Arkansas News

Governor Sanders Provides State Aid as School Insurance Rates Rise Dramatically

LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders today announced that the State of Arkansas will help school districts cover the cost of rising insurance premiums.

“What these insurance providers are doing to our schools is outrageous. They gave districts no reasonable justification for skyrocketing premium costs. It’s clear that they’re just trying to line their pockets on the backs of Arkansas children and taxpayers,” said GovernorSanders. “To prevent our districts from facing financial difficulties, my administration is stepping up to help them cover rising premium costs.”

Arkansas school districts are facing substantial premium increases for the upcoming school year, averaging nearly 130%. Governor Sanders has authorized the State of Arkansas to cover 30% of the cost increase using money from the state’s restricted reserve account pending legislative approval.

After a disappointing first cutting, Arkansas pasture managers cross fingers for the second

By Ryan McGeeney
U of A System Division of Agriculture 

LITTLE ROCK — Pasture managers across Arkansas are reporting extraordinarily low yields from first cuttings.

Kenny Simon, instructor and extension forage specialist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said growers are seeing yields from first cuttings of ryegrass and other forage grasses reduced anywhere from 25 to 75 percent of expectations.

PASTURELANDS — Pasture managers across Arkansas are reporting extraordinarily low yields from first cuttings, seeing yields from first cuttings of ryegrass and other forage grasses reduced anywhere from 25 to 75 percent of expectations. (Division of Agriculture photo.)

According to the July 10 Crop Progress report from the National Agricultural Statistics Service, 81 percent of non-alfalfa hay was in good or fair condition, with 11 percent rated poor or very poor. The same report showed 24 percent at a second cutting of hay, compared to 50 percent last year. Ninety-eight percent had completed a first cutting of hay, just short of last year’s 100 percent.

Simon said that with record-high fertilizer prices last year — doubling and nearly tripling in some cases — many growers chose to put out less fertilizer in fields than they typically would.

“Or perhaps none at all,” he said.

“But this low fertility issue is not something that’s come about overnight,” Simon added. “It’s an accumulation of several years.”

Simon said that despite outreach efforts by the Cooperative Extension Service and other farming resources, there persists a widespread misunderstanding of soils’ true nutritional needs.

“It’s typical that a producer will fertilize a field with a complete fertilizer early in the season, then only come back with nitrogen as needed,” he said. “We’ve been doing our best to educate growers about the importance of soil fertility and the correct fertilizer applications.

“Of course, sometimes it’s simply the case that the producers understand what they need to be doing, but it’s just not economically feasible,” he said.

Other issues have conspired to affect the year’s hay crop as well. Les Walz, extension agriculture and natural resources educator, said the first cutting in the state fell victim to the “perfect storm.”

“Last year, we had the drought across a large portion of the state,” Walz said. “Nobody wanted to fertilize during a drought, especially given the high prices, so we had low-fertility fields going into the winter.

“Then we had that freeze the week of Christmas, where we had single-digit temperatures, and we got a lot of winterkill on some of our warm season perennial grasses, like Bermuda and bahia, as well as turfgrass and some ornamentals” he said.

This year’s notably wet spring was then capped off by an unusually cool May, with overnight temperatures consistently in the 50s in the northern part of the state. The southern portion of the state saw those cool temperatures during the first week of May, which Walz said delayed their growth.

“With 50-degree nights, the warm season grasses really didn’t take off,” Walz said. “All those things fell in line to add up to a really bad first cutting.”

Most cattle and hay producers in Arkansas tend to let cattle graze those pastures for much of the first half of the year, Simon said, executing a first cutting in the early summer and a second cutting three to five weeks later, depending on the grass variety. Producers who maintain dedicated hay fields may take as many as four or even five cuttings in a season.

For the majority of Arkansas producers, however, much is riding on this year’s second cutting. Simon said that the ongoing rainfall throughout much of the state will likely benefit most growers, provided they can harvest their grasses at the right moment.

“The nutrient value is largely tied to the maturity stage of the plant,” Simon said. “It’s the No. 1 thing that influences forage quality. In areas where we’re getting rain, grass is maturing quickly.”

