Arkansas lawmakers form Forestry Caucus

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

Members of the Arkansas Legislature have formed a Forestry Caucus and selected leaders to represent the group. State Senator Ben Gilmore, R-Crossett, and Rep. Howard Beaty, R–Crossett, will serve as co-chairs. State Senator Charles Beckham, R-McNeil, and Rep. Jeff Wardlaw, R–Hermitage, will serve as vice chairs.

“I am encouraged by the many legislators who have decided to join the Forestry Caucus. Forestry plays a significant role in Arkansas’ economy, especially in our rural communities. It is critical we advance policies that will help our state’s most important industries – forestry. This past session we were able to advocate for the creation of the Center for Forest Business at the University of Arkansas at Monticello’s College of Forestry, Agriculture, and Natural Resources,” said Gilmore.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/04/state-lawmakers-form-forestry-caucus/

Treasurer of State Dennis Milligan Announces Milestone with Arkansas 529 Plan; Logo and website given fresh look, benefits remain

Little Rock, Ark. – The Arkansas 529 Education Savings Plan, established in 1999, is getting a new name to more accurately reflect the plan’s ever-evolving benefits for Arkansans. It will now be called the Arkansas Brighter Future 529 plan, Treasurer of State Dennis Milligan, whose office administers the program, announced today.

“We’ve had a great history with the Arkansas 529 plan,” Milligan said. “We’ve been diligent and have worked with many champions in the state legislature to keep the program current with federal laws, and this was a natural time to ensure the brand reflected all the offerings 529s now have.”

The “offerings” Milligan mentions refer mainly to how funds from the plan can be used. The Arkansas 529 plan has traditionally been used to pay for college and university expenses and trade or vocational school costs.

“One of the first major changes to the plan happened in 2018 when K-12 private school tuition became a qualified expense. Then in 2021, the federal government broadened the plan even more to allow it to cover apprenticeship programs, as well as pay down student loan debt,” Milligan explained. “So as the program has evolved over time, we felt like this was an appropriate time to rebrand to allow people to see that their child’s future – whatever it may look like – could be even brighter with an Arkansas Brighter Future 529 plan.”

Fran Jansen, director of Arkansas Brighter Future 529 plans for the state, said the new logo and website better reflect the brand and its direction moving forward.

“We’ve completely revamped the 529 website to make it more user-friendly,” Jansen said. “For the new logo, we chose a star to resemble light. We designed the star to be red as a nod to Arkansas. Even the playful design of the star was intentional.”

Another factor in rebranding the program to “Arkansas Brighter Future 529” is to highlight the fact that these accounts can now be used for so much more than higher education, Milligan said.

“Not every child in Arkansas will choose to go to college, so we wanted something that reflects that no matter what path a family decides is best for their child, they can still use the funds from their 529 to help brighten their future,” he said.

The Arkansas 529 plan has grown 120% to more than $1.2 billion in assets under Milligan’s administration. Accounts may be opened online for as little as $25 with no requirement for additional deposits, and account owners may be eligible to deduct up to $10,000 in contributions from their Arkansas adjusted gross income taxes.

All of the benefits currently offered by the Arkansas 529 plan will remain the same, Milligan said.

For more information, please visit BrighterFutureDirect529.com or call 501-682-1406.

UA Cossatot Athletics Department to Add Competitive Shooting Sports for 2022-23; A Visit With Coach Brett Blackburn

Colts' shooting sports coach Brett Blackburn visited our De Queen studios on Monday to talk about the new program.

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.

Arkansas Legislators Recognized for Work on Step Therapy

Today, Senator Cecile Bledsoe and Representative DeAnn Vaught received awards for their recognition as 2021 SAIM Patient Access Champions, a well-deserved honor for their work on Step Therapy legislation in Arkansas.

During the 93rd General Assembly, Sen. Bledsoe and Rep. Vaught sponsored SB99, now Act 97. The law ensures step therapy protocols in Arkansas are based on widely accepted medical and clinical guidelines and provides a clear process for health care providers and patients to request exceptions to step therapy protocol.

Thanks to Sen. Bledsoe and Rep. Vaught, Arkansas has strong step therapy protection laws to ensure patients have timely access to treatments and medications best suited for their needs.

inVeritas CEO, Ruth Whitney was present for the award ceremony. inVeritas is proud to have played a part in helping to pass this important legislation.

UA Cossatot SCC Welding Team Captures 3rd Place in 2022 Weld-A-Thon

UA Cossatot SCC welding team from the Nashville campus won 3rd place at the 2022 Weld-A-Thon competition held at South Arkansas Community College in El Dorado on March 17th! The team comprised three 11th graders: Cristian Perez from Mineral Springs HS, Wren Washburn, and Tristan Ewing from Nashville HS. They won welding jackets, gloves, and glasses and brought home their fire pit. The fire pit is located in the welding building at the UA Cossatot campus in Nashville. 

