
There is an expected impact on sinkholes due to climate change. Increasing temperatures will likely affect hydrologic processes, enhance dissolution of limestone, and promote soil failure. It was found in one study that with every increase of 0.2ºF in global temperature, there is a 1-3% increase in the number of sinkholes, thus, there is a high possibility that an increase in sinkholes is due to climate change. With an increase in intense rain events, there could also be an increase in sinkholes opening due to runoff and undermining of soil.
Potential impacts include:
- Damage to roads and property
- Displacement of residents
- Transportation issues (traffic, blocked routes)
- Economic loss due to changes in development patterns or sinkholes/flooding
Working with AT&T’s Climate Resilient Communities Program and the Climate Risk and Resilience (ClimRR) Portal, BRADD identified additional opportunities for hazard mitigation action items associated with climate impacts for Karst Landscapes in the Barren River Region. To view an interactive report of these findings, click here.
Vulnerability
Hart County’s vulnerability to karst and sinkhole hazards is high, reflecting the county’s extensive karst terrain, widespread sinkhole plains, and the presence of major cave systems—most notably in and around Horse Cave, Cave City, Munfordville, and the Mammoth Cave region. Residential neighborhoods, farms, roadways, and commercial areas located on soluble limestone formations are susceptible to subsidence, sinkhole collapse, and drainage disruption, particularly during periods of heavy rainfall or rapid soil saturation. Development pressures along I-65, U.S. 31W, and growth near tourist destinations have increased the number of structures and roadways placed in areas with underlying karst features, elevating overall exposure.
Vulnerability is especially high where stormwater systems, fill material, or grading activities unintentionally direct runoff toward sinkholes or concealed conduits, increasing the likelihood of sudden collapse or flooding. Homes and businesses with foundations over shallow bedrock or undocumented subsurface voids face elevated structural risk. Rural areas dependent on private wells may also experience water-quality impacts when contaminants enter karst conduits that rapidly transmit pollutants through the groundwater system.
Critical infrastructure—including roads, culverts, utilities, and wastewater systems—faces additional vulnerability, as voids or collapses can undermine pavements, damage water/sewer lines, and disrupt essential services. Emergency response can be complicated by road closures, unpredictable ground failure, or loss of access in rural areas. Populations most at risk include residents living in older homes with unknown foundation conditions, those lacking financial resources for mitigation or repairs, and households in low-lying karst depressions prone to flooding when sinkhole inlets clog.
Mitigating these vulnerabilities requires continued coordination with the Kentucky Geological Survey (KGS), improved stormwater design standards, regular inspection of known sinkhole areas, and strong public education on recognizing and reporting signs of subsidence or drainage failure across the county.
Vulnerability Summary Analysis
Based on KGS’s data there are 10,224 Topo and LiDAR-identified sinkholes within Hart County. In the unincorporated areas of the county (only county land), there are 9,958 topo and LiDAR-identified sinkholes.
The majority of Hart County has very high karst/sinkhole potential.Due to these factors, Hart County experiences very high vulnerability to sinkholes. The risk for Hart County’s cities is analyzed below.
Bonnieville has 11 identified sinkholes. Its vulnerability is low.
Horse Cave has 204 identified sinkholes. Its vulnerability is high.
Munfordville has 85 identified sinkholes. Its vulnerability is high.
Landslides in Hart County
Description
Landslides are the downslope movement of rock, soil, or both under the influence of gravity. Landslides occur when gravity exceeds the strength of earth materials that compose the slope.
What Triggers Landslides?
Often landslides are triggered from a combination of activities including:
- Intense rainfall: Soil and rock material on slopes may have high moisture levels, increasing pore-water pressure, which destabilizes the slope and causes slides. Subsequently, surface-water erosion may also cause landslides.
- Earthquakes: Ground shaking during earthquakes can cause landslides in many different topographic and geologic settings.
- Water-level change: Rapid lowering of groundwater against a slope can trigger landslides, especially along dams, coastlines, reservoirs, and rivers. The pore pressure in soil or rock material may not be able to adjust to a sudden drawdown of water causing slope instability.
- Human activities: Many destabilizing activities may trigger landslides. These include vegetation removal, surface and underground mining, excavation of toe slopes, loading on a slope, and leakage from pipes.
- Geology: Easily weathered rock types and soils, especially on steep slopes, combined with the triggers listed above are susceptible to landslides.
How Do Landslides Move?
Landslide is a general term for a wide variety of down slope movements of earth materials that result in the perceptible downward and outward movement of soil, rock, and vegetation under the influence of gravity. In areas where a landslide is prone to happen, the event itself usually must be triggered by some other phenomena such as an earthquake or heavy rainfall. Slope failures are major natural hazards throughout the world. A slope failure is classified based on how it moves and the type of material being moved.
There are four identified types of major slope failures:
- Slide: A slide is the downward displacement of material along one or more failure surfaces. The material can be soil, rock, etc., and may be broken into a number of pieces or remain a single, intact mass.
- Flow: A flow is similar to a slide in the fact that downward displace of materials occur. However, the distinguishing characteristic is the high water content involved in a flow. The combination of loose soils, rocks, organic matter, air, and water form a mass with the appearance of a viscous fluid.
