News

Hutchinson, Boozman say harsh sanctions are needed against Russia

KUAR | By Laura Jansen ,

Michael Hibblen

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and U.S. Sen. John Boozman expressed their support Friday for Ukraine and its citizens as Russia continues a military invasion of the sovereign eastern European nation.

During his weekly press conference, Hutchinson said the U.S. needs to enact severe sanctions on Russia and suggested President Joe Biden hasn’t acted as quickly as he would like.

“We don’t need to hold anything back right now, we need to give the full weight of our sanctions now,” Hutchinson said.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/2022-02-25/gov-hutchinson-sen-boozman-say-harsh-sanctions-are-needed-against-russia

Michael Hibblen/KUAR News

Sen. John Boozman speaking with reporters Friday inside the Arkansas State Capitol.

Appeal filed in dismissal of Arkansas redistricting case

KUAR | By Josie Lenora, Daniel Breen

A decision by a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit challenging Arkansas’ new districts in the state House of Representatives is being appealed by the American Civil Liberties Union.

The Arkansas State Conference NAACP and the Arkansas Public Policy challenged the new map arguing it dilutes the power of Black voters. The map was approved by the state Board of Apportionment, which is made up of Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Attorney General Leslie Rutledge and Secretary of State John Thurston, all Republicans.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-02-23/groups-appeal-dismissal-of-arkansas-redistricting-case

ARCAN/Arkansas PBS

Arkansas Secretary of State John Thurston, Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Attorney General Leslie Rutledge confer before the start of a meeting on Nov. 29, 2021 in which new legislative maps were approved.

More than 27,000 feral hogs eradicated in Arkansas

KUAR | By George Jared/ Talk Business & Politics

Feral hogs cause billions of dollars in agriculture losses nationwide each year, and in the Natural State an effort has been underway since before the pandemic to curb the problem. At least 27,803 feral hogs have been killed in Arkansas since January 2020 by members of the Arkansas Feral Hog Eradication Task Force, according to the state Department of Agriculture.

The Feral Hog Eradication Task Force was initially created by the Arkansas Legislature during the 2017 regular session and was directed to create a plan for the eradication of feral hogs in Arkansas. The Task Force is made up of 21 federal and state agencies and non-government organizations.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-02-21/more-than-27-000-feral-hogs-eradicated-in-arkansas

United States Division Of Agriculture

Feral hogs, an invasive species, are especially destructive to agricultural crops, native wildlife, and young domestic livestock.

AUDIO: Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address | Paving the Way for the Future of Mobility

LITTLE ROCK – Ever since I took office in 2015, my goal has been to make Arkansas first.

From the very first coding tour, I have pushed Arkansas to lead the nation on computer science. Legislators who share my vision for the future passed laws that put the state ahead of the rest of the nation.

In a press conference this week, I announced that Arkansas can also be a worldwide leader in advanced mobility, which includes electric vehicles, driverless vehicles, drone delivery, and cars that travel by air. I created the Arkansas Council on Future Mobility to identify barriers, recommend policy, and suggest incentives to support the development of advanced mobility. Members of the council will search for innovative companies and create partnerships with businesses that are pushing the future in terms of transportation and movement of people and goods.

By doing this, we are laying the foundation for Arkansas's leadership in the transportation industry for decades to come. This is another step that will not only make Arkansas No. 1, but we will be the first to create this type of council with private sector experts, academia, and government leaders.

Arkansas is home to a growing number of mobility companies such as Canoo, an electric vehicle manufacturer, which is moving its headquarters and R & D [Research and Development] facility to Bentonville, and Envirotech announced this week it would be opening its first U.S.-based electric vehicle manufacturing facility in Osceola, Arkansas.

In Bentonville, right now thanks to a partnership between Walmart and Gatik, the world’s first autonomous driverless delivery service is operating daily, without a safety driver aboard the vehicle. This is the first time that fully autonomous operations have ever been achieved on the “Middle Mile,” a term to describe moving goods from warehouses or micro fulfillment centers to a pick-up location such as a retail store. These companies are choosing to build in Arkansas because we have made it clear we are committed to striving for the future. Nowhere else in the world has this been done yet, but in Arkansas, we have achieved it and continue to look forward to what's next.

In 1908, Theodore Roosevelt was the first president to travel by automobile while on official duties. He rode in a Columbia Electric Victoria Phaeton, an electric vehicle that ran on two 20-volt batteries that weighed nearly 800 pounds. His trip around Hartford, Connecticut took nearly four hours. Now, more than 100 years later, I was the first Arkansas Governor to sit in the driver’s seat of the next generation of transportation.

When discussing the most innovative and forward-thinking places in the world, Japan, Germany, Israel, and Finland are among those mentioned. Now, the Natural State has staked its place as a global leader as we lay the pavement for the future of transportation and mobility.

