Jim Smith takes leadership job with cannabis company

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

In August of 2020, late on a Friday afternoon, Rogers attorney Jim Smith got a phone call from Alex Gray, an attorney in Little Rock.

Gray wanted to hire Smith, considered one of Arkansas’ leading and most highly experienced business lawyers, to acquire one of Arkansas’ eight cannabis cultivation licenses. Gray was an investor with an operation that wanted the license — Good Day Farm Arkansas LLC.

Arkansas voters approved the legalization of medical marijuana in November 2016, with 53% of the vote. State lawmakers and regulators were slow to develop and implement the rules for issuing cultivation and dispensary licenses, and a series of legal actions hampered the process.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/04/jim-smith-takes-leadership-job-with-cannabis-company/

Jim Smith, president of business at Good Day Farm.

Arkansas’ year-to-date sales tax revenue up 13.2%, surplus tops $450 million

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

Broad gains in consumer spending helped push Arkansas’ year-to-date (July 2021 to March 2022) tax revenue up 7.6%, with sales tax revenue in March up 33.2% compared with March 2021. Overall gains in tax revenue has boosted the state’s revenue surplus to $456 million.

The fiscal year-to-date revenue is $5.898 billion, up 7.6% compared with the same period in 2021 and up 8.4% above forecast, according to Monday’s (April 4) report from the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (DFA).

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/04/arkansas-year-to-date-sales-tax-revenue-up-13-2-surplus-tops-450-million/

Arkansas Secretary of State John Thurston Launches Veteran Voter Initiative

(LITTLE ROCK, ARK.) – The office of the Arkansas Secretary of State, in partnership with the veteran service organization We Are The 22, announces the launch of a Veteran Voter InitiativeThroughout the month of April, representatives of both organizations will be on the road, reaching out to veterans across the state to ensure that they are both registered and ready to vote. The #ARVetsVote hashtag has been established to highlight the initiative. 

Secretary Thurston is recruiting support for the initiative from all Arkansans by asking them to dedicate their vote to a veteran they wish to honor or encourage. To participate, Arkansans may visit the tribute page hosted on the Secretary of State's website and dedicate their vote to a veteran or an active service member by sending a message honoring their service to media@sos.arkansas.gov. Arkansas voters may also link their tribute to social media posts using www.sos.arkansas.gov/elections/vote-for-a-veteran and the #Vote4ARVets hashtag. 

During the month of April, Secretary of State mobile offices and members of the We Are The 22 organization will be visiting veteran’s facilities and service centers across the state. At these mobile offices, Arkansas veterans and those honoring them, may register to vote and learn how to dedicate their vote in honor of a veteran or active service member. Additional election resources may be found on the office's website at www.sos.arkansas.gov/elections.  

We Are The 22 is a veteran service organization conducting direct suicide prevention and responding to veterans in crisis. Named for the average number of American veterans committing suicide each day (22). "When a veteran is in the darkest place in their life, there should be someone out there that cares enough to go find them, to sit down with them, and tell them there's hope," states founder Mikel Brooks. Members of the organization will be present at the mobile offices to assist voters in offering encouragement to struggling veterans through the Vote for a Vet campaign. Please visit www.wearethe22.org for more information on the organization. For immediate assistance to a veteran in crisis please call their 24-hour, vet-answered hotline at 1-855-WEARETHE22. 

The voter registration deadline for participation in the preferential primary is April 25. The primary election will be held May 24. The general election will be held November 8, with an October 11 voter registration deadline.

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

On Monday of last week, the House and Senate Judiciary Committees met jointly with the Charitable, Penal, and Correctional Institutions subcommittee of the Arkansas Legislative Council.

Members reviewed reports from the Department of Corrections concerning the current prison population and recidivism rates. Currently, the recidivism rate for the entire department is 46.1%. That breaks down to 47.8% for the Division of Correction and 37.5% for the Division of Community Correction.

In Arkansas, recidivism is defined as either an arrest, conviction, or re-incarceration within a 3 year time period from an individual’s release from a correctional facility.

Arkansas’ definition of recidivism makes it difficult to compare to other states, but Corrections Secretary Solomon Graves told members Arkansas’ recidivism rate is “unacceptably high.”