- Lateral Spread: A lateral spread refers to the displacement of gently sloping ground as a result of pore pressure build-up or liquefaction in a shallow, underlying layer of material. The movement rates are typically very slow but can occur spontaneously.
- Falls: A fall occurs when masses of roc or other material detach and descend down a steep slope or cliff. Falls usually result from an earthquake or common erosion and gravity. The movement rate of a fall is extremely rapid and damage can be critical.
Location, Past Events, & Extent
Landslide Susceptibility
During Kentucky’s 2018 Hazard Mitigation Plan update, Kentucky Geological Survey (KGS) developed a landslide susceptibility map for the state in order to show which areas have greater landslide risk due to slope and geology. Using the KGS data, BRADD staff created a landslide susceptibility dashboard for our 10-counties. Click on the button below to access the BRADD Landslide Dashboard.
Probability
The probability of landslides in Hart County is low to moderate, with occurrences generally limited to steep slopes, streambanks, road cuts, and areas where drainage patterns have been altered. Based on regional records and BRADD’s landslide inventory, Hart County has experienced 6 documented landslide events over the past 30 years, indicating an annualized occurrence rate of approximately 0.2 events per year, or a 20% chance of at least one landslide event in any given year. This rate reflects the county’s rolling topography, which is less prone to major slope failures compared to counties with more rugged terrain, but still capable of producing localized slides and embankment failures.
Landslide probability increases during periods of prolonged or intense rainfall, especially in areas with clay-rich soils, steep stream valleys, and roadway embankments that become saturated or undercut. Freeze–thaw cycles, common in winter months, can further weaken slopes and contribute to small-scale failures. Construction activities, changes in land use, and modifications to natural drainage can also trigger localized instability, particularly where culverts or ditches concentrate runoff.
Although large, damaging landslides are uncommon in Hart County, the combination of sporadic but recurring rainfall-driven events and the region’s susceptibility to smaller slides means that landslide hazards remain a persistent, though relatively low-frequency, concern for emergency managers and transportation officials.
Impact
Built Environment
Human-made structures are directly affected by landslides. Any structures such as buildings, roads, bridges, street lighting, and power lines can be completely destroyed if in the direct life of the landslide.
Any roads or other transportation systems that are in the path of a landslide will be directly affected. Roads can either be covered by the debris or wiped completely away. Power lines and telecommunication networks would also be directly affected. Along with roads, telephone poles and towers can be damaged and ruined during the event of a landslide.
Natural Environment
A landslide, itself, involves natural materials. The drastic displacement of earth, trees, and debris can cause persistent problems such as continued erosion. Landslides can carry contaminated materials into streams and other water bodies, directly affect wildlife by destroying wildlife habitats such as wooded areas, streams, and ponds. This can affect the ecosystem and all living things within it.
Social Environment
People
The vulnerability of a landslide do not affect one section of the population more than another. Anyone living in an area at high risk of a landslide will be affected. Landslides can occur spontaneously and randomly.
Economy
Economic costs associated with landslides are due to replacement costs for any property damaged. If transportation and telecommunication networks are damaged or destroyed, it may lead to business closures for a brief time.
Climate Change and Sinkholes
There is limited evidence connecting climate change to an increase in landslides; however, it is theorized that more intense rainfall, rain-on-snow events, mean warming, permafrost thaw, glacier retreat, and coastal erosion can lead to rockface instability and decreased slope (IPCC 2022). There has been an increase in landslides in certain areas of the world and it is expected that there will be an increase in frequency in northwestern North America. Studies make these projections based on increasing rainfall intensity and frequency, so it is possible that the BRADD region may see minor impacts from these in the form of slumps and low-grade slope failure. Kentucky’s landslides mostly occur in Eastern Kentucky, so the BRADD region should not be significantly impacted.
- Potential impacts include:
- Infrastructure damage
- Ecosystem damage
- Loss of life
- Economic loss
Vulnerability
Hart County’s vulnerability to landslides is moderate, concentrated in areas with steeper terrain, clay-rich soils, and roadway or streambank embankments that can become unstable during periods of heavy or prolonged rainfall. While much of the county consists of gently rolling topography, localized areas—particularly along the Green River and Nolin River valleys, the Bacon Creek corridor, and sections of KY 88, KY 357, KY 218, and rural secondary roads—are susceptible to small-scale slope failures, shoulder collapses, and embankment erosion.
Roadway infrastructure is among the most vulnerable elements, as even minor landslides can block lanes, damage pavements, or undermine culverts and ditches. Rural routes with limited alternate access increase risk for isolated communities when slopes fail or debris covers the roadway. Homes built near steep creek banks, on cut-and-fill slopes, or in areas where grading has altered natural drainage patterns are also at elevated risk. Manufactured homes and older structures with shallow foundations may experience greater sensitivity to soil movement.
Hart County’s karst terrain adds an additional dimension of vulnerability, as subsurface voids and unpredictable drainage patterns can weaken slopes or contribute to ground instability following intense rainfall. Agricultural lands located along steep streambanks may also experience erosion or bank sloughing during high-water events.