Nashville Chamber of Commerce Awards Banquet Winners

Nashville Chamber of Commerce Awards Banquet was held Monday night at the Occasions Event Center. Incoming president Carlos Martinez welcomed the large crowd. Awards included:

Memorial Recognition - Mary Woodruff

Lifetime Achievement - David Blase

Scrapper Pride - Johnny Wilson

Orange & Black - Patricia Elliot

Better Together - Nashville High School Cheerleaders

Woman of the Year - Stephanie Harrison

Man of the Year - Greg Furr

UA Cossatot's Relinda Ruth and the OER program featured in a recent national article

OER Zero to Sixty in Five Years: One University’s Pathway to 60% Participation

https://wcetfrontiers.org/2022/02/03/oer-zero-to-sixty-in-five-years-one-universitys-pathway-to-60-participation/

Active COVID-19 Cases in SW Arkansas Back on the Downward Trend

Active Cases Data for Sevier County
Total Active Cases: 33

Active Cases Data for Howard County
Total Active Cases: 60

Active Cases Data for Little River County
Total Active Cases: 34

Active Cases Data for Polk County
Total Active Cases: 103

Active Cases Data for Pike County
Total Active Cases: 41

Robert G. Dixon, M.D., Joins UAMS as Interventional Radiologist Specializing in Prostate Artery Embolizations

By Linda Satter

Feb. 14, 2022 | Robert Dixon, M.D., has joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as a professor in the Division of Interventional Radiology in the College of Medicine’s Department of Radiology.

He brings to UAMS a procedure called prostate artery embolization, a minimally invasive treatment that helps improve lower urinary tract symptoms caused by benign prostatic hyperplasia, a noncancerous enlargement of the prostate gland that affects many men after age 50.

He is also an expert at treating kidney cancer, specifically, renal cell carcinoma.

https://news.uams.edu/2022/02/14/robert-g-dixon-m-d-joins-uams-as-interventional-radiologist-specializing-in-prostate-artery-embolizations/

Conservative talk show host floats GOP gubernatorial challenge to Sarah Huckabee Sanders

by Steve Brawner (BRAWNERSTEVE@MAC.COM)

Doc Washburn, a radio personality who until last year hosted a radio show on KARN 102.9, is floating his name as a candidate for the Republican nomination for governor.

On his podcast Feb. 9, Washburn said he would run for governor if he could raise the $15,000 required for the Republican Party’s filing fee by the filing deadline at noon March 1. He said he was a third of the way there after only a few days.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/02/conservative-talk-show-host-floats-gop-gubernatorial-challenge-to-sarah-huckabee-sanders/

Poll: Biden receives low marks for job approval, Hutchinson has widespread support

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

Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson scores high marks for his job performance among Arkansas voters, while Democratic President Joe Biden ranks low. U.S. Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., has an overall negative job approval rating, although he performs well with his party’s voters.

The latest Talk Business & Politics-Hendrix College Poll of 961 likely Arkansas voters was conducted Feb. 7-8, 2022 and has a margin of error of +/- 4.4%. The survey asked:

Q: Do you approve or disapprove of the job Gov. Asa Hutchinson is doing?

Q: Do you approve or disapprove of the job Sen. John Boozman is doing?

Q: Do you approve or disapprove of the job President Joe Biden is doing?

Results are found at the link below.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/02/poll-biden-receives-low-marks-for-job-approval-hutchinson-has-widespread-support/

Arkansas governor’s order sparks hope of energy conservation

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

There are hopes that an executive order by Gov. Asa Hutchinson will lead to reduced energy consumption and costs savings. Members of the Arkansas Advanced Energy Association (AAEA) are celebrating executive order 22-01 which was signed by the governor in January. The association is made up of 160 members including public utilities, engineering firms, contractors and solar developers.

Matt Bell, a partner at Entegrity Energy Partners and a board member of the AAEA, spoke at a press conference Wednesday in the Rotunda of the state Capitol. He said the energy saving initiatives could lead to an annual cost savings of over 20%.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-02-10/arkansas-governors-order-sparks-hope-of-energy-conservation

Michael Hibblen/KUAR News

Former state senator and current Arkansas State University Vice President of University Relations Shane Broadway speaks at Wednesday's press conference by the Arkansas Advanced Energy Association.

AUDIO: Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address | A Bridge Across the Centuries

LITTLE ROCK – Two weeks ago, I traveled to Washington to attend the Winter Session of the National Governors Association. As I met with my fellow governors, I was inspired by our shared hope that America will continue to be the beacon of freedom to the world.

Our meeting included dinner at the home of the Swiss Ambassador to the United States. In his remarks to us, Ambassador Jacques Pitteloud recounted events, such as the first and second world wars, when the hopes of the Free World rested on our great nation. He was born in November 1962 during the Cuban Missile Crisis. He said the planet was on the brink of nuclear apocalypse, but the U.S. stood fast in confronting evil. His parents awakened him in the middle of the night to watch Neil Armstrong become the first person in history to walk on the moon. He was in Berlin in November 1989 when the wall crumbled. He said that once again, people knew the United States had won that victory for freedom. 

