Arkansas News

Dangerous heat for Arkansas this week

We are expecting dangerous heat to build throughout the duration of the week. It will be imperative, especially as we near the middle of the week, that any location lacking electricity and/or access to air conditioning will be at a greater risk for heat-related illnesses.

High Temperatures and dangerous heat index values will increase for the duration of the week across Arkansas.

• The most concerning days for heat-related illnesses will be on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday where both the air temperature and dewpoint temperature will increase.

• The reason will be a warm front lifting through the state on Wednesday leaving a more moist airmass across the state in its wake.

hazardous weather briefing for Arkansas

Justice Rhonda Wood offers vision for Chief Justice, wants magistrate system to speed up trials

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Rhonda Wood remembered her colleague Justice Robin Wynne and outlined her vision if she is elected Chief Justice in 2024 – a vision that includes creating magistrates to make the trial process faster and more efficient in the state’s court system.

Justice Wynne died last week after being re-elected to an eight-year term in November 2022. Wood said she and Wynne had a close relationship in part due to having the same initials.

“He was a lovely, lovely man. I worked with him for ten-and-a-half years because we served on the Court of Appeals together, we came on the Supreme Court together,” she said. “We would say, ‘Hi, R.W.’ to each other because it was ‘Robin Wynne, Rhonda Wood’. People got our names confused, nobody could figure out who we were.”

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/06/justice-rhonda-wood-offers-vision-for-chief-justice-wants-magistrate-system-to-speed-up-trials/

Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Rhonda Wood.

Sens. Boozman, Cotton announce $50 million in DOT funding for Russellville, Bryant projects

by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net)

U.S. Senators John Boozman, R-Ark., and Tom Cotton, R-Ark. announced two U.S. Department of Transportation grants have been awarded to infrastructure projects in Arkansas.

The city of Russellville will receive a $23,752,759 for a 13.8-mile expansion of its Connected Trail System, connecting the areas north of Interstate-40 to the south at Lock and Dam Park.

Additionally, the Arkansas Department of Transportation (ARDOT) has been awarded $25,000,000 to reconstruct approximately 3.6 miles of Old Stagecoach Road (Highway 5).

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/06/sens-boozman-cotton-announce-50-million-in-dot-funding-for-russellville-bryant-projects/

The Supply Side: Arkansas rice farmer part of Walmart’s sustainable farm focus

by Kim Souza (ksouza@talkbusiness.net)

Dustin Faulkner, a third-generation Arkansas farmer, is part of an aggressive plan by the world’s largest retailer to save billions of gallons of water in rice farming.

Faulkner lives south of Jonesboro in Harrisburg, where he oversees 26 Ditch Farm Partnership with his wife Kristy and teenage daughters Alyson and Abby. The family farms around 3,500 acres, with about one-third of that being rice he sells to Walmart. He also sells rice and wheat to beer maker Anheuser-Busch while improving sustainable farming practices.

He said running a regenerative farm is important because the land and its resources must be preserved for future generations. He was introduced to Walmart by third-party sustainability partner Indigo Ag, whose mission is to connect farmers to higher-valued markets while using sustainability practices.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/06/the-supply-side-arkansas-rice-farmer-part-of-walmarts-sustainable-farm-focus/

Dustin Faulkner walks his 3,500-acre farm in Harrisburg just south of Jonesboro inspecting the growth of rice that will be sold to Walmart for its Great Value Long Grain brand. Faulkner has been selling rice to Walmart since 2021 and is one of several farms in the region taking part in sustainable farm practices.

Arkansas to receive $1 billion from Biden administration for high-speed internet

by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net)

The U.S. Department of Commerce released details Monday (June 26) of a $42.45 billion high-speed internet grant program and Arkansas will receive more than $1 billion as a result.

The “Internet for All” initiative is a component of Biden’s “Investing in America” infrastructure agenda.

Arkansas will receive $1,024,303,993.86 through the program. The state must submit a proposal describing how it will run its grant program within 180 days from June 30, 2023.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/06/arkansas-to-receive-1-billion-from-biden-administration-for-high-speed-internet/

A year without abortion in Arkansas: more sterilizations and continued struggles in maternal health

KUAR | By Tess Vrbin / Arkansas Advocate, Antoinette Grajeda / Arkansas Advocate

A year after abortion effectively ended in Arkansas, more Arkansans than ever are seeking permanent sterilization, and abortion access groups have seen their costs increase.

