AUDIO: Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address | Women’s History Month

LITTLE ROCK – This is women’s history month, and it is important to recognize their contributions.

With just slightly more than 50% of Americans being women, it's not hard to imagine how much of an impact they have on our country.

Women are mothers, educators, caretakers, medical professionals, executive administrators, managers, factory workers, farmers, and entrepreneurs. The list of contributions by women in America is endless.

We set March aside to honor and reflect on the courage, bravery, and perseverance of women through history. The vital role women have played in the development of America is undeniable, and women’s role in the development of Arkansas was just as important.

Arkansas Children’s Hospital is the only pediatric hospital in the state, and among the ten largest children’s hospitals in the United States. In 1934, Ruth Olive Beall became superintendent of the hospital and was an integral part of change and growth that garnered the support of President Franklin Roosevelt when he visited Little Rock in 1936. In that same year, the American College of Surgeons accredited the hospital which became an important milestone in the development of what the hospital is today.

In 1917, women won the right to vote in primary elections, thanks to the efforts of valiant women who did not waiver when the legislature rejected their initiatives. In 1919, Arkansas became just the second state in the south to pass the Nineteenth Amendment, giving women the right to vote in all elections. 

In 1932, Arkansan Hattie Caraway became the first-ever woman elected to serve in the United States Senate.

One of the most notable movements of the 20th century included the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 60s. Here in Arkansas, Daisy Gatson Bates, president of the Arkansas NAACP and mentor to the Little Rock Nine, led the way for the desegregation of Arkansas schools.

Today, women are an essential part of my leadership team, and I have relied upon women in several positions to bring success to my administration.

The impression that women have left on the state can not be overstated, yet even today new developments and issues arise daily. For that reason, I created the 2022 Arkansas Women’s Commission to address new issues, and there is no better perspective on an issue than that of those who are affected by it.

The Arkansas Women’s Commission is an opportunity for women from across Arkansas to be heard. The first regional meeting was held in Fayetteville with other meetings planned for Pine Bluff, Mountain Home, and locations to be chosen. These meetings are open to the public and materials can be found at Women.Arkansas.Gov.  

I urge you to take the opportunity to share your experience because your perspective could be one that makes a difference for our future.                                                                                

UA Cossatot Awarded $1.96 Million Workforce Development Grant To Support A Regional Cyber Learning Network

UA Cossatot has received a $1.96 million workforce development grant to fund further development of the CyberLearning Network (CyberLearN) – a regional cyber-learning partnership with six other schools in the University of Arkansas System to address Arkansas’s talent gap in cybersecurity.

The CyberLearN partners include UA Cossatot, UA Little Rock, UA Pine Bluff, UA – Pulaski Technical College, UA Hope-Texarkana, UACC Batesville, and UACC Morrilton. The Forge Institute, the Arkansas Center for Data Sciences, and SmartResume are also collaborating on the initiative.

Governor Asa Hutchinson awarded a total of $7.9 million in Large-Scale Workforce Development Grants to UA Cossatot and eight other organizations during a March 15 press conference at the Jonesboro Chamber of Commerce. The grants were funded by the Arkansas Office of Skills Development, a division of the Arkansas Department of Commerce.

“We don’t have an unlimited source of funds in Arkansas for workforce training, so we want to invest it wisely,” Governor Hutchinson said. “And you do that by partnering with industry to guide our training, our funding so that it results in jobs.”

CyberLearN leverages shared resources for the purposes of expanding and diversifying cyber workforce education in Arkansas. The consortium will provide more equitable access to cybersecurity education for Arkansas learners, aligning freshman and sophomore cybersecurity curriculum with ABET, a national accreditation board, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology Standards. CyberLearN partners will share instruction and create a common learning experience through standardized, hybrid-flexible learning spaces. “UA Little Rock is proud to lead in creating the CyberLearning Network, which will put Arkansas on the map for cybersecurity workforce education,” said Dr. Erin Finzer, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs. “This new consortium among academic and nonprofit partners will serve as a model to provide collaborative education and training opportunities across the state. We thank Gov. Hutchinson and the Office of Skills Development for this investment in Arkansas’s economic security and for providing our state with cyber talent for many years to come.”

