Thursday COVID-19 Active Cases Update from the Arkansas Department of Health

Active Cases Data for Sevier County
Total Active Cases: 9
Active Confirmed Cases: 6
Active Probable Cases: 3

Active Cases Data for Howard County
Total Active Cases: 3
Active Confirmed Cases: 2
Active Probable Cases: 1

Active Cases Data for Little River County
Total Active Cases: 6
Active Confirmed Cases: 4
Active Probable Cases: 2

Active Cases Data for Polk County
Total Active Cases: 10
Active Confirmed Cases: 9
Active Probable Cases: 1

Active Cases Data for Pike County
Total Active Cases: 1
Active Confirmed Cases: 1
Active Probable Cases: 0

Jay Winters ‘A Man of Great Integrity, Character,’ Governor Hutchinson Says of Former Sheriff, ACIC Director

LITTLE ROCK – Jay Winters, a former director of the Arkansas Crime Information Center who died Tuesday, June 1, was one of only three agency directors that Governor Asa Hutchinson asked to stay on for his administration.

Mr. Winters, whose 19 years as sheriff of Pope County was the longest term in county history, stepped down as director of the ACIC in October 2017. When Mr. Winters resigned for health reasons, Governor Hutchinson praised him for his integrity and character.

“I want to thank Jay – a man of great integrity and character – for the incredible work he has done at ACIC through the years,” Governor Hutchinson said. “After I was elected governor in 2014, Jay was one of three agency directors that I asked to stay on. His continued stellar service confirms he was the right person for the job, and his service to our state will be missed.” 

Governor Hutchinson reiterated his admiration for Mr. Winters upon learning of his death.

“Jay Winters served his community and state with dedication and professionalism,” Governor Hutchinson said. “I was privileged to have Jay serve in my administration as director of the Arkansas Crime Information Center. I knew Jay as a law enforcement professional and also as a man who loved his family and community. He will be greatly missed.”

Largest Budget Surplus in Arkansas History Underscores Wisdom of  Belt-Tightening, Governor Hutchinson Says

LITTLE ROCK – Arkansas’s net revenue for May was $263 million more than projected and $980 million more than projected for the first eleven months of Fiscal Year 2021. May’s gross revenue was $328 million higher than forecast, and the year-to-date gross was $1.04 billion more than projected.

“The $980 million current surplus is the largest surplus in the history of Arkansas,” Governor Asa Hutchinson said today. “This fact underscores the importance of the belt-tightening decisions we made during the pandemic and the strength of our economic recovery. The record surplus also tells us that this fall will be the right time to cut our individual income tax rate again. This surplus has been created despite reducing our tax rate this year to 5.9%.  This shows we can fund education, raise teacher pay and protect public safety at the same time we are lowering our tax rate. It is all because our private sector continues to grow."

UAMS Breaks Ground on New Radiation Oncology Center, Will House First Proton Center in Arkansas

By Linda Satter

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) broke ground today on an expanded Radiation Oncology Center, which will be home to Arkansas’ first Proton Center.

The Radiation Oncology Center, part of the UAMS Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute, already offers cutting-edge technologies to provide the latest radiation treatments. It will continue to provide those services, as well as new ones using the expanded capabilities of three new linear accelerators, as it relocates in 2023 to a new 52,249 square-foot-building facing Capitol Avenue, between Pine and Cedar streets.

The new three-story structure, located southeast of the BioVentures building, is being built primarily to accommodate a proton center — one of fewer than 40 that exist nationwide — in partnership with Arkansas Children’s, Baptist Health and Proton International.

https://news.uams.edu/2021/05/25/uams-breaks-ground-on-new-radiation-oncology-center-will-house-first-proton-center-in-arkansas/

Gov. Asa Hutchinson speaks Tuesday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the UAMS Radiation Oncology Center as UAMS Chancellor Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA, looks on. The expanded Radiation Oncology Center will house Arkansas’ first Proton Center, a partnership between UAMS, Baptist Health, Arkansas Children's and Proton International. Image by Evan Lewis

Gov. Asa Hutchinson speaks Tuesday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the UAMS Radiation Oncology Center as UAMS Chancellor Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA, looks on. The expanded Radiation Oncology Center will house Arkansas’ first Proton Center, a partnership between UAMS, Baptist Health, Arkansas Children's and Proton International. Image by Evan Lewis