Populations most vulnerable include residents living along narrow valleys or steep road corridors, households with limited ability to finance repairs, and those who rely on single-access roads that could be temporarily blocked by debris. Emergency response and school transportation may be disrupted when slides occur near bus routes or key connector roads.
Overall, while large landslides are uncommon, recurrent small-scale failures and the potential for transportation disruptions contribute to a meaningful but localized vulnerability profile for Hart County.
Vulnerability Summary Analysis
Since 1991, KGS has recorded 6 landslides in Hart County.
Because of these factors, Hart County experiences low vulnerability to landslide events. Because Munfordville reflects Hart County’s history of landslides, it also experiences a low vulnerability.
Pandemics in Hart County
What is a Pandemic?
The World Health Organization (WHO) describes a pandemic as the “worldwide spread of a new disease”. Often there is little to no immunity within a community to this new or re-emergent disease, so transmission and contraction is significant. While a general definition of ‘pandemic’ exists, the term is often misapplied. However, there are characteristics of disease and disease spread that allow public health practitioners to identify a pandemic and begin responding.
Characteristics of Pandemics
David Morens, Gregory Folkers, and Anthony Fauci published a paper in a 2009 volume of The Journal of Infectious Diseases describing the eight characteristics of a pandemic. They note that pandemic is often used by the media to describe disease spread which does not rise to the level of being classified by scientists and public health officials as pandemic. These are the eight characteristics that are common in diseases that are officially classified as pandemics:
1. Wide Geographic Extension
Pandemics impact a wide geographic area, often being classified as transregional, interregional, or global.
2. Disease Movement
The spread of a pandemic disease can be traced from place to place.
3. High Attack Rates & Explosiveness
Refers to the number of cases of a particular illness reported within a short time frame. Diseases with slow rates of transmission are rarely classified as a pandemic, as was seen in the 1999 spread of the West Nile virus from the Middle East to both Russia and the Western Hemisphere.
4. Minimal Population Immunity
While pandemics have occurred in partly immune populations, limited population immunity has created ideal conditions for pandemic disease to develop and spread.
5. Novelty
The term ‘pandemic’ is often applied to new diseases, or new variants of known diseases. However, this does not preclude repeatedly
6. Infectiousness
Pandemic diseases generally have a high level of infectiousness. While the term has been applied to non-infectious health issues, such as cigarette smoking, this term is often used in less scientific settings.
7. Contagiousness
Most diseases classified as ‘pandemic’ are transferred from person-to-person.
8. Severity
Pandemic typically describes diseases that are severe or fatal, such as SARS, HIV/AIDS, and the Black Death. Measuring Magnitude
In the event of a pandemic, the WHO and the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) direct response efforts. Depending on the severity of the outbreak, local or national public health agencies may also respond. The World Health Organization breaks pandemic alerting into five phases:
- Phase 1: No viruses circulating among animals have been reported to cause infections in humans
- Phase 2: Animal influenza virus circulating among domesticated or wild animals is known to have caused infection in humans, and is therefore considered a potential pandemic threat.
- Phase 3: An animal or human-animal influenza reassortant virus has caused sporadic cases or small clusters of disease in people, but has not resulted in human-to-human transmission sufficient to sustain community-level outbreaks. Limited human-to-human transmission may occur under some circumstances
- Phase 4: Characterized by verified human-to-human transmission of an animal or human-animal influenza reassortant virus able to cause “community-level outbreaks.” The ability to cause sustained disease outbreaks in a community marks a significant upwards shift in the risk for a pandemic.
- Phase 5: Characterized by human-to-human spread of the virus into at least two countries in one WHO region. While most countries will not be affected at this stage, the declaration of Phase 5 is a strong signal that a pandemic is imminent and that the time to finalize the organization, communication, and implementation of the planned mitigation measures is short.
Pandemics in the Last Century
In addition to the current COVID-19 Pandemic, the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Service explains that there have been four other pandemics in United States in the last 100 years: the 1918-1919 Spanish Flu, the 1956-1958 Asian Flu, the 1968-1969 Hong Kong Flu, and the 2009 Novel H1N1. Combined, these four pandemics have claimed thousands of lives in the Commonwealth, hundreds of thousands in the United States, and millions worldwide.
Spanish Influenza 1918-1919: Historical examples of pandemic demonstrate that while a pandemic may be devastating to a community from a life safety and economic standpoint, the threat was often downplayed and ignored. The 1918 Spanish Influenza pandemic was initially disregarded as having a significant impact because influenza was thought of as a minor illness that incapacitated the sick for a relatively short period of time before they eventually recovered. However, as the Spanish Influenza rose to pandemic level, it redefined the public’s perception of the virus. A historian at the time noted that at a military encampment in southern Ohio, soldiers would arrive healthy and within twenty-four hours would be dead from the flu. The virus spread globally along trade routes and shipping lines. Residents of North American, Europe, Africa, Asia, Brazil, and the South Pacific were particularly affected by the illness, which in-total infected 1/5 of the global population. In contrast to the majority of flu strains, the Spanish Influenza primarily affected young, healthy adults between the ages of 20 and 40. The mortality rate was 2.5%, an astounding figure given that flu outbreaks typically have a rate of 0.1%. By the end of the pandemic, the virus had claimed 20 million lives worldwide and 675,000 in the United States.