A renewed focus to implement policies experts say would improve maternal health saw mixed results, and Arkansas’ maternal mortality rate continues to be among the worst in the U.S.

Arkansas was one of several states with a “trigger law” that banned abortion in June 2022 almost immediately following the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health decision by the U.S. Supreme Court that overturned Roe v. Wade.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-06-26/a-year-without-abortion-in-arkansas-more-sterilizations-and-continued-struggles-in-maternal-health

John Sykes/Arkansas Advocate

Arkansas Pregnancy Resource Center’s office in west Little Rock provides testing and other services for pregnant people. It was one of nearly two dozen facilities that received state funds in 2022 and 2023 directed at entities that help those experiencing an unintended pregnancy give birth.

Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Robin Wynne dies

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

A member of the Arkansas Supreme Court died Wednesday. According to Arkansas Business, Associate Justice Robin Wynne of Little Rock died at age 70. His cause of death is unknown.

A graduate of Harvard and the University of Arkansas School of Law, Wynne was reelected to a second eight-year term in November. He was reelected in a nonpartisan runoff election with 58% of the vote.

“Our democracy depends on a fair, impartial and independent judiciary,” he told the Arkansas Advocate in November.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-06-22/arkansas-supreme-court-justice-robin-wynne-dies

Courts.Arkansas.Gov/Courts.Arkansas.Gov

Division of Agriculture veteran to show new extension agents ‘how it’s done’

By Sarah Cato
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK – With 30 years of experience under his belt, Chad Norton is ready to shepherd in the next generation of agriculture extension agents in Arkansas.

OLD HAND — Chad Norton, agriculture and natural resources instructor for the U of A System Division of Agriculture, will be working directly with new county agriculture agents and help them understand their duties. (Division of Agriculture photo.)

Norton, who worked as a county agent for 20 years and a verification coordinator for 10, stepped into his next role with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture as the new agriculture and natural resources instructor for row crops on June 1. Norton will be working directly with new county agriculture agents and help them understand their duties. He joins current instructors Les Walz, beef and forages, and Leigh Ann Bullington, family consumer science.

“With his extensive experience in extension and with county agents, Chad is well-suited for this position,” said Victor Ford, associate vice president of Agriculture and Natural Resources for the Division of Agriculture. “We’re excited to have him in this new role.”

This position won’t be entirely new to Norton, who has worked closely with new agents in past roles, including as verification coordinator for the Corn and Grain Sorghum Research Verification Program.

“As a verification coordinator, I was in south Arkansas at the time, and we had four or five brand new agents,” Norton said. “That gave me an opportunity to work with someone just starting out and help them increase their knowledge base.”

Norton said his experience working with new agents taught him how to work with different learning styles, saying that “not everyone learns in the same way.” But that’s a challenge he’s looking forward to.

“I’m very excited to work with our new agents and watch them grow and gain confidence,” Norton said. “That’s what I’ve enjoyed doing over the last ten years. That growth is what I like to see.”

Find your local agriculture county extension agent at www.uaex.uada.edu.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk.

UAMS Ranks 17th Nationally for Primary Care in Annual U.S. News Best Graduate School Rankings

By Linda Satter

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS)’ colleges of medicine, nursing, public health and health professions were recently recognized by U.S. News & World Report as among the best graduate schools in the country.

The UAMS College of Medicine continued to climb the rankings, earning 17th place overall in primary care, up from 36th last year.

In a reflection of UAMS’ ongoing push to improve primary care in rural and medically needy areas of Arkansas, the medical school also placed 18th in serving rural areas, fourth in serving medically needy areas and 24th in producing the most primary care graduates. Last year, UAMS ranked 20th nationally in serving rural areas, wasn’t ranked in the category of serving medically needy areas and ranked 36th in producing the most primary care graduates.

https://news.uams.edu/2023/06/26/uams-ranks-17th-nationally-for-primary-care-in-annual-u-s-news-best-graduate-school-rankings/

An excessive heat warning and the possibility for severe weather in Arkansas on Sunday

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LITTLE ROCK - Attached is an update to the briefing that was issued. The severe weather outlook area has been greatly expanded with more of the state now in the slight risk area. The other noteworthy change is that heat advisories have been issued for Sunday.

