Which Side Are You On: Harlan County Kentucky, HB128, and the Weight of History
Florence Reece wrote “Which Side Are You On?” in 1931, scratching the lyrics onto a calendar page in a company-owned house in Harlan County after deputy sheriffs ransacked her home looking for her husband, a union organizer. The song became one of the most enduring labor anthems in American history, recorded by Pete Seeger, Billy Bragg, Dropkick Murphys, and dozens of others. It came from Harlan County because Harlan County in the 1930s was where the American labor movement’s struggle was most raw and most violent — “Bloody Harlan,” they called it, a place where the conflict between coal operators and the United Mine Workers of America involved bombings, murders, hired gun thugs, and the Kentucky National Guard, where the phrase “you’ll get a gun stuck in your ribs” was not metaphorical.
That history does not require apology or euphemism; it is simply the ground Harlan County sits on, as much a part of the landscape as Black Mountain rising to 4,145 feet on the Virginia border or the Cumberland River cutting its narrow valley through the county seat. The county was established in 1819, named for Major Silas Harlan who died at Blue Licks in 1782, and developed through farming and small-scale industry until coal companies arrived in the early 20th century and built an entire world around the extraction of bituminous coal from the mountain seams. Lynch, constructed by U.S. Steel beginning in 1917, was the largest coal camp in the world at its peak. Benham, a few miles away, was built by International Harvester. These were not improvised settlements but planned company towns with housing, churches, schools, recreational facilities, and segregated neighborhoods that told a story about power and labor that has not been forgotten.
Harlan County Today: After the Coal
Harlan County’s 2020 population of 26,831 represents a dramatic decline from its mid-20th-century peak when coal employment sustained a far larger population. The contraction that accelerated through the 2010s has been severe here as across eastern Kentucky’s coalfields. Mines have closed. Workers who had made $60,000 to $80,000 per year in underground coal left when the jobs did. The county’s population has declined, median household income has fallen, and the housing market reflects these pressures — significant vacancy in older stock, very low rents, and a rental pool that is smaller and less economically robust than it was a generation ago.
What remains is a community navigating transition with considerable resilience. Harlan ARH Hospital is the county’s largest employer and one of the Appalachian Regional Healthcare system’s significant facilities. Harlan County Schools and Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College provide education employment and student-related demand. County and state government persist. The SOAR (Shaping Our Appalachian Region) initiative has worked to attract technology, tourism, and light manufacturing investment, with some success. And the county’s extraordinary physical setting — Black Mountain, Pine Mountain, the Cumberland River watershed, proximity to the Virginia border — has attracted some outdoor recreation interest, particularly after the TV series Justified placed “Harlan County” in the global vocabulary of popular culture from 2010 to 2015.
The Housing Stock: Company Towns, Hollow Houses, and Radon
Harlan County’s housing stock has three layers that are relevant to landlords in distinct ways. The oldest layer is the company-town housing in Lynch and Benham — structures built in the early 20th century to house mine workers and their families, often constructed to a specific architectural standard imposed by U.S. Steel or International Harvester. These are historic structures with genuine character, but many carry the physical conditions of century-old construction: lead paint throughout, possible asbestos in insulation and floor materials, aging electrical systems, structural wear from a century of mountain winters. Before renting any company-town era structure, conduct a thorough physical inspection. HB128’s nonwaivable habitability duty covers building code compliance, weatherproofing, electrical safety, and hazardous substance control (lead, asbestos, mold) — all of which require active attention in these older structures. Federal lead paint disclosure is mandatory for any pre-1978 dwelling.
The second layer is the mid-20th-century housing built as the coal economy expanded beyond the company towns — frame houses and small ranch-style homes scattered through the county’s creek bottoms and hollows. This stock is also predominantly pre-1978 and shares many of the same maintenance challenges. The hollow-sited location of much of this housing creates specific concerns: flood risk from the seasonal rise of the county’s numerous creek branches, slope drainage issues, persistent moisture from hillside runoff, and the mold and structural damage that moisture creates when not addressed. HB128’s weatherproofing and moisture control obligations apply here with particular force.
The third concern, which cuts across both housing layers, is radon. The Cumberland Plateau geology of southeastern Kentucky is associated with elevated radon levels in some properties, particularly those with basements or below-grade living spaces. Radon is a Class A carcinogen and the second-leading cause of lung cancer in the United States. HB128’s habitability duty explicitly covers hazardous substance control. Testing a basement or crawl-space unit with an inexpensive radon test kit before renting it is not required by law but is strongly recommended given the regional geology. If levels are elevated, mitigation systems are available and relatively inexpensive. Disclosing radon test results to prospective tenants is good practice and may reduce future liability.
Filing in Harlan and HB128 Essentials
All residential evictions in Harlan County are Forcible Detainer actions filed in District Court at the Harlan County Justice Center, 101 S. First Street, Harlan, KY 40831, phone (606) 573-4453. Harlan city sits in a narrow river valley; street parking is generally available near the justice center on First Street. Access to some parts of Harlan County via mountain state routes can be affected by weather, particularly in winter; plan your trip to the courthouse accordingly. Verify current civil hearing dates and filing requirements with the clerk before making the drive.
HB128 applies uniformly across Harlan County. The core compliance checklist: written 14-day notice to pay or vacate for nonpayment; 14-day notice to cure with 30-day minimum termination for lease violations; one month’s written notice for month-to-month termination; security deposits at two times monthly rent maximum, separate account, 30-day return with itemized deductions; $250 or 2x penalty for improper withholding; nonwaivable habitability across 13 categories with 14-day (or 5-day for essentials) written response obligations; 24-hour advance notice for standard entry; self-help eviction prohibited at three times periodic rent or actual damages.
In a market where rents may be as low as $300 to $500 per month and the tenant population includes a significant share of people living on fixed or transfer incomes, the landlord-tenant relationship in Harlan County carries a weight that is more than legal. The history of this place — of labor and land and who controlled what — is not distant. Provide housing that is safe, habitable, and lawfully managed. It is the floor the law requires, and here, more than most places, it matters.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. HB128 applies to leases made on or after its effective date; prior Kentucky law governs older leases. Consult a licensed Kentucky attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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