CyberLearN will drive economic development opportunities by providing robust talent pathways and creating opportunities to spur creative innovations. Arkansas currently has more than 3,000 unfilled cybersecurity positions listed on LinkedIn, and that number is expected to continue to grow. Now that Arkansas’s broadband initiatives have provided more internet access across the state, there are more opportunities for cybersecurity professionals to work remotely, which can provide a boost for rural communities.

The workforce development grant builds on the commitment and spirit of last year’s UA System announcement of a $900,000 CARES Act Recovery Assistance grant from the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Economic Development Administration (EDA) to boost the state’s statewide workforce recovery from the economic impact of COVID-19 growth through the creation of the UA System Workforce Response and Training Center. That grant included nine UA System institutions, led by the Arkansas Economic Development Institute (AEDI) at UA Little Rock, to collect and analyze statewide workforce data and use outcomes to provide existing and bolstered education and training efforts through all seven of the UA System’s two-year colleges, along with two colleges of technology at the University of Arkansas at Monticello (UAM).

“This is a shining example of the synergy that’s possible by harnessing UA System resources in a collaborative and innovative fashion to continue bolstering the growth of a world-class, highly skilled workforce in Arkansas,” said Chris Thomason, vice president for planning and development for the UA System. “When we’re able to pool the resources and talent within the UA System close to Arkansas citizens and in our communities, the momentum that’s created can have a much larger impact on the state’s economic growth and within Arkansas families.”

In order to support this economic and workforce development potential, UA Cossatot and its academic partners are providing stackable certificates, which are a set of professional credentials that can be stacked into more advanced certificate and degree programs or may be earned by Arkansas workers wishing to upskill or reskill. Stackable certificates are an innovative way for institutions of higher education to serve working students by providing them with distinct skillsets and manageable motivators on their way to a two-year or four-year degree. “COVID has changed a lot of how we operate in higher education, and this program shows a positive adaptation in meeting the needs of today’s learners,” said Dr. Philip Huff, assistant professor of cybersecurity at UA Little Rock. “The workforce needed in cybersecurity is so great right now, and we can’t simply tell the industry to wait four more years for us to provide you with a pipeline of talent when they need it yesterday. These stackable certificates address the immediate need, and also open up new academic paths if a student chooses to continue their education.”

The certificate programs, the first of which is pending approval for the Fall 2022 semester, include two certificates of proficiency in cybersecurity fundamentals that “stack” into a technical certificate and associate degree. By completing these foundational certificates, learners will be ready to enroll in upper-level specialized certificates in areas like data security, digital forensics, cybersecurity operations, and software security. These certificates are designed to provide college students and workers with a road to lifelong learning with personalized pathways to learn skills that meet both learner and employer needs. “Higher education should seize every viable opportunity to increase efficiency in the delivery of educational services contributing to workforce education. CyberLearN is exactly this kind of opportunity,” Dr. Albert Baker, chair of the Department of Computer Science at UA Little Rock. “It has been, and continues to be, energizing to collaborate on this opportunity to build efficiencies in the development of the Arkansas workforce in the emerging and evermore critically important cybersecurity industry.”

Dr. Steve Cole, UA Cossatot Chancellor, said one of his biggest worries is how to combat the cyber-attacks that are happening all around the world. This new partnership with CyberLearN will bring education and training opportunities directly to UA Cossatot and other two-year colleges across the state. Having a skilled workforce that can respond to cyber threats will ensure a resilient economy in Arkansas.

“Cybercrime just doesn’t touch large corporations, it even touches the small business owner with one employee,” Cole said. “To combat cybercrime, we must build a workforce of cybersecurity experts, and CyberLearN seeks to address this huge skills gap. Community colleges like ours find it extremely difficult sometimes to start new, technology-rich programs due to the high costs involved and the lack of available instruction, but a collaborative effort like CyberLearN allows us to tap into the talent at UA Little Rock and the Forge Institute to offer cybersecurity programming in our rural area. I am confident that, without this effort, it would be difficult to offer a world-class program like this to many rural parts of the state like ours.”