Gov. Asa Hutchinson Proclaims June 11-13 Free Fishing Weekend in Arkansas

COURTESY ARKANSAS GAME AND FISH COMMISSION

COURTESY ARKANSAS GAME AND FISH COMMISSION

Randy Zellers Assistant Chief of Communications

LITTLE ROCK – Thanks to a proclamation by Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Thursday, anyone may fish in Arkansas without a fishing license or trout stamp from noon Friday, June 11, through midnight Sunday night, June 13. The proclamation was read at the beginning of the Commission's May meeting by Megan Perkins, agriculture liaison to Hutchinson’s office.

An annual tradition sponsored by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and approved by Gov. Hutchinson, Free Fishing Weekend gives many people the opportunity to enjoy the amazing angling The Natural State has to offer. Residents and nonresidents may fish without a fishing license or trout permit. All other regulations, such as daily limits and size restrictions on certain bodies of water, still apply during this weekend.

The AGFC will host special fishing derbies at four of its freshwater hatcheries June 12 in celebration of the annual event.

Visit www.agfc.com/en/education/calendar/annual-event/free-fishing-weekend-statewide-2021 for more information on Free Fishing Weekend and the hatchery derbies planned.

https://www.agfc.com/en/news/2021/05/28/gov-asa-hutchinson-proclaims-june-11-13-free-fishing-weekend-in-arkansas/

AGFC Taps Veterans Affairs Chief of Staff to Lead Agency

Austin Booth New Director AGFC Courtesy AGFC

Austin Booth New Director AGFC
Courtesy AGFC

Randy Zellers Assistant Chief of Communications

LITTLE ROCK – Commissioners with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission unanimously voted at today’s regularly scheduled meeting to approve Austin Booth, a native of Scott, to become the agency’s 19th director in its 106-year history. He will replace Director Pat Fitts when he retires from the agency June 30.

Booth served as Captain in the United States Marine Corps in multiple capacities from 2011-2019, including a 2015-2016 deployment to Afghanistan. He comes to the AGFC after 18 months as Chief of Staff and Chief Financial Officer at the Arkansas Department of Veterans Affairs, where he oversaw financial functions as well as internal operations of the department. He is a graduate of The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina, and received his Juris Doctor from the University of South Carolina School of Law.

AGFC Chairman Andrew Parker said the decision to hire Booth was based on his proven track record in leadership and fiscal responsibility. “Booth has a keen understanding and vision for supporting the state’s leading conservation professionals and ensuring they have the means necessary to maintain Arkansas’s natural resources,” Parker explained.

https://www.agfc.com/en/news/2021/05/27/agfc-taps-veterans-affairs-chief-of-staff-to-lead-agency/

Arkansas Term Limits Files Suit Against Voter Petitioner Limits

by Steve Brawner (BRAWNERSTEVE@MAC.COM)

Arkansas Term Limits and other plaintiffs filed suit Friday (May 28) in the federal Eastern District of Arkansas to overturn a new state law that limits who can gather signatures for citizen-led constitutional amendments and other initiatives.

Act 951 by Sen. Breanne Davis, R-Russellville, and Rep. Michelle Gray, R-Melbourne, limits paid petitioners to state residents, which Arkansas Term Limits said in a press release is not required for any other political job or for petitions used to gather signatures for candidates to run. It passed with an emergency measure.

The ban applies to gathering signatures for citizen-led constitutional amendments; initiatives, which have the force of law; and referenda, which allow voters to rescind a law passed by the state Legislature.

https://talkbusiness.net/2021/05/arkansas-term-limits-files-suit-against-voter-petitioner-limits/

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

memorial day.jpg

Directly behind the Capitol stands a monument honoring those Arkansas families who sacrificed more than most. The Gold Star Family Memorial Monument reminds us daily here at the Capitol that without those sacrifices, our freedom could not and would not have been preserved.

Arkansas has citizens in nearly every community willing to make such sacrifices. Whether they volunteered, served during peacetime, or never expected to serve until their draft card arrived, those who wear our nation’s uniform represent the best America has to offer.