Severe Weather Briefing

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

In Arkansas, an estimated 58,000 Arkansans aged 65 and older were living with Alzheimer’s in 2020. This number is expected to climb to 67,000 by 2025.

Nationwide, more than 6 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s dementia and that number is expected to grow to as many as 14 million by the year 2050.

June is Alzheimer’s & Brain Awareness Month. It is an opportunity to hold a conversation about the brain and share the fact that Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias are major public health issues.

In 2021, the Arkansas General Assembly passed legislation creating the Alzheimer’s Disease and Dementia Advisory Council. The council examines the needs of individuals living with Alzheimer's disease or other dementias, services available in the state for patients and their family caregivers, and the ability of healthcare providers and facilities to meet current and future needs.

Last year the council issued an update to the Alzheimer’s State Plan and made several recommendations to the General Assembly. The 94th General Assembly passed several pieces of legislation as a result of those recommendations.

Act 202 requires the Arkansas Commission on Law Enforcement Standards and Training to train new officers on the topic of interacting with persons who are affected by Alzheimer’s disease or other dementias.

The General Assembly also passed Act 335 which sets minimum dementia training requirements for staff members who are employed by an assisted living facility and requires the Department of Human Services to adopt rules regarding the training requirements.

In addition, the legislature passed ACT 682 and Act 70. Act 682 creates the full-time position of Dementia Services Coordinator within the Division of Aging, Adult, and Behavioral Services of the Department of Human Services. ACT 70 requires at least four hours of dementia training for home caregivers.

Act 102 adds additional members from the assisted living and home-based care industry to the Alzheimer’s Disease and Dementia Advisory Council. The council will continue researching ways to improve care in Arkansas and make future recommendations.

Proclamation to Declare a State of Emergency in Arkansas in Response to the June 17, 2023 Storms

WHEREAS: On or about June 17, 2023, severe thunderstorms and strong winds occurred throughout the State of Arkansas, causing danger, hardship, and suffering which now warrants this executive action;

WHEREAS: The damage resulting from these storms includes numerous downed power lines, which have created the need for commercial vehicles to haul heavy equipment, oversized loads, transformers, necessary hardware, and other transmission and distribution equipment to line crews working to restore power to the citizens of Arkansas;

WHEREAS: To ensure the safe and efficient restoration of power throughout the state, it is important to maintain a safe distance from these downed power lines, line crews, and related equipment; and

WHEREAS: Pursuant to 49 CFR §390.23, the Governor is authorized to declare a regional emergency for the duration of emergency conditions, not to exceed thirty (30) days from the date of the initial declaration of emergency, and any motor carrier or driver operating a commercial vehicle to provide emergency relief is temporarily exempt from the regulations found in 49 CFR §390 to §399 for the duration of the declared emergency.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS, acting under the authority vested in me as Governor of the State of Arkansas and pursuant to Act 511 of 1973, as amended, do hereby declare that a state of emergency exists in the State of Arkansas as applied to:

1. Commercial vehicles hauling heavy equipment, oversized loads, transformers, necessary hardware, and other transmission and distribution equipment to line crews for the purpose of restoring power to the citizens of the state; and

2. Emergency response vehicles such as, but not limited to, utility vehicles, bucket trucks, and electric utility supply trucks actively responding to the storms and related damage. These emergency response vehicles are authorized to bypass all Arkansas Department of Transportation weigh station facilities through July 17, 2023. This authorization does not include vehicles that require permits to operate on Arkansas’ roadways. This authorization does not relieve size and weight restrictions. This declaration only applies to weigh stations and to vehicles traveling in convoy.

FURTHERMORE, I hereby invoke the emergency executive powers vested in me under Ark. Code Ann. §§ 12-75-101 et seq., as amended, and suspend all provisions of regulating statutes prescribing procedures for the conduct of the Office of State Procurement, the Arkansas Building Authority, the Office of Personnel Management, and all other state departments and agencies to render maximum assistance to the Arkansas Department of Energy and Environment and the Arkansas Department of Public Safety, through the Arkansas Division of Emergency Management, relative to any potential impediment to the rapid and orderly rendering of assistance to affected political subdivisions.