Asian Flu 1956-1958: The New York Times first broke the news of the Asian Flu in 1957 when they published a story of a flu virus that had infected 250,000 in Hong Kong. Months after this story was published, the disease had spread to the United States. Unlike Spanish Influenza, the Asian Flu was most commonly reported in the vulnerable populations, such as the elderly and individuals with heart and lung conditions. People with rheumatic heart disease and women in their third trimester of pregnancy were uniquely impacted. Infection for this pandemic came in two parts—the first in the late summer of 1957 and the second in the winter of 1958. The death toll for the Asian Flu widely varies, with sources reporting between 1 and 4 million deaths worldwide and approximately 69,800 in the United States.
Hong Kong Flu 1968-1969: The Hong Kong Flu is the mildest of all pandemics of the 20th century, a fact that is often explained by its similarity to the Asian Flu which increased immunity to the 1968 strain and the fact that it hit the United States in late December when most students were on break, reducing opportunities for spread. As with the Asian Flu, the vulnerable populations, particularly the elderly, were most at risk. By the end of the pandemic in 1969, it had claimed 33,800 lives in the US.
H1N1 2009-2010: This pandemic first appeared in the United States in the spring of 2009. By June, H1N1 had infected 18,000 people in the US. The virus primarily affected the populations most typically affected by the flu: children and infants, pregnant women, the elderly, and individuals with prior-existing health conditions. Due to advancements in medical research and technology, the overall impact of the pandemic was curbed. A vaccine was introduced in the fall of 2009. Approximately 80 million people were vaccinated worldwide. By the time the pandemic was declared over in the spring of 2010, between 43-89 million people had been infected and between 8,870 and 18,300 people had died.
COVID-19 2020-2023: The most recent pandemic first appeared in the United States in the spring of 2020. By July 2020, COVID-19 had infected over 200,000 people worldwide. The virus initially primarily affected the elderly, and individuals with prior-existing health conditions, however as spread increased so did the populations at-risk. A vaccine was approved for use against the virus in December of 2020, and in May of 2023 the World Health Organization declared an end to the public health emergency of international concern.
Probability
Pandemics have a low-probability but high-consequence profile. Globally, pandemic-level events occur several times per century, though moderate-scale regional epidemics—such as severe influenza seasons—are more frequent. For Edmonson County, the likelihood of a pandemic impacting the community over a 10-year planning horizon is classified as moderate, driven by:
- High levels of regional and interstate travel
- Workforce movement into and out of Hart County’s commercial centers
- Increasing global connectivity
- Seasonal respiratory disease patterns
- Periodic emergence of novel viral strains
Although pandemics remain rare compared to other hazards, their prolonged and system-wide impacts justify sustained planning and mitigation.
Impact
Built Environment
Infrastructure could be impacted due to lack of repair and upkeep if pandemic is extensive and lengthy; Utility lines and repairs would take longer to repair due to manpower lost.
Natural Environment
Potential increased loss of agricultural assets (crop & livestock) due to loss of manpower to harvest crop; fewer livestock and crop markets due to restriction of crowds which prevent spread of pandemic disease;
Social Environment
People
Farmers-pandemic could affect crop production & yield since they could not seed or harvest; General populace -would be impacted due to both physical and psychological impacts of disease; Possible school closures would aid in disrupting spread of disease; Vulnerable populations may experience more impacts due to synergistic effects of pandemic symptomology. Additionally, the county could expirence increased emergency clinical care visits, more hospitalization (upwards 1-4% symptomatic patients will require hospitalization) leading to severe and overwhelming impacts on healthcare and public health system; workforce absences leading to minimal patient care
Economy
Pandemic can cause business slowdown or even recession; decreased food and merchandise shipped throughout area would increase cost; loss of buyers and sellers due to potential risk of contagion. Increased staff absences (upwards 50% workforce may require time off over entire period of pandemic).
Climate Change and Pandemics
The 2016 Global Risk Report published by the World Economic Forum has proposed that climate change could be a causal factor in future pandemics. This finding is further explored in a 2016 report produced by Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies, Pandemics in a Changing Climate – Evolving Risk & Global Response. The report explains that vector ecology indicates the potential for climate change to create the conditions for future pandemics. Changes in temperature, precipitation, and pH levels due to climate change will impact the quantity and quality of ecological services, such as food, water, and soil. Ecosystem shifts can impact the migratory patterns, habitats, population, and survivability of certain animal and insect populations. Such changes may increase human-animal or human-insect contact, increasing the likelihood of transmission. For example, as hot summer months extend tick and mosquito populations, both culprits in transmission of epidemic-causing viruses, can survive longer and have more opportunities to infect humans. Climate change may have more direct impacts on humans by making certain populations, particularly in developing countries, more susceptible to illness by creating food and water security crises.