Obesity among Arkansas public school students rises to record level

KUAR | By Ronak Patel

The childhood obesity rate among Arkansas public school students increased by 3.1%, during the 2020-2021 school year, which is significantly higher than typical year-to-year increases, according to a report from the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement (ACHI). The increase coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic, which disrupted life for many.

Since 2003, the state has been able to track students' body mass index (BMI), a measure of body fat based on height and weight, through Act 1220, which was signed into law by former Gov. Mike Huckabee, a Republican. Passage of Act 1220 created one of the nation’s first statewide, school-focused initiatives to help children reach and maintain a healthy weight, according to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-03-22/obesity-among-arkansas-public-school-students-rises-to-record-level

Arkansas Nonprofit News Network

42 Bar and Table staffer Melissa Hooper at the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock.

Arkansas marijuana sales top $21 million in February; tax revenue was $2.3 million

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

Medical marijuana sales in Arkansas totaled $21.1 million in February, with sales based on tax revenue topping February 2021. Sales for the first two months of 2022 total $41.69 million and 7,389 pounds, according to the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (DFA).

The DFA reported Tuesday (March 22) that tax revenue from the state’s 37 licensed marijuana dispensaries was $2.333 million in February, above the $2.309 million in February 2021. Taxes collected are 6.5% of regular state sales tax with each purchase by a patient, and a 4% privilege tax on sales from cultivators to dispensaries. Most of the tax revenue is placed in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences National Cancer Designation Trust Fund.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/arkansas-marijuana-sales-top-21-million-in-february-tax-revenue-was-2-3-million/

Snippets with Johnye Fisher from the Sevier County Library System

April is here and it is the fourth month of the year that brings us Earth Day, April Fool's Day, and Easter, just to name a few. Hibernating animals come out of their winter sleep, birds fly back to settle, and in some parts of the world, the harvest season begins. Speaking of Easter, On April 6th at 4 pm, Kelsie will have Easter storytime and activities for the kids. It has been said that April showers bring May flowers, so we will be giving away flower seeds for the kids to plant.  

Kickin’ it with Klondike is April 20th at 4 pm. Come play games and have fun with Klondike.

Don’t forget now that spring is here. We have seeds of all kinds for checkout. Remember these are the only items you can check out and not bring back. However, we do ask that if you have seeds from your harvest, you share them with us so we can keep our seed program going.

 

And don’t forget you can access our card catalog anytime at: 

www.seviercountylibrary.com/county-card-catalog.

Don’t forget the LIBBYAPP. You can follow the instructions to download the libbyapp from our Facebook.com/seviercountylibrary or simply go to your play store on your device. Remember you must search “Arkansas Digital Library Consortium” and hold a valid library card to browse our selection. For more information, you can call 584-4364

Amy at Horatio Library says, Happy April Y’all.  Come check out the front of our building and let your children play.   We have a caterpillar and an alligator out there.  No that's not an April Fool’s joke either, we really do.  We have lots of new books and DVD's that have come in this month.   Come by and see what we have.  We will be having a children's program on the 9th and 23d both will be at 10 a.m.   Don't forget we also have a domino game that goes on Thursday's.   We need to get these guys some more competition.  Come out and join them.  We hope to see you soon.

“Art at the Library” kick-off will be the week of April 6,7 and 9, patrons may come to the Lockesburg Library and prepare to start an art project for the library art show in May. All supplies will be provided and the theme is READ. On April 20, 21, and 23 in honor of Earth Day, Mz Wendy and the Lockesburg Library will celebrate by providing some STEM Earth Science activities around that theme. We will do some outdoor planting in the library flowerbeds and create a garden pot craft and al always a game will be included.  Lockesburg Library designs programs for fun and learning. Homeschool groups are welcome and encouraged to participate during the hours the library is open at their convenience. Wednesdays and Thursdays 8:30 – 5:00 and Saturdays mornings. For more information, call Wendy Clay at the Lockesburg Library at 289-2233 or follow us on facebook on the Lockesburg Library page.