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Great Seal of the State of Arkansas to be affixed on this 20th day of June, in the year of our Lord 2023.

Work continues on new Owens Corning plant; could open later this year

by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net)

Owens Corning on June 13 received its fourth building permit in the past two years at its new facility at 5401 Excelsior Drive. The recent permit issued by the city of Fort Smith was valued at $47.7 million.

In February 2021 the company began to build a new 550,000-square-foot manufacturing facility, adjacent to its existing plant on Planters Road. The global building and construction materials company announced in October it is investing in machinery and new construction at its existing plant. The estimated $115 million project is expected to add five jobs with an approximate annual salary of $85,000 per year.

The company has three other open building permits for the 5401 Excelsior Drive Location – a $4 million new construction project permitted on Sept. 14, 2021; a $15.4 million project listed as “other” permitted on Oct. 13, 2021; and $3.7 million “other” project permitted on July 2, 2021.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/06/work-continues-on-new-owens-corning-plant-could-open-later-this-year/

Student loan repayments will cut billions from consumer spending

by Kim Souza (ksouza@talkbusiness.net)

Financial services firm Jefferies estimates student loan payments will cost U.S. consumers $18 billion a month by September. Some economists suggest the hit to household budgets will slow a national economy already slowing due to high interest rates and inflation.

“Americans owning student loan debt will have to pull back on other things like travel and restaurant spending to fit the resumed payments into their budgets. Belt-tightening could hurt an economy that relies heavily on consumer spending,” noted Jefferies economist Thomas Simmons.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Investor Services, predicts student loan borrowers will face an average of $250 a month in extra payments in September when the moratorium is lifted after more than three years. He said the loan repayments reduce consumer spending and will reduce economic growth by 0.2% in the final quarter of 2023.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/06/student-loan-repayments-will-cut-billions-from-consumer-spending/

Federal judge permanently blocks Arkansas law banning transgender procedures for minors, AG will appeal

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

An Arkansas law that banned medical procedures for transgender patients under the age of 18 was permanently blocked by U.S. District Judge Jay Moody on Tuesday (June 20). Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin said he would appeal the decision.

The Save Adolescents From Experimentation Act (SAFE Act) was passed by the state legislature in 2021 by overwhelming margins, but then-Gov. Asa Hutchinson vetoed the measure saying it was “overbroad” and “a vast government overreach.” The legislature overrode his veto, putting the law in effect before it was challenged in court.

The federal lawsuit was brought by several families of transgender children who claimed the SAFE Act violated the 14th Amendment right to equal protection under the law and their 1st Amendment right to free speech. The defendants included then-Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge and members of the Arkansas Medical Board.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/06/federal-judge-permanently-blocks-arkansas-law-banning-transgender-procedures-for-minors-ag-will-appeal/

Arkansas judge hears arguments on LEARNS emergency clause, expects to rule in coming days

KUAR | By Antoinette Grajeda / Arkansas Advocate

Pulaski County Circuit Court Judge Herbert Wright said Tuesday that he’ll issue a ruling in a week or two on the effective date of the LEARNS Act, the governor’s signature education legislation.

The plaintiffs in a lawsuit challenging the law argue it is not yet in effect due to a defective emergency clause. An emergency clause allows legislation to take effect immediately instead of 91 days after the end of the legislative session.

They also argued the Legislature failed to establish that an emergency existed that made immediate implementation of the law necessary.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-06-21/arkansas-judge-hears-arguments-on-learns-emergency-clause-expects-to-rule-in-coming-days

Charlie Neibergall/AP

Pulaski County Circuit Court Judge Herbert Wright said Tuesday that he’ll issue a ruling in a week or two on the effective date of the LEARNS Act.

First food product rolls out from Expanding Farmers’ Opportunities in northwest Arkansas Program

By Fred Miller
U of A System Division of Agriculture

Aromatic steam rose off a cooking vat in the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station’s Arkansas Food Innovation Center earlier this month while rows of glass jars stood ready to receive a savory, tomato-based sauce. You won’t find this product on your supermarket shelves but at the farmers markets in northwest Arkansas.