In 2022, many cattle producers in Arkansas and elsewhere were forced to deeply cull their herds, selling off more than they preferred, as the year’s widespread drought made forage scarce. Simon said that despite a disappointing first cutting, cattle producers may yet be able to harvest and stockpile enough forage to avoid a second year of drastic culling.

Greener in 2023

“We’re a lot greener now than we were this time last year,” Simon said. “We might have a really good second cutting, or even a third.”

Going forward, Simon said that soil testing — and adhering to appropriate fertilizer recommendations in response — will be key for pasture managers hoping for a more reliable first cutting in 2024 and beyond. Additionally, managing the canopy height of grasses will also be essential to success, he said.

“When doing a hay cutting, we need to raise our mower to a 2 to 3-inch height,” he said. “A common thread I’ve seen in damaged fields is that they were scalped to the ground, cut at 1-1.5 inches, and cut late in the season.

“With the forage top growth, the root system is a mirror image of the canopy,” he said. “If you have 1-2 inches of top growth, your roots are going to be really shallow in the soil.”

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.

Heavy rain in southern Arkansas KO’s hay production, closes roads

LEWISVILLE, Ark. — Heavy rain in southwest Arkansas closed roads and brought hay production to a halt in Lafayette County, said Jerri Dew, the county’s extension staff chair, said on Thursday.

A stalled front enabled rain to continue falling over the same area starting overnight Tuesday into Wednesday morning. The National Weather Service at Shreveport, Louisiana, which covers parts of southwest Arkansas, issued a flash flood emergency for portions of Columbia, Hempstead, Lafayette and Nevada counties and warned of life-threatening flash flooding “particularly in the Stamps, Bucker, Lewisville and Patmos areas.”

Flood damage to Arkansas Highway 98 in southern Arkansas. (Image courtesy Arkansas Department of Transportation)

According to the National Weather Service, northern Lafayette County saw the highest totals, estimated at 6-8 inches. A CoCoRaHs station — Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow network — recorded 7 inches in Hempstead County. El Dorado, in Union County, recorded 4 inches, which was a record total for July 12. The old record of 2.6 inches was set in 2002.

“The flooding yesterday was not as bad in most of the cropland — for once — as it was in the northeast corner of the county which is mostly timber, some hay,” Dew said. “It was a mess up here. A lot of flooding.”

Roads closed

“U.S. Highway 82 was even closed for a time due to complete flooding,” she said, adding that she couldn’t remember that happening before.

According to the Arkansas Department of Transportation, both lanes of Arkansas 98 remained closed Thursday because of a washout. The department tweeted an image of damage to the highway.

“My neighbor keeps weather data for Lamartine and he had 12.77 inches of rain in his electronic rain gauge within a 12-hour span yesterday morning,” Dew said. “We have a lot of road damage over there.”

Crop damage

Dew that in visiting one of the farmers in the bottoms, he told her he didn’t get as much rain as the northern part of the county, but Wednesday’s rain added to the effects of previous events.

Road crew in Columbia County repairing damage following heavy rain on Wednesday (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Jerri Dew)

“They have had one storm after another come through for weeks now,” she said. “A lot of corn has been blown down, there has been a lot of hail damage and water is standing in the fields. Dew said that in driving through the area on Tuesday, she “observed a lot of yellowing corn. I am sure water is the majority of the problem.”

“Hay production has come to a standstill,” she said. “There are hayfields from one end of the county to the other that needed to be cut three weeks ago. Producers cannot catch a break to cut because we have showers almost daily.

“It is mid-July and some producers have not completed their second cutting yet. It is all adding up to make a short year on hay and a lot of it is not going to be good quality,” Dew said.

The Cooperative Extension Service is the outreach arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

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.

Brookshires Grocery sells 120 pharmacies to Walgreens, including Arkansas operations

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

Brookshire Grocery Co. (BGC) announced an agreement with Walgreens for the publicly-traded pharmacy chain to acquire 120 Brookshire pharmacies in Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas. Grocery store operations are not part of the transaction.

Financial terms of the Brookshire-Walgreens deal were not disclosed.

