 Appalachian Wireless proudly brings you unlimited data. Unlimited data is only $80 a month for a single line. Four lines as low as $200. Better service? Bigger savings? That's today's Appalachian Wireless. An East Kentucky network company. Fiat Speed slow to 25 gigabytes per line to 512 kilobits for phones and tablets. And 15 gigabytes for motors. See store for more details. The past week's continuous rain has caused numerous problems across the region. And among those problems now is this roadway collapse here on Kentucky 1499 in the Feds Creek community. Large sections of the blacktop underneath where I'm standing have no earth underneath them. And officials tell me they expect this collapse to get even bigger before the earth stops moving underneath it. Kentucky Highway 1499, also known as North Levisa Road, began collapsing into the Levisa Fork River Saturday evening, leaving one lane heavily damaged and the other destroyed. The road is now closed and is forcing motorists coming from the Biggs area, including school buses going to nearby Feds Creek Elementary School, to take an hour-long detour toward Kemper and Pikeville. Highway 1499 is now closed indefinitely. There's really no quick fix for this situation. You have the normal freeze-thaw cycle that we have every winter. And you have moisture that gets underneath the pavement. And basically it's eating out the rock and the dirt underneath the pavement. It has to go somewhere, that and the water. And when that moves out from under the pavement, then the pavement collapses. And that's what's happened here. Officials are considering how to repair Kentucky 1499, but those repairs will likely be time-consuming and expensive. It cannot be fixed through our routine maintenance budget. We are going to have to request emergency funding for this. Also, the asphalt plants are closed until the 1st of April, so any repairs that we might be able to make between now and then would not have permanent asphalt anyway. And right now we don't even know if it can be repaired that quickly. Officials are now asking for patience while the collapse is repaired. There's no point in putting a band-aid on this and then having it become worse again. There's no point in fixing it where it might not be thoroughly safe just to be able to get the road open and then have to come in and do it all over again. Our goal, of course, is a permanent fix that is safe for the traveling public and it may take some time to accomplish that. Access to Kentucky 1499 is restricted from the Biggs Bridge to the Feds Creek Bridge. Transportation Cabinet officials will be posted at the road closure around the clock until further notice. In Feds Creek, Chris Anderson, EKB News. Thank you.