VALUE-ADDED — Farmer's Ratatouille from McGarrah Farms is the first product from the Expanding Farmers' Opportunities in Northwest Arkansas. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Fred Miller)

Farmer’s Ratatouille is the first product to roll out of the Expanding Farmers’ Opportunities in Northwest Arkansas Program, a program designed to help cut down on food waste and create value-added products for farmers. In the United States, food waste is estimated at between 30–40 percent of the food supply, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Expanding Farmers’ Opportunities in Northwest Arkansas is a partnership of the University of Arkansas System’s department of food science; Brightwater, A Center for the Study of Food; and The Sam M. Walton College of Business at the University of Arkansas.

The experiment station is the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. Brightwater is a division of Northwest Arkansas Community College.

The project is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Farmers Market Promotion Program. The grant is provided by USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service through its Local Agriculture Market Program.

Renee Threlfall, an experiment station research scientist, said the program helps participating farmers learn to create shelf-stable, value-added food products from their surplus produce. Students at Brightwater develop recipes for foods that are produced at the experiment station’s Arkansas Food Innovation Center, a food manufacturing facility.

Chef Steve Jenkins, department chair at Brightwater and a partner in the Expanding Farmer’s Opportunities in Northwest Arkansas Program, said his students not only develop the recipes, but also team up with University of Arkansas food science students to produce the foods.

“They provide the expertise for farmers who want to turn their surplus produce into value-added products, but who are not trained as chefs or food processors,” Jenkins said.

The Farmer’s Ratatouille is made from tomatoes, squash, zucchini, eggplant and roasted red peppers produced by McGarrah Farms of Pea Ridge. Dennis McGarrah operates the farm at three locations in northwest Arkansas, where his family has been farming since 1824. He’s been farming for 60 years and sells his produce at farmers markets in Fayetteville, Bentonville and Rogers. He also sells produce at Rivercrest Farms, operated by his son, Dennis McGarrah Jr., near Fayetteville.

FARMER'S RATATOUILLE — Dennis McGarrah, left, of McGarrah Farms observes the cooking of Farmer's Ratatouille made with ingredients from his farms. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Fred Miller)

Dennis McGarrah said he had a lot of “seconds” in squash and tomatoes and wanted to come up with a recipe for a shelf-stable product. “Seconds,” or “culls,” are vegetables that may have blemishes that consumers would reject at a farmers market.

“It’s perfectly fine produce that just doesn’t look good enough for the farmers markets,” McGarrah said. “Now I can turn them into products that can be sold year-round.”

Dennis McGarrah said he has worked with the Division of Agriculture on many projects over the years, so he reached out to Threlfall. She connected him with Jenkins, and his Brightwater students developed the recipe.

“I tried it out at home first and thought we had something,” Dennis McGarrah said. “This is the first time we’re scaling up to production level.”

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch and on Instagram at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk.

Tenth annual Mid-South Conference looks behind the bench at SCOTUS

By Mary Hightower
U of A System Division of Agriculture

The common portrayal that the U.S. Supreme Court as being made up of liberal vs. conservative voting blocs simply isn’t true, said Tim Bishop, an attorney who has argued significant cases before the high court.

Bishop, a partner at Mayer Brown, in Chicago has argued eight cases and briefed more than 80 before the U.S. Supreme Court. He was among the presenters June 9 for the 10th annual Mid-South Agricultural and Environmental Law Conference. Bishop covered several SCOTUS-related topics, including decision composition, recusals and their potential effects on decision making and implications of the Dobbs decision leak.

Tim Bishop, partner at Mayer Brown, presents on environmental law before the U.S. Supreme Court at the 10th Annual Mid-South Agricultural & Environmental Law Conference on June 9 in Memphis, Tennessee. Bishop recently argued the Prop 12 case before SCOTUS. (The National Agricultural Law Center photo by Drew Viguet).

The conference opened with Harrison Pittman, director of the National Agricultural Law Center, which organized the conference more than a decade ago. The first Mid-South was held at Harrah’s, one of the riverboat casinos in Tunica, Mississippi.