Walgreens will receive pharmacy customer prescription files and related pharmacy inventory. The vast majority of Brookshire locations are being converted to Walgreens pharmacies within existing grocery stores.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/07/brookshires-grocery-sells-120-pharmacies-to-walgreens-including-arkansas-operations/

Former Republican lawmaker appointed to Arkansas Board of Education

KUAR | By Daniel Breen

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders has appointed a former Republican state lawmaker to the Arkansas Board of Education.

Sanders announced Thursday that Ken Bragg will serve on the nine-member board, replacing outgoing board chair Ouida Newton. Speaking at the state Capitol, Sanders said Bragg would seek to implement her signature education legislation known as Arkansas LEARNS.

“He helped us get LEARNS across the finish line, and now he’s back to help implement it across the state. Ken’s resume makes him more than qualified to take on this role,” Sanders said.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-07-14/former-republican-lawmaker-appointed-to-arkansas-board-of-education

Daniel Breen/KUAR News

Former Republican state Rep. Ken Bragg speaks alongside Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders at the Arkansas State Capitol on Thursday

Sanders Orders Flags to Half-Staff on July 14, 2023

WHEREAS: Charles L. Daniels, born December 7, 1939, near El Dorado, Arkansas, held the offices of Secretary of State, Commissioner of State Lands, and Auditor in service to the State of Arkansas. Daniels passed away on July 9, 2023, deeply loved by his family, friends, and colleagues, and known as a beloved public servant of the people of Arkansas;

WHEREAS: Daniels began his career in public service in the United States Air Force, serving four years of active duty and fifteen in the Air Force Reserves. He attended Southern Arkansas University and the University of Arkansas at Little Rock before becoming an electrician at Arkansas Power and Light Company;

WHEREAS: Daniels entered public office in 1972 upon his election to the Parker’s Chapel School Board. Governor David Pryor then appointed Daniels as Director of the Arkansas Department of Labor. Daniels served in this position into the administration of the next Governor, Bill Clinton;

WHEREAS: Daniels was elected as Commissioner of State Lands in 1984 and served in that position for eighteen years. He was then elected Secretary of State in 2003 and served in that position until 2011. He completed four decades of elected public service as Arkansas State Auditor; and

WHEREAS: Daniels leaves behind a long legacy marked by generosity, humor, and humility. It is fitting and right for Arkansas to honor him and his decades of service to the people of Arkansas.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS, Governor of the State of Arkansas, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the laws of the State of Arkansas, in tribute to the memory of Charlie L. Daniels and as an expression of public sorrow, do hereby direct that the United States flag and the state flag of Arkansas be flown at half-staff from sunrise to sunset on July 14, 2023.

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Great Seal of the State of Arkansas to be affixed this 12th day of July, in the year of our Lord 2023.

Pro soccer, 5,000-seat stadium coming to Northwest Arkansas

by Jeff Della Rosa (JDellaRosa@nwabj.com)

A Tampa, Fla.-based professional soccer organization is partnering with a new Arkansas team to bring professional soccer to the state.

The United Soccer League (USL) and USL Arkansas announced Wednesday (July 12) plans to establish men’s and women’s soccer teams and build a 5,000-seat stadium in Rogers. Preliminary estimates show the stadium will cost about $15 million, and the aim is for it to open in early 2026.

USL Arkansas is led by co-founders Chris Martinovic and Warren Smith. Martinovic, a former professional and college soccer player, started working to bring pro soccer to Northwest Arkansas about four years ago. Smith, who helped establish the San Diego Loyal SC, joined the effort in late 2022.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/07/pro-soccer-5000-seat-stadium-coming-to-northwest-arkansas/

A rendering shows what the stadium for the new professional soccer team might look like. The goal is for the stadium to open in Rogers in early 2026.

Arkansas AG requests expedited appeal of LEARNS Act ruling

KUAR | By Antoinette Grajeda / Arkansas Advocate

Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin on Wednesday filed a motion to expedite his appeal of a circuit court ruling that delays the effective date of the LEARNS Act, the governor’s signature education legislation. Griffin asked that the state Supreme Court respond by 8 a.m. Friday.