Hey from Gillham Library. We are still in the process of moving and almost done so please bear with us a little longer. The new building is really nice; we can’t wait for everyone to see it. While we are waiting there are still new books and DVD’S to check out. We have James Patterson and Dolly Parton’s Run Rose Run, Harlen Coben’s, The Match, David Rosenfelt’s Citizen K-9 and CJ Box’s Shadows Reel. We also have a new author that everyone is enjoying Jana Deleon, she writes about escapades in Louisiana.  We have new DVD’s, Space Jam, The Addams Family 2, and Ghostbusters Afterlife.   Come see us and check one out. 


Criminality and Cryptocurrency

When Russia invaded Ukraine, conversations began quickly about how oligarchs might be able to hide money in cryptocurrency. That prompted Blockchain: The Future of Money hosts Eric and Leigh to explore how and how much cryptocurrency is being used for illicit or illegal activities.

https://www.kuaf.com/show/ozarks-at-large/2022-03-22/criminality-and-cryptocurrency

UA Cossatot Athletics Department to Add Competitive Shooting Sports for 2022-23

UA Cossatot will be adding another team sport in the coming school year. The Colts will compete at the NJCAA Division II level in men’s and women’s clay target shooting beginning in the Fall of 2022. Brett Blackburn will serve as the shooting sports coach.

UA Cossatot’s Athletic Director Robert Byrd announced, “UA Cossatot Athletics is excited to expand our sporting options with the addition of clay target shooting in the fall of 2022. Coach Blackburn is eager to begin the recruiting process, and we are looking forward to competing this upcoming fall.”

UA Cossatot Chancellor Dr. Steve Cole added, "Shooting sports has become mainstream, especially in our area, and with the incredible interest from our local high school student-athletes, it just made sense for UA Cossatot to offer this sport for all men and women with interest in shooting sports.”

UA Cossatot has competed as a member of NJCAA Division II Region 2 in men’s and women’s basketball for the past three seasons. Clay target shooting is the first sport added to the UA Cossatot athletic department since joining the NJCAA with preliminary plans for future sports under consideration. Coach Blackburn will be visiting the regional and state tournaments.

UA Cossatot Clay Shooting Coach Brett Blackburn said, “The shooting program will build on the foundation started by high school and Jr high students of the AYSSP program from the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. We look forward to building on these skills as the student-athletes grow as citizens and competitors at the collegiate level. Go Colts!”

For more information, contact Coach Blackburn at 941-726-2245 or bblackburn@cccua.edu.

UA Cossatot Students visit Arkansas State Capitol

UA Cossatot students recently visited the Arkansas State Capitol to learn about legislation, met with their state delegation, and visited the Governor.

The student groups consisted of UA Cossatot Student Ambassadors, Rotaract, and Youth Build.

Students first met with State Representative DeAnn Vaught and Collin Callaway with Arkansas Community Colleges. They discussed federal versus state issues, roles of Governor versus legislature, how a bill becomes a law, and legislative advocacy 101.

Students were then given a tour of the Capitol Building, followed by a panel discussion on hot topics from the 2021 session and anticipated issues for 2023. The visit ended with students meeting with Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson. Students asked Governor Hutchinson questions, followed by a group picture.

UA Cossatot’s Director for Student Success and Enrichment and Student Ambassador Sponsor, Erika Buenrrostro, said, “It was an amazing experience for all the students and sponsors who visited the Capitol. This was some of our students' first time visiting the Capitol. There is always something new to learn and experience. Thank you to Collin Callaway, Representative DeAnn Vaught, and Governor Hutchinson for making this a fantastic experience for our students!”

For more information, contact Erika Buenrrostro at 870-584-1133 or ebuenrrostro@cccua.edu.

Attorney General Alert: Don’t Fall Prey to a False Family Emergency

LITTLE ROCK – As spring break approaches, Attorney General Leslie Rutledge is warning of the all too popular “family emergency” scam. The scam starts with an Arkansan receiving a panicked phone call from an unknown number claiming to be a family member, like a favorite grandchild, or a friend desperately needing money to get out of trouble. The Arkansan’s initial reaction is to immediately lend a hand to the loved one in need by offering to send money via wire transfer or purchase a gift card, where the money cannot be retrieved or traced. The reality is that the friend or relative on the phone is actually a con artist looking to profit from rushed emotional decisions.