Honoring our veterans with words alone falls terribly short if we do not bring those words to life by honoring them equally with our deeds.

We can always offer our support. We can place flags and wreaths at their graves. We can donate to charities that provide for their families.

Business owners can offer a special veteran discount. We can volunteer at the VA hospital or pick up the tab for the table with a soldier at a restaurant.

We can also honor the lives lost by remembering and retelling their stories.

We can recognize their sacrifices by taking care of their comrades who served. In the Arkansas legislature, we strived to do just that. In recent years, we’ve eliminated taxes on military retirement and survivor benefits. And just this year, we established the Arkansas Military Affairs Council Act and Military Affairs Grant Program. The council will work with the Arkansas Economic Development Commission to promote and support military installations for state and local economic development.

President Franklin Roosevelt once said, “Those who have enjoyed such privileges as we enjoy, forget in time that men have died to win them.”

May we all remember them this Memorial Day and commit to living a life every day worthy of their sacrifice.

Tuesday's COVID-19 Active Cases and Vaccines Update from the AR Dept of Health

Active Cases Data for Sevier County
Total Active Cases: 5
Active Confirmed Cases: 4
Active Probable Cases: 1

Active Cases Data for Howard County
Total Active Cases: 4
Active Confirmed Cases: 3
Active Probable Cases: 1

Active Cases Data for Little River County
Total Active Cases: 5
Active Confirmed Cases: 3
Active Probable Cases: 2

Active Cases Data for Polk County
Total Active Cases: 12
Active Confirmed Cases: 10
Active Probable Cases: 2

Active Cases Data for Pike County
Total Active Cases: 1
Active Confirmed Cases: 1
Active Probable Cases: 0

AUDIO: Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address / Getting Across the COVID Finish Line

LITTLE ROCK – The state’s emergency health declaration ends this Sunday, and today I’d like to encourage Arkansans to remember that although the emergency has passed, we are still in a pandemic.

We have plenty of reasons to be optimistic, though. Our hospitalizations are down. The General Assembly enacted into law my emergency orders that allowed telemedicine and liability protection. Now every Arkansan 12 and older has access to vaccines, and the vaccine is the best way to manage COVID.

But these encouraging signs and the end of the emergency declaration do not change the fact that COVID-19 is still in our community. The public health concerns remain, and we must continue to take it seriously.

Throughout the pandemic, I have worked closely with my team at the Arkansas Department of Health as we decided the best course of action. After consulting Health Secretary Dr. José Romero and his experts, I am confident that ending the declaration is the correct action. Arkansans have demonstrated they will do the right thing, so we can safely move from an emergency response to the day-by-day management of the virus.

The Centers for Disease Control reports that 50 percent of adult Arkansans have at least one shot. That is good, but we must do better. And we hope to have seventy-percent of all Arkansans to be vaccinated.

We all know that vaccinations are our way out of the pandemic, and that is why I am supporting a program of incentives to help move Arkansas across the finish line.

On Tuesday, I announced the state will purchase fifty-thousand Arkansas Scholarship Lottery scratch-off tickets and fifty-thousand gift certificates for hunting and fishing licenses from Arkansas Game and Fish. Starting this week, everyone who receives a vaccination will get the choice of a lottery ticket or the Game and Fish certificate. If we hand out all of those, we’ll purchase more if this proves successful to motivate more people to get a shot.

In addition for Memorial Day weekend, the Department of Health is partnering with Arkansas State Parks to stage vaccination clinics at three of our state parks – DeGray Lake, Mississippi River, and Petit Jean. The name of everyone who receives a shot at one of these clinics will be entered into a drawing for two nights of free lodging at any of our state parks.

Last week, I announced that employees of the state’s executive branch agencies who receive the vaccination will receive a one-hundred-dollar bonus. We want employees to be immunized so they can be safe. But we also want to create a safe environment for those who must come into a state office, whether it’s to get a driver’s license or register a business.

Memorial Day is the time we officially set aside to honor the memory of those who have given their life in service to the United States. Memorial Day also is the unofficial start of summer. This year, Memorial Day also marks the end of the COVID-19 emergency for Arkansans. We are making progress against the pandemic. Normal life is in sight, and that’s something to be thankful for this Memorial Day.