Griffin filed an appeal on July 3 of an order invalidating the law’s emergency clause, which would allow it go into effect immediately instead of 91 days after the end of the legislative session.

Pulaski County Judge Herbert Wright last month ruled the law’s emergency clause is invalid because it was not passed with a separate roll-call vote garnering a two-thirds majority, as required by the Arkansas Constitution.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-07-13/arkansas-ag-requests-expedited-appeal-of-learns-act-ruling

Courts.Arkansas.Gov/Courts.Arkansas.Gov

Arkansas professors discuss the impacts of affirmative action programs in college admissions

KUAR | By KUAR News

Two weeks ago, the U.S Supreme Court in a ruling that involved Harvard and the University of North Carolina ended affirmative action. In the majority opinion by the Supreme Court, an academic paper written by Robert Steinbuch, a law professor at the UA Little Rock Bowen School, was quoted by Justice Clarence Thomas.

During a panel discussion on Arkansas Week, Steinbuch said his paper used data to analyze the effectiveness of race-based admissions programs at law schools.

“What the paper shows is that the success rate for example Blacks passing the bar, after graduation, I should say the failure rate is double that of whites,” he said. “It’s not because they’re Black, but because they are admitted with insufficient credentials and we’re not telling the students this when we take their money.”

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-07-09/arkansas-professors-discuss-the-impacts-of-affirmative-action-programs-in-college-admissions

Arkansas PBS

The U.S Supreme Court's decision to undo affirmative action will change the way schools handle their admissions. Robert Steinbuch, a law professor at the UA Little Rock Bowen School of Law, said the Supreme Court was correct in their ruling.

Arkansas 4-H members bring the heat to state barbecue contest, advance to nationals

By Rebekah Hall
U of A System Division of Agriculture

ROGERS, Ark. — Sixteen Arkansas youth put their grilling chops to the test at the 4-H State Barbecue Cook-Off, and the first-place winners in chicken and turkey barbecue will advance to the national competition in Louisville, Kentucky.

WINNER WINNER, CHICKEN DINNER — Jeremiah Moix, 18, took first place in the chicken barbecue category with a recipe that focused on his grilling technique and used hickory chips to infuse the chicken with smoky flavor. (Photo submitted by the Moix family.)

The contest was held June 10 in Rogers at the 63rd Annual Poultry Festival, hosted by The Poultry Federation. Jeremiah Moix, 18, was the first-place chicken barbecue winner, and Blakley Thompson, 14, was the first-place turkey barbecue winner. Moix and Thompson will advance to the national competition, which will be held at the National 4-H Poultry and Egg Conference in Louisville, Kentucky, from Nov. 15-16.

Moix has been a member of the Paron Lion’s Pride 4-H Club in Saline County for three years and has competed in the barbecue competition each year since joining.

“I’ve grown up watching my dad grill, so I already knew some basics,” Moix said. “It just sounded like a fun thing to do. We’d never cooked on charcoal, so I had to learn different techniques for that, and I got to learn how to cook chicken.”

Thompson has been a member of Clark County 4-H since he was 5 years old. Thompson said he also shows goats and lambs at the national level. This was his first year competing at the state level of the barbecue contest.

“I just fell in love with turkey because I like the taste of it, and I also like to turkey hunt,” Thompson said. “Turkey is all-around my favorite bird.”

The road to state

Sara Orlowski, assistant professor and extension poultry specialist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, coordinates the district and state 4-H barbecue contests. She said 4-H members first compete in the barbecue contest at the county level, starting in March and April. Those winners advance to the district level in one of four district barbecue contests held in Fayetteville, Jonesboro, Arkadelphia and Little Rock. Only 4-H’ers aged 14 and older can move on to the state-level contest.

“One of the big draws is that we hold the state barbecue contest for the 4-H kids at the Poultry Festival,” Orlowski said. “They grill in the morning, and then they spend the rest of the day at the festival. There’s usually a concert at night that the kids get a ticket to go to, so it’s a big weekend for them. They get to come up to Rogers and compete, but also have some fun afterward.”