“We literally shut it down,” Pittman said with a laugh. “We were the last thing ever held at Harrah’s Casino.”

When the first attendees walked out the door, casino personnel chained it closed behind them.

“Not a small chain, but a big chain with a big lock,” Pittman said. “And it was over. We shut it down.”

The following year, Pittman said, the conference was moved to its current site, at the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law.

SCOTUS

Bishop may be best known for the case challenging California’s Proposition 12, which would bar the sale of pork from pigs not raised under specific conditions. The high court upheld the law as constitutional.

Bishop said that in reading about SCOTUS in the media, one would have the impression that “this is a deeply conservative, pro-business court with a solid six-justice majority intent on remaking the law the way the Federalist Society wants it to be.

“It’s not true,” he said and cited several cases from the weeks preceding his presentation to show that justices did not vote in a six-justice block, including the National Pork Producers Council and Arkansas Farm Bureau Federation vs. Ross, the Proposition 12 case, Andy Warhol Foundation vs. Goldsmith and Sackett vs. EPA, the Waters of the United States case.

“None of the cases from the last few weeks has the lineup that the New York Times expected occur,” he said.

Heirs property

New Orleans attorney Ebony Woodruff called heirs property “the worst problem you never heard of. It’s the legal term for land inherited without a will.”

Woodruff, a former legislator and consul, was the first woman elected to represent District 87 in the Louisiana House of Representatives. She is currently the director of the Agricultural Law Institute for Underserved and Underrepresented Communities at Southern University Law Center, one of the NALC’s partners.

“Over 70 percent of Americans don’t have a will or have one that’s invalidated,” she said.

Heirs property is found in dozens of counties from Texas to Virginia in areas that tend to be poor and rural.

“Heirs property is generally framed as a black issue, but it affects many people. It’s a leading cause of black land loss,” Woodruff said.

With heirs property, typically there are multiple owners, sometimes through multiple generations.

Without obtaining agreement from everyone with a share, owners can’t get loans or mortgages, conduct leasing or be part of U.S. Department of Agriculture programs. And as she found after Katrina, many with heirs property could not get FEMA disaster relief.

Woodruff said the Uniform Partition of Heirs Property Act, restructures the way partition sales occur, offering protection to heirs’ property owners. The law has been adopted in 20 states and the Virgin Islands, including Arkansas, Texas and Mississippi.

Long-term care

Robert Moore, an attorney and research specialist with the Agricultural and Resource Law Program at The Ohio State University, a partner of the NALC, discussed how farm families can prepare themselves for long-term care.

“Twenty percent of 65-year-olds will need some type of long-term care for longer than five years,” he said. “One-third may never need it.”

“It’s this ‘more than five years’ that puts a lot of farms in jeopardy,” Moore said. “Sixty-nine percent of 65-year-olds will need three years of care — two years at home and one in a facility."

He said that that one year will be unpaid home care by a spouse or other family member. One year will be paid care; someone who comes in to feed and bathe the family. One year will be in a nursing home.

Moore, citing a survey by GenWorth Financial, said the cost of the care at home would be nearly $62,000, while the one year of nursing home care would be more than $94,000, bringing the average long-term care costs to $156,672.

“About two-thirds of 65-year-olds can expect a long-term care cost or expense, of about $150,000,” he said.

Moore said throwing everything into a revocable trust may not be the right tactic, and it’s important for farms to conduct a long-term care risk assessment to know what strategy to use in facing the challenges that come with age. Risk assessment enables users to analyze the potential long-term-care costs, income and savings to determine the actual risk to farm assets.

“This risk assessment is really a requirement of good long-term planning,” he said.

Moore said a tool to help farms conduct a risk assessment is available online.

Solar farms

Rusty Rumley, senior staff attorney for NALC, talked about the growing demand for solar power and the growing demand for land on which to place panels.

“Solar is going to take up larger chunks of land,” he said. He noted a caller from Texas who was approached by a solar company to lease his pasture land. According to the National Agricultural Statistics Service, the average rental rate for pastureland in Texas was $7.70 an acre. The pastureland owner signed a 25-year lease with the solar company for $2,500 an acre.

Rumley cautioned that solar leases are not like ag leases.

