Cave City

Paragould, Cave City recovering after weekend tornadoes

KUAR | By KASU Newsroom

Officials in northern Arkansas are assessing damage and continuing recovery efforts after severe storms and tornadoes moved through the region over the weekend.

Paragould Mayor Josh Agee announced that the storm destroyed seven of the city's 16 outdoor warning sirens. In a video statement posted to Facebook, Agee said the city had purchased and installed three new sirens last fall and is aware of the current issues.

"We have crews out looking at those, inspecting them, making an inventory of the parts they need," Agee said. "We're going to try our best to get those replaced. Bear with us for that."

Paragould, Cave City recovering after weekend tornadoes

Arkansas Department Of Parks, Heritage And Tourism

The welcome sign for Cave City, Ark. The town was hit by an EF3 tornado on Friday, March 14, 2025, killing three people.

Graveler more of ‘an experience,’ could be big for tourism

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

Arkansas has 69,000 miles of unpaved roads, according to the state’s Department of Agriculture, and there are also many more miles of unpaved roads that crisscross national forest lands. They may soon turn into an economic engine fueled by bicycle tourism.

Organizers with the Ozark Foundation hope the Arkansas Graveler will become an annual event. The six-day ride stretches 340 miles from the University of Arkansas campus in Fayetteville to the Arkansas State University campus in Jonesboro.

Scotti Moody, Graveler event director and UCI pro cyclist, recently told Talk Business & Politics that the goal is for about 400 cyclists to participate in the 2024 event set for June 23-28. The route will go through Ozark, Jasper, Marshall, Mountain View and Cave City. It should be a tourism boon to the rural businesses the cyclist will utilize on the ride. Hotels, restaurants, convenience stores, and other businesses will be exposed to many customers that have likely never visited rural Arkansas, she said.

Graveler more of ‘an experience,’ could be big for tourism