Secretary Graves told members they will be reviewing current programs to evaluate their effectiveness. He added that this is an issue that government cannot solve alone. It will take a collaborative effort from advocacy groups and faith-based organizations.
To bring attention to the issue, the Governor has proclaimed the week of April 26 as Reentry Awareness Week.

The proclamation states that at least 90% of state prison inmates will be released at some point in their sentence. It goes on to say that because high recidivism increases the cost of corrections and puts Arkansas citizens at greater risk of becoming victims of crime, it is imperative that offenders returning to the community have the programs, services, and support they need to become productive citizens of the state.

Committee members were also presented with information showing that roughly two-fifths of individuals entering prison do not have a high school degree or GED. Research presented also showed that incarcerated people who participate in postsecondary education in prison are 48% less likely to recidivate than those who do not.

The inmate population for the Division of Correction is currently 15,089. There are 1,528 inmates in county jails waiting to be transferred.

In the most recent Fiscal Session, the General Assembly increased county jail reimbursements by $6.4 million. The General Assembly also approved the transfer of $150 million for various one-time funding projects including prison construction.

In the months ahead, the members will continue to consult with the Department of Corrections regarding the inmate population, recidivism, and ways we can improve on this crucial issue.

AUDIO: Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address | The Black Bear Makes a Comeback

LITTLE ROCK – One hundred-fifty years before I took office, Arkansas was home to so many black bears that we were known as The Bear State, but by the early years of the last century, enthusiastic hunters had thinned the population to the point that the General Assembly outlawed bear hunting.

Today I’d like to share a bit of the story of the demise and the historic reintroduction of the black bear in our state.

I learned much of this history two weeks ago when I accompanied several of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s 14-member bear team on a visit to a bear den near Jessieville. The team is led by Game and Fish Deputy Director Roger Mangham and Myron Means, the coordinator of the Large Carnivore Program. The annual survey starts in January and is complete by the end of March.

The team tracks the bears with radio collars that allow them to distinguish one bear from another and to find each bear’s den. As they usually do, the members of the team found each of its 43 collared bears this spring.

The day I joined the team, the members were visiting the den of mama bear Brenda Lee, who has two cubs. They safely tranquilized and examined Brenda, and held her cubs to measure and weigh.

A hundred years ago, the number of Brenda Lee’s ancestors had dwindled to fewer than about 50 in the entire state. From 1958 to 1968, Arkansas brought in bears from Minnesota and Manitoba, Canada. Now the project, with almost 6,000 bears, is considered the most successful reintroduction of a large carnivore anywhere in the world.

By 1980, the state had once again allowed bear hunting in the Ozark and Ouachita mountains. This year, the Game and Fish Commission is expanding bear hunting into south Arkansas.

Myron Means, who grew up in Van Buren and now lives in his grandparents’ home there, has worked with bears for 27 years. His degrees are from Arkansas Tech and the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. He started his career as a field biologist in the Ozarks. In 1989, he caught his first bear, which was two years old and weighed 110 pounds. Out of the thousands of bears Myron has handled, he remembers that one. That was the moment he knew he wanted to work with bears.

A bear has never attacked him, but plenty of mama bears have bluff charged him. Myron says the mamas attempt to scare humans by running at them, but they stop short of an attack. Bears really are timid, and the bears that attack a person have lost their fear through frequent interaction with humans.

My visit with Brenda Lee and the bear team was exciting, informative, and safe. Now I can add bears to my list of Arkansas wildlife I have seen in the woods.

Harris named next CEO of Winthrop Rockefeller Institute

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

After a nationwide search, the Winthrop Rockefeller Institute Board of Directors decided to keep it local and have named Janet Harris as Institute executive director/CEO. Harris, now the Institute’s chief strategy officer, will begin in the new role on April 1.

