It wasn't just Senate Bill 150. Governor Beshear also vetoed Senate Bill 107, a bill that requires the commissioner of education to be subject to Senate confirmation. He vetoed House bill for a bill requiring the operators of electric generating facilities to submit plans in advance for how they will eventually remove their equipment when the facility is no longer operational. The governor says he agreed with many things in the bill but doesn't like that it removes local input from important decisions. And he vetoed Senate Bill 126. Kentuckians challenging the constitutionality of a law or executive branch decision could ask for the case to be moved out of Franklin Circuit Court to a circuit court picked at random. Some Republicans don't like decisions made in the past by the Franklin Circuit Court. In his veto message, the governor called SB 126 a power grab by the General Assembly. The governor signed three bills supporting police. Senate Bill 89 allows an urban county government to rehire retired police officers as needed. House Bill 380 lets future officers train before they are 21 years old as long as they're 21 by the time their certification takes place. And House Bill 540 will allow for school resource officers for private and parochial schools.