 This trustee August is hotter than ever at Appalachian Wireless, as they are slashing all normal contract pricing on all smartphones by 50% when you sign up for service. Better service, bigger saving, serving you for the last 25 years at Appalachian Wireless. This morning, representatives from the National Weather Service presented Johnson County officials with two signs to warn motorists of the dangers of driving on flooded roadways. The National Weather Service headquarters had 50 signs available nationwide, and so we had to, we polled our emergency managers that we work with in the 33 counties that we cover and we had five counties ask for signs. They had to supply a flood prone area and an outreach plan for the signs. The signs in Johnson County will be placed in an area on Kentucky 1107 at Davis Branch, a place that floods often after heavy rains. And emergency management officials in Johnson County know all too well the dangers of flooding. One of the four people killed in last year's flash flood in Flat Gap was in a vehicle. The first confirmed, you know, fatality that we had that evening was the gentleman in a vehicle out on Patterson. But simply placing warning signs along the road won't prevent vehicles from being swept into the water if drivers don't heed the warning. You think, I can make that, no problem. But it's not always true, so we encourage everybody to do it. When you see a sign like that, heed that sign, heed that warning, because the life you saved might be your own. Of the 50 signs that were available nationwide, eight were placed in eastern Kentucky. Reporting in Paintsville for EKB News, I'm Shannon Deskins.