Harris has worked at the Institute since 2016, first as director of programs, followed by a promotion to chief programs and marketing officer in 2018, before being promoted again to chief strategy officer. She succeeds Dr. Marta Loyd who retires March 31.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/harris-named-next-ceo-of-winthrop-rockefeller-institute/

Clinton, Fauci look back on science, genome accomplishments

by Steve Brawner (BRAWNERSTEVE@MAC.COM)

Investments made during President Bill Clinton’s administration helped lead to the mapping of the human genome as well as advances in the fight against AIDS and later, COVID, according to Dr. Anthony Fauci and participants in two panel discussions hosted by the Clinton Presidential Center on Tuesday (March 29).

The participants spoke at a virtual program, “Investing in a Healthier Future,” presented as part of the Frank and Kula Kumpuris Distinguished Lecture Series.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/clinton-fauci-look-back-on-science-genome-accomplishments/

Amazon selects UA Little Rock, UA Pulaski Tech for workforce program

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

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock and the University of Arkansas – Pulaski Technical College were selected as education partners for Amazon’s Career Choice program, which provides Amazon’s hourly employees in central Arkansas with access to more than 180 accredited degree programs.

UA Little Rock and UA Pulaski Tech are the first higher education institutions in Arkansas to be named Career Choice Partners by Amazon.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/amazon-selects-ua-little-rock-ua-pulaski-tech-for-workforce-program/


Report says electric vehicles could save Arkansas billions in health costs

KUAR | By David Monteith

A new report from the American Lung Association says transitioning completely to electric vehicles over the next 20 years could save Arkansans over $9 billion in medical costs by 2050.

Laura Turner with the group says there are many lung-related issues linked vehicle emissions.

“Factoring in all of the issues that we know are connected to pollution and figuring out, based on that, if we [could] reduce those health issues proportionately, such as asthma attacks,” Turner said.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-03-30/report-says-electric-vehicles-could-save-arkansas-billions-in-healthcare

Michael Hibblen/KUAR News

An electric vehicle charging station along Interstate 30 in Texarkana, Texas near the Arkansas border on June 20, 2021.

Arkansas Derby to be held Saturday at Oaklawn ahead of Kentucky Derby

KUAR | By Laura Jansen , Michael Hibblen

The 86th Arkansas Derby will be held Saturday at Oaklawn Racing Casino Resort in Hot Spring. The annual qualifying race is the fourth and final race of Oaklawn’s prep series for the Kentucky Derby.

The participants will be able to win qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby. First place will receive 100 points, second place 40 points, third place 20 points and fourth place will earn 10 points. The winner will also receive $1.25 million.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-03-29/arkansas-derby-to-be-held-saturday-at-oaklawn-ahead-of-kentucky-derby

Brandonrush/Flickr

The finish line of the 2013 Arkansas Derby, which was won by Overanalyze.

EPA Pressing for Cross-State Air Pollution Control Rule

By Jacqueline Froelich

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, under the Biden Administration, has renewed efforts — greatly curtailed during the Trump administration — to reduce harmful industrial ozone-forming emissions from industry, including coal-powered energy facilities. The non-profit Sierra Club, which works in Arkansas, supports the rule. But Southwestern Electric Power Company says its Flint Creek Power Plant in Gentry, Benton County operates with some of the lowest permitted emissions limits of any coal-fueled generating unit in the country.

https://www.kuaf.com/show/ozarks-at-large/2022-03-29/epa-pressing-for-cross-state-air-pollution-control-rule

Courtesy/SWEPCO

AEP Southwestern Electric Power Company’s aging H.W., Pirkey Coal Plant near Longview, Texas will be retired next year.

Severe Weather Briefing from the National Weather Service

A strong storm system will affect Arkansas on Tuesday Night and Wednesday

Showers and thunderstorms will be widespread, moving into Arkansas late Tuesday Night and Wednesday Morning and out of the state on Wednesday Evening.

Severe weather is possible, with the greatest likelihood over the southeast half of Arkansas. Storms that become severe will be capable of producing damaging winds in excess of 60 MPH, and there could be a few brief, weak tornadoes. It does appear that severe storms are more likely in areas south and east of Arkansas.

There will be areas of heavy rain. The forecast calls for one to two inches of precipitation at most locations. Isolated heavier amounts are possible, and this could cause localized flash flooding issues.