Vulnerability
Hart County’s vulnerability to pandemic events is moderate to high, shaped by its population distribution, workforce patterns, healthcare access limitations, and concentration of congregate settings. As demonstrated during the COVID-19 pandemic, the county relies heavily on regional healthcare facilities located outside its borders—primarily in Bowling Green, Elizabethtown, and Glasgow—which can become quickly overwhelmed during large-scale outbreaks. Limited local specialty care, transportation barriers for rural households, and uneven access to primary-care providers increase the likelihood of delayed diagnosis, untreated illness, and higher disease severity.
Congregate settings—including schools, long-term care facilities, childcare centers, correctional environments, and manufacturing and food-processing worksites—are particularly vulnerable to rapid transmission of respiratory pathogens. Many residents commute along or work near the I-65 corridor, an active regional travel route that facilitates disease introduction and spread. Tourism activity in areas around Horse Cave, Mammoth Cave attractions, and commercial centers along U.S. 31W also increases seasonal exposure by bringing transient populations into close contact with local workers.
Social vulnerability further contributes to risk. Older adults, individuals with chronic illnesses, low-income households, and residents without reliable internet access face greater challenges accessing telehealth, remote schooling, or public-health information during pandemics. Schools and small businesses may experience significant operational strain due to workforce shortages, high absenteeism, or childcare disruptions. Essential services—including EMS, utilities, and public safety agencies—may also face staffing challenges during widespread illness.
Overall, Hart County’s combination of regional mobility, reliance on external healthcare systems, and presence of multiple high-contact environments results in a vulnerability profile that requires strong coordination across public health, emergency management, schools, and regional partners during future pandemic events.
Vulnerability Summary Analysis
Hart County’s vulnerability is intermediate. Tourist sites, highway access, and visitor traffic may introduce pathogen transmission. The dispersed rural layout may slow spread initially but also delay detection and response.
The county’s medical and public health capacity could face stress in sustained pandemic conditions.
Severe Storms in Hart County
Description
Severe storms include a range of weather hazards such as severe thunderstorms, hail, damaging straight-line winds, lightning, intense rainfall, and occasional derechos. These storms occur throughout the year but are most common from March through August. Severe storms in Edmonson County can cause widespread impacts to homes, utilities, roadways, and agriculture, and may contribute to secondary hazards such as flash flooding, power outages, and fallen trees that block roads.
The National Weather Service (NWS) issues Severe Thunderstorm Watches and Warnings based on forecast or observed conditions including large hail (≥1 inch), winds ≥58 mph, and dangerous lightning.
Extent, & Past Events & Location
Location: Severe storms are treated as a region-wide, non-spatial hazard; no jurisdiction is inherently more likely to be struck, though more built-up places see greater damages. For Hart, that means exposure countywide, with higher potential property impacts in and around Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville.
Extent: The profile evaluates hail, wind, and lightning (tornadoes are handled separately). Severe thunderstorms are defined by hail ≥ ¾”, wind gusts ≥ 50 knots (57.5 mph), or a tornado. Straight-line winds in extreme cases can exceed 100 mph.
Past events / occurrence: Hart County has recorded 97 severe storm events over 21 years (≈ 4.6 events annually).
Probability
The BRADD region’s probability of severe storms is rated High based on annual frequency; this regional rating applies to Hart County as well.
- Hart County: 97 severe storm events/21 years = 4.61 wind events annually
Impact
Built Environment
Vehicles, roofs, windows, utilities, roads, and culverts are vulnerable; straight-line winds can down trees/power lines, causing outages from hours to weeks.
Natural Environment
Increased stormwater runoff, localized flooding, tree loss, and impacts to fish/wildlife; crop and livestock damage are common consequences.
Social Environment
Outdoor workers and people without timely warnings (boaters, campers, farmers, construction crews) are especially susceptible; damages can trigger brief business closures where transport/telecom are affected.
Climate Change and Sinkholes
Research indicates climate change is increasing the number of days with sufficient CAPE and vertical wind shear to produce severe storms (hail, damaging wind, and tornadoes), implying more frequent environments favorable to severe weather in the region.
Vulnerability
Hart County’s vulnerability to severe storms is high, reflecting the county’s rural housing stock, prevalence of manufactured homes, extensive overhead utility infrastructure, and exposure along major transportation corridors. Severe storms—bringing damaging winds, large hail, lightning, and intense rainfall—pose risks to residences, critical facilities, farms, and transportation networks across the entire county. Manufactured homes and older site-built structures with limited wind resistance are particularly susceptible to roof damage, siding loss, and structural compromise from high winds or falling trees.
Public facilities, schools, and community buildings without hardened safe rooms or wind-resistant design features face elevated risk during wind-driven events. Rural areas with long, tree-lined roadways are vulnerable to extended power outages when trees fall on power lines; this is compounded by limited redundancy in some utility corridors and long repair times in sparsely populated areas. Agricultural operations—including barns, poultry houses, equipment sheds, and fencing—are especially vulnerable to straight-line winds and hail, which can damage structures, livestock operations, and seasonal crops.
