FRANKFORT, Ky. —
Kentucky officials on Monday launched a statewide Chemtrail Awareness and Reporting Tool, a mobile app allowing residents to document what the state describes as “aerial anomalies” and “unregistered sky streaks.” Within hours, more than 9,000 reports were submitted, overwhelming the system.
Meteorologists later confirmed the images showed contrails, clouds or standard atmospheric processes.
“We anticipated strong engagement,” said Dana Whitford, a spokesperson for the Department of Environmental Vigilance. “We did not anticipate 147 reports of suspicious fog, 82 reports of weaponized humidity, or repeated submissions of the same section of sky.”
One resident uploaded 14 identical photos of a cloud, taken minutes apart, to confirm what he called “continued presence.”
Preliminary analytics produced by the system showed a high concentration of reports originating from a small area in eastern Kentucky. Officials said the data had not yet been reviewed manually. The system slowed briefly after a user attempted to upload a six-minute video labeled Evidence.
The app follows a contentious legislative hearing last week in which lawmakers questioned why “planes only spray over America.” A University of Kentucky atmospheric scientist attempted to explain condensation and temperature gradients before being interrupted by Rep. Hargis, who accused him of pre-weaponized evaporation and asked whether clouds could be “turned off.”
In response, the state enacted a temporary aviation disclosure rule requiring pilots flying over Kentucky to announce whether they are “spraying or not spraying” every 90 seconds.
“It’s that or a fine,” said a Louisville-based pilot. “We’ve started harmonizing.”
Passengers have reportedly joined in. One flight attendant described the practice as noncompliant with the spirit of aviation. Delta said it is reviewing whether a pre-recorded announcement could reduce crew fatigue.
The Kentucky Board of Education also ap
proved an interim instructional module for grades 3–8 titled “Recognizing Nonstandard Sky Activity.” The materials were fast-tracked under existing critical-thinking standards.
Teachers report students have flagged jet trails in video games, accused school fog machines of participating in “deep-sky operations,” and submitted chalkboard eraser streaks as evidence.
One student declined recess due to unauthorized aerial exposure. Another requested remote learning “until the sky can be verified.” A third submitted a drawing of a cloud captioned, “I don’t trust this one.”
To promote transparency, the state unveiled a public Chemtrail Transparency Dashboard, which refreshes every 15 seconds and currently lists all categories as “Pending.”
Officials said the dashboard is operating as designed and will populate once verified information becomes available.
Meanwhile, Lexington wellness influencer Sage Willowhart began selling $89 jars of Anti-Chemtrail Salt, described on the label as “ethically sourced from a grocery aisle.” The product sold out in two days.
“There’s no data either way,” Willowhart said.
She later announced Quantum Sky Detox Crystals, which she said realign the aura with the troposphere. One verified buyer wrote, “My plants appear calmer.”
State officials said the reporting app, aviation rule, school materials and dashboard represent “a comprehensive, multi-agency approach to atmospheric accountability.”
Whitford said no confirmed chemtrail activity has been identified but encouraged residents to continue submitting reports.
“No one is saying it isn’t condensation,” she said. “We’re just not ruling anything out.”
As of press time, officials were reviewing multiple reports of a large, bright object moving across the sky on a predictable schedule.
Meteorologists identified it as the sun.
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