The team was assigned a blueprint and welding materials and two hours to build a custom fire pit. The project was judged based on efficiency, technique, quality, and teamwork. Their instructor, Stuart Dufrene, is very proud of their success, especially since many of the other competing teams were seniors who competed in last year’s competition. This year is also the second consecutive year that a UAC SCC welding team has placed in the top three, with the previous year’s group of 12th graders winning 1st place. 

Perez, Washburn, and Ewing hope to compete again next year, and other SCC welding teams from UA Cossatot are encouraged to compete.

Pictured left to right: Instructor Stuart Dufrene, Cristian Perez, Wren Washburn, & Tristan Ewing.

 

Panel approves rate increase for school employees’ insurance

KUAR | By Ronak Patel

Arkansas lawmakers have unanimously approved a motion to direct school districts to increase the amount they paid into public school employees’ health insurance program.

During a joint meeting of the Arkansas House and Senate Committee on Education on Monday, state Secretary of Education Johnny Key urged members to approve the motion.

Currently, school districts are required to pay $150 per employee into their health insurance plans, according to the Legislature's website. Beginning Jan. 1, the rate will double to $300, due to the passage of Act 111, which was approved in this year’s fiscal session.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-04-05/panel-approves-rate-increase-for-school-employees-insurance

Ronak Patel/KUAR News

Elizabeth Bynum (left) and Julie Holt, who are both from the Bureau of Legislative Research, presented the Adequacy Study to the joint Arkansas House and Senate Committee on Education on Monday. The study is done to determine whether funding for education in the state is equitable.

“Creativity Hubs” Established in UAMS College of Medicine to Boost Research Collaborations in Key Areas

By Tamara Robinson

Four interdisciplinary groups of researchers in the College of Medicine at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) have been named as inaugural “Creativity Hubs” in an initiative to develop and expand collaborative, thematic research programs with high potential.

Each hub will receive $300,000 over the next 18 months to jumpstart efforts to increase research, building on existing expertise of researchers across UAMS, Arkansas Children’s and other partnering institutions. The hubs also will use the funding from the college and UAMS Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation to develop mentorship and pipeline programs to bring new and diverse investigators into the fold. The efforts are expected to position the teams to obtain additional external grant funding to support comprehensive, elite research programs.

https://news.uams.edu/2022/04/04/creativity-hubs-established-in-uams-college-of-medicine-to-boost-research-collaborations-in-key-areas/

Severe Storms to Affect the ARK-LA-TEX Monday Night

A strong storm system will approach from the southern Plains Monday night, and showers and thunderstorms will become more widespread. Areas of heavy rain are expected over central and southern sections of the state, with 1 to 2 inch amounts in the forecast.

While there is a potential for severe weather across the southern counties, severe storms are more likely farther south from northeast Texas to southern Mississippi. The main concerns with storms that become severe are damaging winds and isolated tornadoes. 

For more information, click on the attached picture below for the latest briefing (PDF).

New Clinton School dean to build on success with academic programs, continued partnerships

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Dr. Victoria DeFrancesco Soto, the new dean of the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service, is no stranger to politics, political science or public service. Approaching her first 100 days in charge of the Little Rock-based campus, she sees a great base of success and hopes to build on it.

“Skip [Rutherford, the former dean], he left an incredibly strong foundation upon which I can write the next chapter of the Clinton School,” DeFrancesco Soto said.

She’s spent most of her first three months in Little Rock listening to faculty, administrators, and students. From that, she’s ready to institute some advancements.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/04/new-clinton-school-dean-to-build-on-success-with-academic-programs-continued-partnerships/

Photo: Dr. Victoria DeFrancesco Soto courtesy of University of Texas.

UA hires Mike Malone for economic development role

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

The University of Arkansas announced Monday (April 4) that Mike Malone is the school’s new vice chancellor for economic development.

Malone is vice president of community and corporate affairs for Runway Group, a private business team in Bentonville led by Steuart Walton and his younger brother, Tom Walton. They are grandsons of Walmart founder Sam Walton and the sons of Jim Walton, chairman and CEO of Arvest Bank Group Inc.

Runway Group is a holding company that makes strategic investments in real estate, hospitality, cycling and aviation.

Malone will begin his new job on April 18. He replaces Stacy Leeds, who stepped down from the position in July 2020. David Snow, director of Technology Ventures at the UA, held the job on an interim basis.

https://talkbusiness.net/2022/04/ua-hires-mike-malone-for-economic-development-role/

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/