At the county and district level, participants bring their own grills, but for the 16 youths who qualify for the state competition, a grill is provided for each of them. They then get to take that grill home with them as part of their reward for making it to the state level.

Orlowski said contestants are judged not only on the taste of their barbecue, but also on their preparation and food safety skills.

“There’s a section that they’re scored on before the product is even tasted,” she said. “They’re judged on how well they can light their charcoal grill, how they control their fire and how they put on sauces and check temperatures.”

Contestants also must prepare a trifold poster board with information about safe food handling and the poultry industry, as well as nutritional facts about their chosen meat. This accounts for a quarter of a contestant’s overall score.

Practice makes perfect

Moix said he begins preparing for the county barbecue contest early in the spring.

“Usually at the start of the season I probably haven’t grilled in a while, so for my first practice, I’ll light up the grill outside and I’ll do my food prep in the home kitchen,” Moix said. “But by the time of my last practice before the competition, I have everything set up outside. I’m trying to simulate the competition as much as I can. I come inside to get the chicken and take it outside to prepare it, just like I would in the competition, and I’m timing myself.”

Contestants are allotted two and a half hours from the time they light their grill to the presentation of their dish to the judges.

Moix said his family has tasted many versions of his chicken recipe and provided plenty of feedback.

“My harshest critics are my siblings,” Moix said. “I get pretty immediate feedback — they’ll tell me too much seasoning, or not enough seasoning, or I didn’t get enough smoke in this part of the meat.”

Thompson said that after qualifying in his county competition, he practiced every week for the district contest.

“I worked on getting my timing right,” Thompson said. “I marinated my turkey for the first hour while my fire was getting ready. And I actually didn’t put my turkey on the grates, I put foil down on the grates and then put my turkey on top of that. This was to render the spices and the vegetables that were on the turkey into it, to make it a better-tasting turkey.”

Moix said that over the years he’s competed in the barbecue contest, his recipe hasn’t changed much, but his technique has.

“What I try to go for is a very simple seasoning that’s not very strong or overpowering, but I add some hickory chips to the smoke,” he said. “Getting that into the chicken — which is sometimes harder to do than perfecting your seasoning — to keep it nice and moist, and get crispy skin without burning the skin, that’s really what I’m practicing each time. It’s a simple, good recipe, and it lets my actual grilling technique show through.”

Thompson said that on a trip to Puerto Rico with his family, they met a soldier who worked as a commercial chef, who influenced the flavors Thompson chose for his turkey recipe.

“I’ve always wanted to meet with a chef who’s been all over the country, so my recipe came from Puerto Rico,” he said. “We learned of these flavors from him and then tried them, and it improved the turkey in so many ways.”

The key to Thompson’s recipe is using lots of white vinegar in the marinade, which he says opens the pores of the meat and allows for garlic and peppers to infuse their flavors into the turkey.

Preparing for nationals

Moix said that at the national barbecue contest, competitors must give a 10-minute presentation on the poultry industry and respond to questions from judges.

“It’s a step up from the poster board, and then you have to go grill,” he said. “I’ve taken some speech classes in high school, so I’m pretty confident on that part.”

Thompson said he’s most looking forward to participating in the competition side of the National 4-H Poultry and Egg Conference, as in previous years he’s shown goats and lambs.

“I’m super excited to learn from other people who are big into this,” Thompson said. “Even at the state competition, people are like, ‘Oh, I’ve been here eight times,’ and it’s my first year. I’m excited to meet with the kids who are cooking those chicken and turkeys and have been there in past years and won that contest, to see what it does for you and how it helps.”

For their fellow 4-H’ers interested in the barbecue contest, Moix and Thompson both recommended plenty of practice and keeping a cool head during the competition.

“Every now and then I see people who have barely practiced, and they can sometimes do well based on luck, but if you want to perform well consistently, practice,” Moix said. “Know how much charcoal you’re going to use, know how much seasoning you’re going to use, so that at the competition, it just feels natural and like you’re cooking at home.”

The Arkansas 4-H youth development program is operated by the Cooperative Extension Service, the outreach arm of the Division of Agriculture.

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.

The Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts is bringing ‘something new’

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts executive director Dr. Victoria Ramirez is ready to wear a new hat. With renovation of the new museum in Little Rock’s MacArthur Park complete, Ramirez and her team are prepared to run an arts center instead of a construction site.

“Well, we were all ready to put our hard hats down. I will say that. We were ready to start to be museum professionals. For me, I feel like I’m back home. I’ve worked in museums my entire career, and I feel like we are finally focusing more intently on our mission-based work, which is serving the community and bringing exceptional visual and performing arts experiences to this community,” Ramirez said on this week’s edition of Talk Business & Politics. “We’re planning our programming and next exhibitions for the end of 2023. We’re looking at 2024. And as we keep saying to people, the best is yet to come because we’ve got a lot more to share in the future. So it feels good to be a museum employee again.”

The architecture of the new building is as much a piece of art as the collections it houses. Designed by world-renowned architect Jeanne Gang of Chicago-based Studio Gang, the 133,000 sq. ft. museum has a new north and south entrance, with the north entrance restoring an original art deco façade from the 1937 Museum of Fine Arts building that had been hidden for decades.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/07/the-arkansas-museum-of-fine-arts-is-bringing-something-new/

77,000 removed from Medicaid rolls in June

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

In the third month of activity, Arkansas posted its highest level of disenrollment figures since beginning its redetermination process mandated by state and federal law.

In June, Arkansas Department of Human Services officials disclosed that “approximately 77,000 beneficiaries were disenrolled because they are no longer eligible. As of July 1, total Medicaid enrollment was 971,364, including 414,722 children, 276,764 on ARHOME, and 279,878 other adults.” More than 50,000 cases were renewed, according to DHS.

In April and May – the first two months of a six-month disenrollment process – DHS reported 72,802 and 68,838 recipients respectively.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/07/77000-removed-from-medicaid-rolls-in-june/

Coughlin commits $500,000 to U.S. Marshals Museum

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

Cynthia Coughlin, a member of the U.S. Marshals Museum Foundation Board, has committed $500,000 to the recently opened U.S. Marshals Museum in Fort Smith to support static and interactive exhibits in the “Modern Marshals” gallery of the museum.

Born in New York City and raised in the San Francisco Bay area, Coughlin moved to Northwest Arkansas in 1978. She was married to Tom Coughlin, former vice chairman of Walmart Inc., who died in 2016. Walmart founder Sam Walton recruited Coughlin in 1978 while he was at Ohio-based supermarket and discount department store chain company Cook United.

Since 1984, she has operated Coughlin’s Ranch, a cattle-breeding operation specializing in registered Black Angus in Centerton.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/07/coughlin-commits-500000-to-u-s-marshals-museum/

UAMS Receives $1 Million FCC Grant to Enroll Arkansans in Affordable Connectivity Program for Broadband Internet

By Benjamin Waldrum

LITTLE ROCK — The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) awarded the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) $1 million to fund outreach for the commission’s Affordable Connectivity Program, which helps ensure that households across America have access to broadband internet.

The FCC created the Affordable Connectivity Program to help households struggling to pay for internet service. The benefit provides up to $30 per month for internet service and a one-time discount of up to $100 for a laptop, desktop computer or tablet purchased through participating providers.

“The UAMS Institute for Digital Health & Innovation is committed to seeing affordable, easily accessible broadband in homes throughout Arkansas, and this funding will allow us to collaborate with other leaders statewide to do just that,” said Roy Kitchen, executive director for UAMS e-Link and the principal investigator on the grant.

https://news.uams.edu/2023/07/11/uams-receives-1-million-fcc-grant-to-enroll-arkansans-in-affordable-connectivity-program-for-broadband-internet/

NALC’s Rollins to discuss WOTUS definition after SCOTUS ruling in July 19 webinar

By Tru Joi Curtis
National Agricultural Law Center
U of A System Division of Agriculture

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — How the Environmental Protection Agency will define the key Clean Water Act term “waters of the United States,” or WOTUS, is unclear following a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court on a case involving wetlands, said National Agricultural Law Center Staff Attorney Brigit Rollins.