“Con artists are ruthless and will quickly take advantage of the innocent with a simple phone call,” said Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge. “If an Arkansan gets a call like this, he or she should hang up immediately and directly contact the person the caller claimed to be, and then report the scam to my office.”

Attorney General Rutledge recommends the following strategies to avoid falling victim to the “family emergency” scheme:

  • Resist pressure to act quickly.

  • Ask the caller for his or her name, and if it’s not provided, hang up immediately.

  • Never give or wire money based on any unsolicited phone call.

  • Verify the friend or family member’s location by calling the family member directly, or confirm with another family member or friend.

  • Do not send money to an unknown account or entity.

  • Have a plan in place when a family member is traveling to easily identify whether or not a need is genuine.

For more information related to scams, call the Attorney General’s Office at (800) 482-8982 or visit ArkansasAG.gov.

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

Arkansas is a better place today than yesterday because of our teachers. 

We cannot thank them enough for their work and the difference they make in our children’s lives.  

If you’ve ever thought about making a difference in the classroom, now is the perfect time to act.

The Arkansas Department of Education and Forward Arkansas are highlighting various pathways and financial incentives to become a teacher. 

Teach Arkansas is an initiative to increase the number of qualified, certified, and diverse teachers in Arkansas. As part of a rebrand, a new website,TeachArkansas.org, was developed. It provides current and future teachers an easily-accessible hub for career resources.  

At the site current teachers can find professional development opportunities to increase their existing skills and income, high school and college students can learn how to enter the teaching profession, and potential career changers can learn about affordable pathways to the classroom. In many cases, teacher candidates can obtain a four-year degree plus teaching license at no cost to them! 

One-on-one coaching with professionals trained in guiding current and future teachers through paths to licensure or career advancement also are available atTeachArkansas.org.  

Unfortunately, Arkansas has faced a massive shortage of certified teachers for decades. This doesn’t mean groups of students sit, unsupervised, in their classrooms. But it can lead to schools ending certain advanced or specialized courses. And, most often, they hire teachers who have not met the state’s requirements for certification. 

According to a report by The New Teacher Project (TNTP), approximately 4 percent of Arkansas teachers are uncertified, more than double the national average of 1.7 percent. But the severity of the problem varies widely from district to district. Statewide, 30 districts have a workforce that includes at least 10 percent uncertified teachers. 

It’s also worth noting that the diversity of the state’s teacher workforce does not reflect the diversity of its students, particularly in districts with the highest certified teacher shortages.  

In the 2021 Regular Session, we passed Act 680 which raises the target average salary for teachers to $51,822.   

The General Assembly is constantly looking at ways to improve teacher recruiting and retention. TeachArkansas.org will guide you through many of the incentives we’ve initiated over the years. Please share the website to help us recruit the very best for our students.

AEDC awards 30 community grants totaling over $7 million

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

The Arkansas Economic Development Commission (AEDC) has awarded $4,753,478 million in Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) to 30 Arkansas cities and counties.

The grants were awarded under the General Assistance set-aside, part of Arkansas’ $18.86 million 2021 formula grant allocation, which is designed to provide communities the opportunity to apply for a variety of non-housing public facility and public infrastructure projects. These funds originate from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) through the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) State Program for Small Cities.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/aedc-awards-30-community-grants-totaling-over-7-million/

UAMS closing COVID drive-thru testing site and vaccination clinic

KUAR | By Remington Miller, Alexandria Brown

As Arkansas’ COVID-19 cases continue to decline, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences is scaling back vaccinations and testing.

On Friday, UAMS will close a drive-thru testing site on the Little Rock campus at Shuffield Drive and Jack Stephens Drive at 4 p.m. It opened just over two years ago on March 13, 2020. Tests will still be offered starting Monday, March 28 by appointment only at the nearby Monroe Building at 401 S. Monroe Street.

Last Friday, it halted the operation of a vaccine clinic that had most recently been located in the Monroe Building. Vaccinations will still be available there, but only by appointment. Since the first vaccination clinic opened on Jan. 19, 2021 in the Freeway Medical Center, UAMS says it has administered more than 118,000 doses.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-03-21/uams-closing-covid-drive-thru-testing-site-and-vaccination-clinic

Michael Hibblen/KUAR News

Doctors and nurses testing people for COVID-19 at UAMS' drive-thru triage location on July 23, 2020. The drive-thru testing site is to be closed on Friday.