Progress from the Construction Site of the New Sevier County Medical Center

The latest progress report from the Sevier County Medical Center construction site

PERSONNEL ONSITE:

• Four (4) Prime Contractors Onsite:

o Gigerich Electrical

o Bass Concrete

o Middleton Plumbing

o Car-Son Construction

• Three (3) Electricians

• Five (5) Concrete Workers

• Six (6) Plumbers

• Seven (7) Structural Steel Erectors

EQUIPMENT ONSITE:

• One (1) SkyJack Scissor Lift

• One (1) Bobcat Mini Excavator

• Three (3) Takeuchi Mini Excavators

• One (1) Dynapac Smooth Drum Compactor

• One (1) Backhoe

• One (1) Komat’su Excavator

• One (1) Caterpillar Excavator

• One (1) Bigge Grove Crane

• One (1) Gradall Shooting Boom Forklift

STORED MATERIALS:

• Reinforced Concrete Pipe (RCP)

• Polyethylene Piping

• PVC Conduit

• Rigid Steel Conduit Fittings

WORK IN PROGRESS:

1. Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP):

a. The SWPPP remains as previously reported.

2. Site:

a. Underground electrical risers are being installed as shown on E0.01 Electrical

Site, PR#005, dated 04-07-21.

3. Building:

a. Building “A”:

i. The south half of the slab has been poured.

ii. Structural steel is being erected at the northwest corner of the building.

Columns and some beams have been erected.

iii. Concrete footings are being poured at Grid H.7.

b. Building “B”:

i. The under-slab sanitary sewer piping has been installed. Due to the excessive rain the contractor has removed the excavated, engineered fill and installed SB-2 for the purposes of time required to aerate and dry the excessive wet material excavated from the plumbing trenches.

ii. Most of the electrical conduit has been installed; a few conduit risers and conduit runs to be stubbed out of the building remain to be completed.

UA Cossatot Phlebotomy Graduates

Six students recently graduated from the UA Cossatot Phlebotomy Technician Program.

This 90 hour Phlebotomy Technician Program prepares professionals to collect blood specimens from clients for the purpose of laboratory analysis. Students will become familiar with all aspects related to blood collection and develop comprehensive skills to perform venipunctures completely and safely. Classroom and lab work includes terminology, anatomy and physiology, blood collection procedures;, specimen hands-on practice; and training in skills and techniques to perform puncture methods.

Pictured left to right/top row:  Instructor Brittany Stone, Franchezca Butler, Kayla Harris, Kyron Starr, Angela Baker. Bottom row:  Blanca Hernandez, Shanika Wright

Pictured left to right/top row: Instructor Brittany Stone, Franchezca Butler, Kayla Harris, Kyron Starr, Angela Baker.
Bottom row: Blanca Hernandez, Shanika Wright

Little River County Chamber of Commerce Awards Banquet

A good time was had at the 2021 Little River Chamber of Commerce Awards Banquet Thursday night at the Barbara Horn Civic Center on the UA Cossatot campus in Ashdown. Award winners were:

Renovation Award: Ashdown Elementary School

New Construction: Davis Feed Co.

Large Business Award: Horatio State Bank - Foreman Branch

Small Business: Next Step Gym / Cutting Edge

Non-Profit Organization: Ashdown Cemetery

Outstanding Health Care Professional: Wes Aylett

Exceptional Law Enforcement Officer: Zane Butler

Foreman Teacher of the Year: Michelle Green

Ashdown Teacher of the Year: Shawnda Chester

UA Cossatot Instructor of the Year: Tamla Heminger

Panther Ambassador of the Year: Emma Wrinkle

Gator Ambassador of the Year: Chris Haywood

Clayton Castleman Public Service Award: Kim Befeld

Steve Pearce Citizen of the Year Award: Matt Richardson

Sticks Provide Strong Recruiting Base for Razorbacks

By: Dudley E. Dawson

Arkansas Sticks coach Chase Brewster has become one of the most influential baseball figures in the state. Chase is the son of Dave Brewster (aka Smokin Dave) of Gentry Chevrolet and Ed 88.

The top-ranked college baseball team in the country has been getting a lot of talent from one of the nation’s best summer baseball programs.