Brigit Rollins, staff attorney for the National Agricultural Law Center, will present a July 19 webinar on the current state of WOTUS and the recent Sackett ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court.

The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Sackett vs. Environmental Protection Agency determined that only those wetlands that share a continuous surface connection with a water body recognized under the WOTUS definition can be regulated under the Clean Water act, or CWA. This has created some inconsistencies with the EPA’s 2023 definition of WOTUS which includes some wetlands that do not share a surface connection with another body of water.

The definition of WOTUS determines what water bodies can be protected by the CWA, which is the primary federal law regulating water pollution in the United States. The CWA requires anyone who might introduce pollutants into a body of water protected under the CWA to acquire a permit from EPA. Introducing pollutants into a WOTUS without a permit can result in fines and criminal prosecution under the CWA. Therefore, it is incredibly important to understand the scope of WOTUS.

“The EPA will most likely have to revisit its 2023 definition of WOTUS because that rule is out of step with the court’s ruling,” Rollins said. “In particular, the Sackett opinion limits what wetlands can be covered by the Clean Water Act beyond what the EPA included in its 2023 rule.”

Confusion over the WOTUS definition and the protection wetlands should receive is nothing new. Since the CWA was passed in 1972, the degree of protection for wetlands has been a point of contention for policymakers.

Rollins will be discussing the current state of WOTUS and the recent ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court during NALC’s upcoming webinar, “What’s Up with WOTUS: A Look at the Current WOTUS Definition and Recent Supreme Court Decision.” This webinar will be held Wednesday, July 19, at 11 a.m. Central/noon Eastern.

“I look forward to shedding some light on the court’s recent ruling, and what that may mean for the definition of WOTUS going forward,” Rollins said.

The webinar is free of charge and registration is online.

“We are thrilled to have Brigit discuss the court’s ruling and the WOTUS definition in this webinar,” NALC Director Harrison Pittman said. “Because the definition affects so many industries and how they conduct their work, it’s critical to understand the status of WOTUS.”

The July webinar is the second in a series regarding WOTUS. The information and recording for the first part, “What’s Up with WOTUS: An Overview of ‘Waters of the United States’ and Why it Matters to Agriculture,” can also be found online.

Rollins will present a third installment on Nov. 15, titled, “What’s Up with WOTUS: Post-Sackett and Beyond.” The November webinar will look at subsequent events and consider the long-term effects of the Sackett ruling. Registration and information for the third part of the series is available online.

For information about the National Agricultural Law Center, visit nationalaglawcenter.org or follow @Nataglaw on Twitter. The National Agricultural Law Center is also on Facebook and LinkedIn.

For updates on agricultural law and policy developments, subscribe free of charge to The Feed, the NALC’s newsletter highlighting recent legal developments facing agriculture, which issues twice a month.

Questions continue over Arkansas teacher pay

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

When Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders talks about the Arkansas LEARNS Act, she almost always mentions teacher pay.

“It starts by immediately offering incentives to attract and retain the best brightest teachers to Arkansas,” she said when she first introduced the bill. “Instead of being in 48th in the nation for starting teacher salary, we will now be in the top five.”

Under the law, new teachers will get $50,000 a year, a far higher base salary than even a year ago, when, according to the National Education Association, Arkansas offered on average $37,000 to first-year teachers.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-07-12/questions-continue-over-arkansas-teacher-pay

Lindsey Balbierz For NPR

As the LEARNS bill rolls out, teachers and districts experience confusion about how teacher pay provisions in the law will pan out.

Arkansas medical marijuana sales up 5.2% through June

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

Arkansas medical marijuana patients have spent $141 million on purchases in the first half of 2023, up 5.2% compared with $134 million in the same period of 2022, according to figures from the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (DFA).

There were 29,057 pounds purchased in the first six months of 2023, up 26% compared with the same period in 2022. Medical marijuana purchases generated $16 million in tax revenue in the first six months of 2023. Since the first dispensary opened in mid-2019, $105 million in state tax revenue has been collected, according to DFA data.