Strong winds are expected with the system, with gusts of 40 – 50 MPH possible, primarily over eastern portions of Arkansas and in the higher terrain of western Arkansas. This will create difficulty for higher profile vehicles, and cause hazardous conditions on area bodies of water.


(Click on the pic below for today’s Severe Weather Briefing PDF)

UAMS College of Nursing Names Tracie Harrison, Ph.D., to Alice An-Loh Sun Chair in Geriatric Nursing

By Kalee Sexton

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has appointed Tracie Harrison, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, FGSA, as the holder of the new endowed Alice An-Loh Sun Chair in Geriatric Nursing for the College of Nursing.

Harrison will be joining UAMS at the end of the semester. Harrison joins UAMS from the University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing, where she is a professor. Her work has focused on aging with and into disability among diverse populations.

“We are delighted that Dr. Traci Harrison will be joining the College of Nursing as the holder of the endowed Alice An-Loh Sun Chair in Geriatric Nursing,” said Patricia A. Cowan, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, dean of the College of Nursing.

https://news.uams.edu/2022/03/24/uams-college-of-nursing-names-tracie-harrison-ph-d-to-alice-an-loh-sun-chair-in-geriatric-nursing/

GOP gubernatorial candidate Doc Washburn on Sarah Sanders: ‘I believe she’s a RINO’

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Talk show host Doc Washburn says his GOP rival for governor aligns too closely with “Republicans in Name Only” – RINOs – and that has caused him to question her conservative credentials and ability to lead Arkansas.

Washburn is the Republican opponent of Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the frontrunner for the GOP nomination who has amassed a multi-million dollar war chest and support from former President Donald Trump to many local and statewide elected officials.

Washburn said as he speaks to audiences, he’s finding persuasive voters to his cause.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/gop-gubernatorial-candidate-doc-washburn-on-sarah-sanders-i-believe-shes-a-rino/

Six inducted into Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame

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

The Arkansas Agriculture Hall of Fame inducted six new members Friday (March 25) at a ceremony at the Little Rock Embassy Suites.

The newest inductees include:

  • Retired Cooperative Extension Service Director Rick Cartwright of Fayetteville;

  • Long-time ag educator Joe Don Greenwood of Hermitage;

  • The late Russell Roy Reynolds, the director of the U.S. Forest Service Crossett Experimental Forest for 34 years;

  • Former Arkansas Farm Bureau President Randy Veach of Manila;

  • Mark Waldrip of Moro, founder of Armor Seed Company; and

  • Andrew Wargo III of Watson, farm manager for the 15,000-acre Baxter Land Company for more than 50 years.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/03/six-inducted-into-arkansas-agriculture-hall-of-fame/

Boozman says he will vote against Supreme Court nominee

KUAR | By Ronak Patel

U.S Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas, a Republican, said Friday he will vote against President Biden’s nominee for the U.S Supreme Court, Ketanji Brown Jackson.

The Senate Judiciary Committee has been holding hearings this week on her nomination. On Tuesday and Wednesday Jackson took questions from members of the committee, including Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas. Boozman isn’t a member of the committee, but the full Senate is expected to eventually vote on the nomination. A simple majority is needed to confirm her nomination.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-03-25/boozman-says-he-will-vote-against-supreme-court-nominee

Michael Hibblen/KUAR News

Sen. John Boozman speaking with reporters on Feb. 25 inside the Arkansas State Capitol when he filed to run for reelection.

Latest UAMS forecast: lull in COVID cases followed by another wave

KUAR | By David Monteith

Another surge in COVID-19 cases is expected in Arkansas, but the latest forecast from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences says that’s not likely for at least another month.

Shortly after the first case of COVID-19 was identified in Arkansas in 2020, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences began using data to predict how the virus would spread in the state. Dr. Mark Williams, dean of the UAMS College of Public Health, said Germany and the United Kingdom have become reasonably good predictors of surges in the U.S.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-03-23/latest-uams-forecast-lull-in-covid-cases-followed-by-another-wave

David Monteith/KUAR News

The latest forecast from the UAMS predicts a month of relatively few COVID-19 cases, followed by a new surge triggered by the deltacron variant.