“They may look a little squirrely,” because they are longer in length, more complicated and require a lot of due diligence on the part of the land owner, he said. “They may affect your kids and your grandkids.”

And just because a landowner signed a lease, doesn’t mean the project will be built, Rumley said. Another bit of caution involves the end of the lease, since some leases aren’t clear on who would decommission the solar arrays.

The 11th Annual Mid-South Agricultural and Environmental Law Conference is set for June 6-7, 2024 in Memphis, Tennesse.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk.


Extension forestry professor named state forester

By Tracy Courage
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK — Kyle Cunningham, a longtime extension forestry specialist with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, has been appointed state forester for Arkansas.

FORESTER — Kyle Cunningham has been named state forester.

Division of Agriculture photo

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders appointed Cunningham to lead the Arkansas Department of Agriculture’s Forestry Division, according to a June 19 news release from the Arkansas Department of Agriculture. Cunningham replaces Joe Fox who will retire at the end of June.

“Kyle’s decades of experience in the forestry industry make him the ideal steward of our state’s forest health and conservation,” Sanders said in the news release. “I know he’s the right candidate to take over this position and shepherd the Forestry Division’s important role in Arkansas’ economy and natural heritage.”

Cunningham’s last day with the Division’s Cooperative Extension Service will be July 5, and he starts the job with the Department of Agriculture on July 6.

In his new role, Cunningham will continue working to ensure the health and conservation of Arkansas’ forests, which provide a diversity of services and benefits including timber production, wildlife habitat, recreational opportunities, watershed protection and aesthetic values.

“Over half of Arkansas is covered in diverse forests,” Cunningham said. “Much of our forestland is privately owned by family forest landowners and industry. I have spent many years working to assist these groups. Now, I have the opportunity to continue this work in a new capacity.

“Ensuring these resources and the people who enjoy them are protected will be a primary objective,” he said. “There will be challenges leading such a diverse entity as the Arkansas Department of Agriculture Forestry Division, but I am excited to tackle these challenges working with our Forestry Division professionals to fulfill the Division's mission."

Cunningham joined the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture in 2004 as an extension instructor and became an assistant professor of forestry in 2014. He was promoted to his current role as associate professor of forestry in 2020. His work has consisted of conducting research on all facets of the forestry industry.

Most recently, Cunningham helped research and establish a hardwood management plan to regenerate a declining ecosystem in Arkansas — bottomland oak forests — to help restore healthy and productive red and white oak ecosystems to provide timber and improved habitat for deer, quail, ducks, turkeys and other species. The plan covers forestland that the Division of Agriculture manages on its research stations.

“We will greatly miss Kyle’s 19 years of Extension experience and his in-depth knowledge about forestry and the forestry industry,” said Bob Scott, senior associate vice president for agriculture with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture and director of the Cooperative Extension Service. “He will be difficult to replace, and we wish him the best of luck in his new position. As much as I hate to see him leave us, I know that he is an excellent choice for state forester and will do a great job.”

Cunningham also organized and will lead sessions at a forestry management workshop on June 27 at DeGray to provide the state’s forest landowners, forestry professionals and watershed resource managers with updated research on forestry management.

Cunningham has a bachelor’s degree in forestry and a master’s degree in forest management, both from Mississippi State University, and a doctorate in applied science from UA Little Rock.

UAMS Receives 5-Year, Multimillion-Dollar Grant Renewal to Support Programs for Regional Campuses

By Chris Carmody

LITTLE ROCK — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has received a five-year renewal of funding under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ AHEC Point of Service Maintenance and Enhancement (POSME) grant, which will benefit programs administered by UAMS Regional Campuses.

The Health Resources and Services Administration, an agency in the Department of Health and Human Services, provides the POSME grant with the goal of preparing a diverse, culturally competent primary care workforce prepared to deliver high-quality care to various populations in rural and underserved areas.

UAMS will receive about $1.15 million during the grant year that ends Aug. 31, with $1.15 million provided in equal share by UAMS. The university is projected to receive $11.5 million, with 50% provided by nongovernment funds, during the grant’s five-year term.

https://news.uams.edu/2023/06/20/uams-receives-5-year-multimillion-dollar-grant-renewal-to-support-programs-for-regional-campuses/