“Since the first dispensary opened for business in 2019, approximately $900 million has been spent on medical marijuana purchases in Arkansas,” DFA Spokesperson Scott Hardin said in a statement. “With a sales average of $23.5 million monthly, we should surpass $1 billion in overall sales toward the end of this year. Patients are spending an average of $785,000 a day at the state’s 38 dispensaries.”

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/07/arkansas-medical-marijuana-sales-up-5-2-through-june/

Rep. French Hill tackles broadband vote, COVID relief fraud, party politics

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

U.S. Rep. French Hill, R-Little Rock, shared his views on a variety of subjects ranging from his vote on infrastructure and broadband funding to COVID relief fraud to Russia and party politics.

Appearing on this week’s edition of Capitol View, Hill said he does not regret voting against President Joe Biden’s infrastructure package, even though it recently brought more than $1 billion to Arkansas for broadband investment.

“The bipartisan infrastructure bill that President Biden worked on with 11 Senators and Nancy Pelosi in the House contained a lot of good ideas, but it’s money that we thought was, I thought personally was too much for too many projects around the country. Only about 10% of it even went to roads and bridges and core infrastructure. So I voted against it, and I think it’s a contributor to the 40-year high inflation,” Hill said.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/07/rep-french-hill-tackles-broadband-vote-covid-relief-fraud-party-politics/

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

This week we received the Fiscal Year 2023 Revenue Summary. It shows we ended the fiscal year with the second-largest surplus in state history.

Results from collections and distributions for FY 2023 reached $7.185 billion. That is $1.161 billion in excess of the full funding level for the Revenue Stabilization Act representing a surplus.

The 2023 fiscal year ended above forecast in all major categories of collections and above year-ago levels in sales tax collections. The Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration says this broad-based gain resulted from another year of high growth in sales tax collections and less decline in income tax categories than expected from tax rate reductions.

The 94th General Assembly passed Act 532 which reduced the state’s top income tax rate from 4.9% to 4.7%. As a result, individual income tax collection was less than the previous year but still $42.4 million above what economic forecasters predicted.

Sales and Use tax collections for FY 2023 were $263.6 million or 8.4% over FY 2022. Corporate income taxes saw an increase of $5.3 million or .6% above FY 2022.

In the 2023 Regular Session, the General Assembly passed Act 561 which authorized the transfer from the previous year’s unobligated surplus funds and up to $380.6 million in projected surplus funds from this year to the restricted reserve fund. Act 561 prioritizes spending of the restricted reserve fund on projects such as educational facilities, correctional facilities, the state crime lab, teacher academy scholarships, and the UAMS National Cancer Institute Designation Trust Fund.

Revenue reports help guide our decision-making when it comes to state spending and tax reduction.

The FY 2023 Revenue Report shows us that our state’s economy is growing and outperforming expectations. In fact, for the month of June alone revenues were above forecast and year-ago levels in all major categories.

We’ve posted the revenue summary at arkansashouse.org.

Beau McCastlain Named Regional Finalist for Arkansas Teacher of the Year

LITTLE ROCK – The Arkansas Department of Education has announced the 14 educators named 2024 Arkansas Teacher of the Year Regional Finalists. These educators will be recognized July 27 at an event at the Governor’s Mansion.

“Congratulations to these teachers for achieving this honor,” ADE Secretary Jacob Oliva said. “We are proud to recognize excellence in teaching and honor those selected for this recognition.”

DQTV Teacher and District Communications Director Beau McCastlain has been named one of the 14 regional finalists. “I want to say a very sincere thank you to our Leopard Family for making this opportunity possible,” said McCastlain. “ I am extremely honored to be named one of the 14 finalists for Arkansas Teacher of the Year, but my students are the ones who have made this possible. DQTV has developed into a great success because of their engagement, commitment, and hard work. We have amazing kids and I am blessed to be in a position that allows me to work with them each day. ”

The regional finalists will each receive a certificate and a $1,000 prize provided by the Walton Family Foundation. The event at the Governor’s Mansion in Little Rock will include a brunch, a ceremony honoring the 14 finalists and the announcement of four 2024 Arkansas Teacher of the Year Semi-Finalist, and one will be named the 2024 Arkansas Teacher of the Year this fall.