The Ambassador then said: “This is how we cherish the memories of what America has achieved in the service of Freedom and Progress, not just for herself, but for all of Humankind.” But at this moment in history, he said, the world perceives that the United States is divided. “We sometimes get the feeling that this country has somehow lost the will to search for her better angels.” 

The words of the ambassador hit home to many of the governors in the audience. He reminded us that the world needs an America that is strong and united. 

The next evening at Mount Vernon, the First Lady of Arkansas and I dined in the same home where President Washington and the first First Lady of the United States ate their meals more than 200 years ago. We shared a table with Bill Ford, the great-grandson of both Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone, who is only three generations removed from two of the greatest business entrepreneurs in our history. His grandfathers traveled America in Model Ts on Firestone tires in the company of a third great inventor, Thomas Edison.  

After dinner, we toured the Washingtons’ home. In the main hall of Mount Vernon, the key to the Bastille hangs high on a wall in the display case. The Bastille was the fortress in Paris that was home to kings and queens, a symbol of authoritarian rule where they imprisoned their political enemies in the Bastille’s dungeons.

The Marquis de Lafayette, who fought with President Washington in the American Revolution, also fought in the French Revolution twenty years later. Shortly after the revolutionists stormed the Bastille, Lafayette ordered its demolition. The Marquis kept the key to the main door as a symbol of freedom and wanted to present it to his mentor, George Washington. He entrusted the key to Thomas Paine, who ensured that it was delivered to President Washington. Two hundred years ago, men who helped birth the United States and free France had held this key in their hands. That evening, I stood close enough to it to touch it. For me, this simple artifact became a bridge across two centuries, stitching time together in a seamless flow of events that really aren’t that far apart when you consider the entire scope of history. 

In the days since those transcendent moments I spent captivated by that key, my optimism has continued to grow that the United States will keep its better angels in sight. As with our founding fathers before us, we will unlock the doors that block history’s path to freedom.

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

On Monday, the 93rd General Assembly will convene at the State Capitol to address the budget for Fiscal Year 2023.

Fiscal Sessions began after Arkansas voters approved what would become Amendment 86 in 2008. This will be the 7th Fiscal Session held in state history.

Governor Asa Hutchinson is expected to address the General Assembly shortly after we convene at noon, February 14.

During the address, the Governor will outline his budget proposal. Previously, in budget hearings the Governor recommended a 3.3% increase in spending. His proposal included increases for state police salaries and more funding for services for Arkansans with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The Governor has also said publicly he will be asking the legislature to direct a portion of surplus funds for a state prison expansion.

The latest revenue report from the Department of Finance and Administration shows net available general revenue at $275 million or 7.1% above this time last year.

All appropriation bills will be heard first in the Joint Budget Committee. That committee has spent several weeks reviewing agency proposals.

By Friday afternoon of this week, more than 90 budget bills had been filed in the House. And more than 80 bills had been filed in the Senate.

If the General Assembly is to take up any bills outside the scope of the budget, they must first have a 2/3 vote in both chambers for a resolution describing the bill. The deadline for those resolutions is by the end of the first day of the session, February 14.

The deadline for filing both appropriation bills and non-appropriation bills is Monday, February 28.

Amendment 86 states that each Fiscal Session shall not exceed 30 days. The Fiscal Session may be extended one time, however, for no more than 15 days, by a ¾ vote of both the House and Senate.

We will continue to update you during this upcoming session. You can find the daily agendas and watch the meetings live at www.arkansashouse.org.

UAMS Part of New Statewide Core Facilities Exchange for Researchers

By David Robinson

Feb. 11, 2022 | The Arkansas Research Alliance (ARA) on Tuesday launched the Core Facilities Exchange (CFE), which allows researchers across Arkansas to share resources and equipmentThe CFE is a partnership with the six major research facilities in Arkansas, including the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).

The launch and demonstration of the web-based CFE platform included remarks by UAMS Chancellor Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA, who endorsed UAMS’ participation and expressed his excitement for researchers across Arkansas who now have access to state-of-the-art technologies and core resources that enable cutting-edge research.

https://news.uams.edu/2022/02/11/uams-part-of-new-statewide-core-facilities-exchange-for-researchers/

Heifer International President, CEO Announces Retirement

COURTESY / HEIFER INTERNATIONAL

By DANIEL CARUTH

Pierre Ferrari, President and CEO of Arkansas-based Heifer International, announced he will step down in September. Ferrari has led the global development organization for the past 12 years.

https://www.kuaf.com/post/heifer-international-president-ceo-announces-retirement