Populations most affected include residents living in manufactured homes, older adults, households with limited financial capacity for repairs, and those relying on electricity-dependent medical devices. Localized flooding resulting from severe storms can further isolate rural homes, disrupt school transportation, and hinder emergency response. Lightning strikes also pose risks to communications infrastructure, churches, barns, and unprotected homes.
Overall, the combination of aging infrastructure, dispersed population, wind-sensitive structures, and reliance on overhead utilities makes severe storms a high-consequence hazard for Hart County, requiring continued investment in preparedness, mitigation, and public education.
Vulnerability Summary Analysis
Hart County has experienced 97 severe storm events/21 years = 4.61 wind events annually.
Because of these factors, Hart County experiences high vulnerability to severe storms. Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville reflect Hart County’s overall history of severe storms, and therefore experience high vulnerability as well.
Terrorism in Hart County
Description
Terrorism involves the unlawful use or threatened use of violence to coerce or intimidate governments or societies for political, religious, or ideological goals, using tactics that range from conventional explosives and arson to cyberattacks and agro-terrorism (e.g., contamination of food or livestock).
Specific Observations & Broader Challenges with Terrorism Risk
Because terrorism is intentional and adversarial, traditional frequency-based risk assessments are not sufficient for evaluating potential impacts. Unlike natural hazards, terrorism cannot be forecasted or modeled using historical trends alone. Effective assessment must incorporate intelligence inputs, threat actor capabilities, and scenario planning to understand possible modes of attack and associated vulnerabilities.
At present, there is limited differentiation between types of terrorism that may affect the region. Distinguishing between domestic and international threats, as well as between physical, cyber, or hybrid forms of terrorism, can help clarify risk pathways and improve mitigation strategies. The region’s profile would also benefit from identifying and assessing critical infrastructure and “soft targets” that may be more susceptible to intentional acts, such as public gathering venues, utilities, schools, and government facilities.
Probability
Because terrorism is intentional and adversarial, you cannot rely solely on historical frequency to derive probability. Many risk models for terrorism must incorporate intelligence assessments, threat actor capabilities, and scenario planning.
While the page references terrorism conceptually, it does not currently include coordination protocols with law enforcement, fusion centers, or homeland security partners that monitor and share threat intelligence. Strengthening interagency coordination—particularly with local emergency management, police, and state agencies—would provide a more credible understanding of regional exposure and response capability.
Cascading and secondary effects of terrorism events, such as public panic, misinformation, economic disruption, and strain on emergency and health systems, are also important considerations. The social and psychological impacts of terrorism can be significant even when physical damage is limited, underscoring the need to plan for behavioral health support and long-term community recovery.
Additionally, the region’s profile does not currently evaluate local preparedness measures such as continuity of operations plans (COOP), security assessments, or mass-casualty response capacity, which are key indicators of resilience. Future updates should also consider emerging risks, such as cyber-physical attacks on utilities and critical networks, and how these may intersect with traditional forms of terrorism.
Finally, it is important to acknowledge both the limitations and sensitivities of terrorism-related data. Some information—such as specific target locations or threat intelligence—cannot be publicly shared due to security concerns. Nonetheless, transparency in describing the general methods, assumptions, and partnerships used to assess terrorism risk would enhance credibility while maintaining confidentiality.
Impact
Built Environment
Terrorism can destroy or damage buildings and critical lifelines (power, water/wastewater, transportation, and communications), with impacts dictated by the attack method and proximity to critical nodes.
Natural Environment
Acts such as agro-terrorism or hazardous-materials release can contaminate soil, water, or wildlife habitat, and BRADD explicitly notes potential destruction of natural resources under certain attack types.
Social Environment
Intentional acts are designed to cause casualties, widespread fear, and economic disruption; BRADD highlights life-safety risks, psychological effects, and local economic shocks due to reduced participation and interrupted operations.
Climate Change and Sinkholes
Climate stressors (e.g., pressures on marginalized populations, aging infrastructure, and periods of civil unrest) may elevate susceptibility to terrorism-related activities, including threats to infrastructure, property, and cyber/economic systems, even though overall climate-driven terrorism risk for the region remains low.
Vulnerability
Hart County’s vulnerability to terrorism is low to moderate, shaped largely by its rural character but influenced by several factors that elevate consequence potential for certain facility types and community functions. While the county does not contain major high-profile targets typically associated with large-scale terrorism, it does host critical infrastructure, transportation corridors, tourism destinations, and public gathering spaces that could be affected by targeted or opportunistic acts of violence or disruption.
Key vulnerabilities include facilities along the I-65 corridor, which carries high volumes of interstate traffic and freight movement and provides broad access to communities such as Munfordville, Horse Cave, and Bonnieville. Tourism-related sites—including attractions near Mammoth Cave, commercial nodes along U.S. 31W, and hospitality venues—periodically draw large numbers of visitors, increasing exposure to crowd-related threats. Local government buildings, schools, courthouses, utilities, and public-safety facilities are additional potential targets due to their operational importance.