More Women Choose Medical Abortions

Jacqueline Froelich

For the first time, a majority of women in the U.S. are now choosing medical abortions, using drugs to terminate pregnancy, rather than invasive surgical abortions. Janet Cathey, M.D. an obstetrician/gynecologist provider at Planned Parenthood Great Plains Little Rock explains the benefits as well as risks.

The following report contains medical details that may be too sensitive for some listeners.

Correction: We report that both Planned Parenthood Great Plains clinics in Arkansas provide medical abortions. Only the Little Rock Clinic dispenses prescription abortion pills. The Rogers clinic does not.

https://www.kuaf.com/show/ozarks-at-large/2022-03-21/more-women-choose-medical-abortions

Courtesy/Guttmacher Institute

AUDIO: Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address | The Ukrainian War Hits Close to Home

LITTLE ROCK – Brent Renaud, who grew up in Little Rock, traveled the world to tell the stories of the overlooked with the hope that the world could never again overlook them. Brent’s films made the stories personal.

Three weeks ago, after Russia invaded Ukraine, Brent traveled there to tell the story of Ukrainian refugees who were fleeing the unprovoked attack on their nation.

On Sunday, Russian soldiers shot and killed Brent as he was traveling to film Ukrainians who were escaping their country. His story has made this war personal. Brent’s death reminds us that the war is much closer to Arkansas than the 6,000 miles between Little Rock and Kyiv.

There are other Arkansas connections. Kateryna Pitchford is a Ukrainian who is an assistant professor at Central Baptist College in Conway. She speaks daily to relatives and friends in her hometown of Dnipro. At the Arkansas Leadership Prayer Breakfast two weeks ago, Kateryna prayed for her country. This week, she shared her story with employees of munitions companies in East Camden.

Those aerospace and defense companies in south Arkansas bring the war close to home. Firms such as General Dynamics, Aerojet Rocketdyne, and Lockheed Martin build warheads and propulsion systems that Ukraine’s defenders are using to resist Russia’s brutal assault.

And now Brent Renaud, an Arkansas treasure, has died in that war as he documented the tragedy for millions who were forced to leave their homes. Brent  “devoted his life to telling the stories of overlooked people,” as his brother and partner, Craig, told Time magazine.

Brent was the first American journalist to die reporting about the war.  Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy sent a letter of condolence to Brent’s family. Brent was a “talented and brave journalist (who) lost his life while documenting human tragedy, devastation and suffering of the millions of Ukrainians,” President Zelenskyy wrote.

Gabe Gentry met Brent and Craig a decade ago when he helped them put on the Little Rock Film Festival, which the brothers founded. Gabe spent a month with Brent as he documented the ISIS invasion of Iraq. Brent’s demeanor and patience earned the trust of the people whose story he was filming. Regardless of the situation, Brent remained calm. Gabe says Brent was “a patient listener. When he did speak, the words had weight.”

Many Arkansans first learned of the Renaud brothers through their 10-part documentary Off to War, which told the story of the Arkansas National Guard’s year-long deployment to Iraq through the eyes of the soldiers as well as their families back in Arkansas.

For such people as Vladimir Putin, Brent Renaud was a threat. As the Dallas Morning News said in an editorial: “(Brent’s) work represented something that is terribly dangerous to autocrats and absolutely crucial for democracy. He was gathering facts. He was shining a light on the terror being waged in Ukraine.”

Brent Renaud lost his life in his effort to tell the story of this war and its victims. His life and death have made the war personal for Arkansas, although as one of his fellow filmmakers said, Brent would be uncomfortable with the attention and accolades. But for the moment, his life has become the story, an innocent man killed by the global ambitions of a single corrupt leader. His death – and the deaths of millions of innocent Ukrainians – calls the world to act with urgency against Vladimir Putin. Our grief and anger over this brutal and unprovoked invasion should forge in us the will to end this assault. Brent has showed us why we must do this. It’s up to us to figure out how.                                 