They just happen to be in the same state.

In six years there have been 40 members of the Arkansas Sticks Academy who have played or are pledged to the Razorbacks' baseball team.

That includes 16 members who will be playing this summer for the Sticks’ various teams.

“At one time last year, the whole entire starting (pitching) rotation were Sticks guys with (Connor) Noland, (Patrick) Wicklander and (Blake Adams)," said Chase Brewster, owner and coach of the Sticks.

“There’s been a lot of other good players — Matt Goodheart, Peyton Pallette and Cason Tollett — that have played for us, and even Christian Franklin, who played with us a weekend or two.”

Brewster is happy the organization has been able to act as an unofficial feeder program for the Razorbacks.

“It’s just been a really fortunate situation that we have been proud to be a part of,” Brewster said. “Like this summer we are going to be wearing the replica Razorback jerseys.

“The one thing that I do know is that the state of Arkansas loves the Razorbacks. Everybody is trying to play catch up with them and we are just trying to put together a team and have a product that the state is proud of just like the Razorbacks.

“We are glad to turn the TV on every Friday and be able to watch some Sticks alumni play on the SEC Network.”

Arkansas’ 2021 recruiting class is ranked third nationally by Perfect Game and includes former Sticks standouts Austin Ledbetter (Bryant), Braylon Bishop (Texarkana), Brandon Arledge (Sheridan), Max Soliz (Madison, Ala.), and Landrey Wilson (Van Buren/Crowder College).

https://www.wholehogsports.com/news/2021/may/27/sticks-provide-strong-recruiting-base-razorbacks/

COURTESY OF WHOLE HOG SPORTS

COURTESY OF WHOLE HOG SPORTS

UA Chancellor Recommends Moving Fulbright Statue, Keeping Name On College

By MICHAEL TILLEY/ TALK BUSINESS & POLITICS

University of Arkansas Chancellor Dr. Joseph Steinmetz supports the move to rename a main dining hall on the campus and relocate a statue of former U.S. Sen. William Fulbright, but opposes renaming the university’s Fulbright College of Art and Sciences.

Earlier this year a university-sanctioned committee reviewed requests to rename Brough Commons, the dining hall, and address the university’s connection to Sen. Fulbright. The committee voted to remove Charles Brough’s name from the dining hall, remove the Fulbright statue from its location outside Old Main, and rename the university’s College of Arts and Sciences.

Brough was Arkansas’ 25th governor and served from January 1917 to January 1921. Brough is connected to what is known as the Elaine Massacre in the summer of 1919.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/post/ua-chancellor-recommends-moving-fulbright-statue-keeping-name-college

The chancellor of the University of Arkansas is recommending the statue of Sen. J. William Fulbright be removed from the Fayetteville campus.CREDIT CLINTON STEEDS / FLICKR

The chancellor of the University of Arkansas is recommending the statue of Sen. J. William Fulbright be removed from the Fayetteville campus.

CREDIT CLINTON STEEDS / FLICKR

Rep. French Hill On Supporting Commission To Probe Insurrection, Bill To Fund Black Colleges

By MICHAEL HIBBLEN

A bill in Congress which would create an independent commission to investigate the violent insurrection at the U.S. Capitol in January is now in the hands of the Senate. A week ago, the House passed the bill with 35 Republicans joining Democrats to support the proposal.

But the future of the bill is unclear with Democrats needing the support of 10 Republicans to avoid a possible filibuster. GOP leadership is opposing an investigation.

One Republican House member who did vote to create the commission was Rep. French Hill of Arkansas’ 2nd district. He spoke with KUAR News on Wednesday afternoon during All Things Considered.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/post/rep-french-hill-supporting-commission-probe-insurrection-bill-fund-black-colleges

U.S. Rep. French Hill of Arkansas' 2nd congressional district, seen here in 2018, was one of 35 Republicans to join Democrats in voting to support creation of an independent commission to probe the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.CREDIT MICHAEL HIBBLEN / KUAR NEWS

U.S. Rep. French Hill of Arkansas' 2nd congressional district, seen here in 2018, was one of 35 Republicans to join Democrats in voting to support creation of an independent commission to probe the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

CREDIT MICHAEL HIBBLEN / KUAR NEWS