Cyber vulnerabilities are significant as well. Small public agencies, schools, health facilities, and local businesses often operate with limited cybersecurity resources, increasing susceptibility to ransomware, data breaches, and service disruptions. Critical systems such as 911 communications, financial services, water/wastewater utilities, and hospital networks in nearby regions could also experience cascading impacts from a cyberattack.
Populations most affected by a terrorism incident—whether physical or cyber—include employees and visitors at high-occupancy facilities, residents dependent on critical services, and vulnerable populations unable to rapidly evacuate or relocate. Emergency response may be challenged by rural road networks, limited specialized tactical resources, and the need for regional coordination.
Although the overall probability of a major terrorism event in Hart County remains low, the presence of essential services, transportation corridors, tourism sites, and cyber-dependent operations results in a vulnerability profile that requires continued planning, training, and information sharing among local, regional, and state partners.
Vulnerability Summary Analysis
Hart County’s vulnerability stems from its transportation assets and tourism economy. With Interstate 65, multiple state highways, and attractions such as Hidden River Cave, the county experiences substantial visitor traffic
and transient population movement. While there are no identified high-profile targets, the combination of interstate access and visitor activity increases the need for strong coordination between local law enforcement,
tourism agencies, and emergency management to ensure threat detection and response capability.
Tornadoes in Butler County
Description
A tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground, typically visible as a funnel cloud and accompanied by a debris cloud near the surface. Severity is classified with the Enhanced Fujita (EF) Scale, which ties estimated wind speeds to observed damage—from EF-0 (65–85 mph; light damage) to EF-5 (>200 mph; extreme destruction).
Extent
Tornado intensity in Edmonson County typically ranges from EF0 to EF2, though stronger events remain possible. Straight-line winds and severe storms accompanying tornadic systems can produce impacts similar to lower-end tornadoes. Tornadoes can damage homes, manufactured housing, barns, large-span structures, utilities, trees, and vehicles.
Past Events & Location
From 2000–2025, Hart County experienced 9 tornadoes (≈ 36% chance of at least one tornado in a given year). Since 1950, tornadoes that touched down in the county have caused 22 injuries and 1 deaths. Regional context includes
the December 10–11, 2021 outbreak, with multiple long-track and high-end events affecting neighboring counties.
Tornado exposure is countywide and non-spatial at planning scale; consequences concentrate where people and assets are located (e.g., Brownsville, major corridors, and higher-occupancy or vulnerable housing areas such as mobile homes).
December 10-11, 2021 Tornadoes
The same supercell which came from Bowling Green extended another tornado to the ground on the down-sloping side of Fisher Ridge, just east of I-65 on Highway 335. Here, many barns collapsed on tobacco farms and hardwood
trees were snapped. The tornado then continued through Rowletts where snapped/uprooted large trees and roof damage was found at the Caveland Country Club. The tornado then encountered terrain on Dawson Knob where little
damage was found, however the tornado quickly intensified on the down-sloping side. The tornado continued down Shady Lane Church Rd. where it destroyed many homes, took roofs off structures and homes, collapsed well-built
barns, destroyed an Amish schoolhouse, snapped/uprooted many trees, downed many powerlines, and took the lives of many farm animals. The tornado weakened to the northeast of Hardyville where damage was determined to be
EF1 and EF0 through Summersville. The tornado lifted northeast of Summersville.
January 1, 2022 Tornadoes
NWS Storm Survey Teams found EF-0 tornado damage across northern Hart County. A barn along E Sullivan Rd was damaged where some of the roofing was found 400 yards away. The weak tornado was very elevated and next hit power lines on the east side of the road. The most significant damage was to a 100 x 50ft barn with damage thrown 200-250 yards back to the southwest. The barn foundation moved 18 inches to the east. A 2 x 4ft from the barn was thrown 60 yards to the north- northwest and was impaled into the 2nd story of an adjacent house. There was very minor tree damage as much of the tornado was highly elevated. The tornado lifted in a field just northeast of this residence.
Probability
BRADD rates overall regional probability for tornadoes as high, based on historical frequency, wind-zone classification, and FEMA definitions. Hart County’s recent history (9 events/25 years) supports an ongoing, recurring likelihood at the county scale.
Impact
Built Environment
Tornadoes can damage or destroy homes and businesses, topple transmission and distribution lines, block roads and bridges with debris, and interrupt power, communications, and water/wastewater services.
Natural Environment
Tornadoes can fell trees, damage crops and farm structures, degrade habitats, and increase fire risk where dead or downed timber is not removed.
Social Environment
Tornadoes can cause deaths and injuries, trigger temporary but significant economic disruption, and reduce local revenue and productivity during recovery.
Climate Change and Sinkholes
While attribution is complex at tornado scale, research indicates fewer “one-tornado” days and more multi-tornado cluster days, linked to increases in days with high CAPE and sufficient vertical wind shear; this implies more days conducive to severe storms—a planning consideration for warning, sheltering, and surge response.
Vulnerability
Hart County’s tornado vulnerability is assessed as moderate. Contributing factors include the historical event rate, documented casualties since 1950, and two census tracts where ≥25% of housing units are mobile homes, which are more susceptible to wind damage and offer limited sheltering. Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville reflect Hart County’s overall history of tornado events, and therefore experience moderate vulnerability as well.