UAMS Study Finds Cancer Treatment Creates Employment Difficulties for Some Rural Women

By David Wise

Rural women are likely to face significant challenges finding secure and reliable employment following cancer treatment if they did not already have a secure job at the time of their diagnosis, according to a new study led by University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) researchers.

The study, which was published in the Journal of Cancer Survivorship, analyzed facilitators and barriers to employment for rural women who survived cancer and how benefits such as paid time off and a supportive work environment can help those women retain employment during and after treatment.

https://news.uams.edu/2022/03/15/uams-study-finds-cancer-treatment-creates-employment-difficulties-for-some-rural-women/

EPA pursues cross-state emissions cuts; Sierra Club seeks retirement of Northwest Arkansas coal plant

by Jeff Della Rosa (JDellaRosa@nwabj.com)

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently announced plans to reduce ozone-forming emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NOx) to protect downwind states from air pollution from upwind states. Following the announcement, environmental group Sierra Club named the coal-fired plant in western Benton County a contributor to cross-state air pollution and called for its retirement.

The EPA’s proposed action would ensure the 26 states, including Arkansas, that are covered in the proposal would meet the Good Neighbor requirements in the Clean Air Act by reducing pollution that contributes to problems attaining and maintaining the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards in downwind states.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/epa-pursues-cross-state-emissions-cuts-sierra-club-seeks-retirement-of-northwest-arkansas-coal-plant/

Governor rallies defense industry employees for work in Ukraine

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

Gov. Asa Hutchinson led a rally in Camden on Monday (March 14) in support of the aerospace defense industry that produces weapons being used to defend the country of Ukraine.

Hutchinson was joined by Ukrainian native Professor Kateryna Pitchford, who is an assistant professor at Central Baptist College in Conway, and Arkansas Secretary of Commerce Mike Preston.

Military exports are Arkansas’ No. 1 export product. There are more than 2,700 workers in Camden’s Highland Industrial Park, where explosive munitions are produced. Some of the weapons include tank killers, anti-air defenses, and other missiles.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/governor-rallies-defense-industry-employees-for-work-in-ukraine/

Rich Huddleston to leave Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families at year-end

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

Longtime Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families (AACF) executive director Rich Huddleston will leave his post at the end of 2022, the organization announced Monday (March 14).

Huddleston said he did not know what his next role would be, but he thought the child advocacy group would benefit from new leadership after his 18 years in charge and 27 years with the organization.

AACF was founded in 1977 by a group of prominent Arkansans who believed that children needed an independent force to provide information and education to parents and citizens about our state’s policies toward children and families. The organization provides leadership, research and advocacy to promote wide-ranging reforms to improve the lives of Arkansas’s children.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/rich-huddleston-to-leave-arkansas-advocates-for-children-and-families-at-year-end/

UA Cossatot’s Cosmetology Program Receives $500 Donation from The Springs of Mine Creek Nursing Home

UA Cossatot’s Cosmetology Program recently received a $500 donation from The Springs of Mine Creek Nursing Home. The donation will cover student expenses to attend the Discovery Beauty Show in Grapevine, TX, in April.

Twice a month, UA Cossatot Cosmetology students provide haircuts and other hair services for The Springs of Mine Creek Nursing Home residents under the supervision of a licensed instructor. In addition, UA Cossatot’s cosmetology students were invited to help residents get glammed up for their Valentine banquet, providing hairstyles and manicures.

“This arrangement is a win for all involved. Providing these services brings smiles all around for the residents, their caretakers and families, and the students,” said UA Cossatot’s Cosmetology Instructor Toyia Witherspoon. “It is so rewarding to make someone feel good about how they look and something we often take for granted in a normal day-to-day salon environment. We certainly appreciate the generosity of the Springs of Mine Creek and their support of our students.”

To book an appointment with UA Cossatot’s Cosmetology Salon, call 870-584-1360. The salon is open Monday through Friday from 9:30 am until 3:00 pm. For more info on UA Cossatot’s Cosmetology Program, contact Toyia Witherspoon at 870-584-1346 or twitherspoon@cccua.edu