Vulnerability Summary Analysis
Between 2000 and 2021, Hart County has experienced 7 tornadoes/21years =33% chance of a tornado happening in a given year.
Since 1950, tornadoes that touched down in Hart County have caused 22 injuries and 1 death.
Hart County contains two census tracts wherein at least 25% of all housing units are mobile homes.
Because of these factors, Hart County experiences moderate vulnerability to tornadoes. Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville reflect Hart County’s overall history of tornado events, and therefore experience moderate vulnerability as well.
Winter Storms in Hart County
Description
A winter storm is a combination of heavy snow, blowing snow, and/or dangerous wind chills; an ice storm produces at least 0.25 inches of glaze on exposed surfaces; snowfall occurs when ice crystals accumulate on surfaces at or below 32°F. These events create life-safety risks primarily through traffic crashes on icy roads, hypothermia exposure, and exertion while shoveling. The National Weather Service issues watches, warnings, outlooks, and advisories to communicate risk and expected severity.
What is a Severe Winter Storm?
The NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory defines a winter storm as an event in which the main types of precipitation are snow, sleet or freezing rain.
Why can winter storms be so dangerous?
Most deaths from winter storms are not directly related to the storm itself.
- People die in traffic accidents on icy roads.
- People die of heart attacks while shoveling snow.
- People die of hypothermia from prolonged exposure to cold.
- Everyone is potentially at risk during winter storms. .
Types of Winter Storm Alerts:
Winter Storm Warning: Issued when a combination of hazardous winter weather in the form of heavy snow, heavy freezing rain, or heavy sleet is imminent or occurring. Winter Storm Warnings are usually issued 12 to 24 hours before the event is expected to begin.
Winter Storm Watch: Issued 12-48 hours in advance of the onset of severe winter conditions. The watch may or may not be upgraded to a winter storm warning, depending on how the weather system moves or how it is developing.
Winter Storm Outlook: Issued prior to a Winter Storm Watch. The Outlook is given when forecasters believe winter storm conditions are possible and are usually issued 3 to 5 days in advance of a winter storm.
Winter Weather Advisories: Issued for accumulations of snow, freezing rain, freezing drizzle, and sleet which will cause significant inconveniences and, if caution is not exercised, could lead to life-threatening situations.
Frost/Freeze Warning: Below freezing temperatures are expected and may cause significant damage to plants, crops, or fruit trees. People who have homes without heat need to take added precautions.
Extent
Extent is characterized by the number and severity of winter storm, heavy snow, and ice storm events (including federally declared disasters). The BRADD region recorded multiple FEMA winter-storm disaster declarations between 2000 and 2020 and 66 reportable winter storm events in that period.
Past Events & Location
From 2000–2020, Hart County experienced 8 severe winter storms.
Exposure is countywide (non-spatial at the planning scale), with impacts most evident where people, infrastructure, and travel corridors concentrate (e.g., Brownsville and major roads)
Probability
Winter storms are an annual occurrence in Hart County, with varying severity. Snow events occur several times each winter, while impactful ice storms occur every 3–7 years, on average. Cold waves with dangerous wind chills occur periodically and may last several days. Climate projections suggest that while average winter temperatures may rise, Kentucky is likely to continue experiencing occasional severe cold outbreaks and high-impact ice events due to increased weather variability. As a result, winter storms remain a high-probability hazard for planning purposes.
Impact
Built Environment
Winter storms can damage roofs under snow load, break limbs that fall onto buildings and vehicles, down power lines, and block roads and bridges with snow/ice and debris; even modest icing can disrupt utilities and emergency response.
Natural Environment
Extended snow/ice cover can alter habitats and timing of species behavior; out-of-season events can injure or kill vegetation and damage crops and trees.
Social Environment
Hazardous travel, power outages, and isolation elevate risks for households—especially older adults or people with medical needs—while business closures and school disruptions impose community-wide costs.
Climate Change and Winter Storms
Changing winter characteristics: warmer winters overall, fewer heavy snowmelt events, more precipitation falling as rain/ice in the Southeast, a lengthening freeze-free season, and related economic and infrastructure stresses—factors that may shift Allen County’s winter risk mix toward icing events and infrastructure sensitivity even as extreme cold snaps still occur.
Vulnerability
The table below displays ice storm, winter storms, and heavy snow events that were reported to NOAA and NWS between 2000 and 2020. While not each of these events received a FEMA declaration, each showed clear characteristics
of a severe winter storm.
Vulnerability Summary Analysis
Between 2000 and 2020, NOAA and NWS reported 23 severe winter storms in Hart County.
On average, Hart County has experienced 8 winter storm events/21 years. This equates to a 0.38% chance of a winter storm event in Hart County annually.
In 2021, winter storm conditions led to a fatal crash on Interstate 65 in Hart County.
Because of these factors, Hart County experiences moderate vulnerability to winter storm events. Bonnieville, Horse Cave, and Munfordville reflect Hart County’s overall history of winter storms, and therefore experience moderate vulnerability as well.