NW Arkansas

Feds award $25 million grant for I-49 segment in the Fort Smith metro

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

The almost 14-mile segment of Interstate 49 to be built in Crawford and Sebastian counties between I-40 in Alma and Highway 22 in Barling has received a $25 million federal grant and is in the running for another $250 million federal grant.

The Arkansas Department of Transportation (ARDOT) said Thursday (June 27) that the U.S. Department of Transportation awarded a $25 million Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity (RAISE) grant for use on the I-49 segment. The money comes from the $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act or Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. No members of Arkansas’ Congressional delegation voted for the legislation.

“After decades of underinvestment, the condition of America’s infrastructure is now finally getting better instead of worse – and today we proudly announce our support for 148 more projects in communities of every size across the country,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement. “Through President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, we’re funding projects across the country to make roads safer, make it easier for people to move around their community, make transportation infrastructure more resilient to extreme weather, and improve supply chains to keep costs down for consumers.”

Feds award $25 million grant for I-49 segment in the Fort Smith metro

Ryan Cork named UAMS NWA vice-chancellor, starts Sept. 1

Ryan Cork, executive director of the Northwest Arkansas Council’s healthcare transformation division since 2021, is headed to a new role in the region.

In a memo to employees obtained by the Northwest Arkansas Business Journal and Talk Business & Politics, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) announced that Cork will become its new Northwest Arkansas vice-chancellor.

“Ryan Cork, MSHA, has accepted our offer to be vice chancellor for the Northwest Arkansas Region, effective Sept. 1.,” noted a memo from UAMS Chancellor Dr. Cam Patterson. “Ryan has extensive experience in leadership and health care administration combined with knowledge about the health care needs and opportunities in Northwest Arkansas. These qualities will be critical as UAMS continues to expand its academic, clinical and research presence in the region — whether it’s our effort to add more graduate medical education slots or completion of the UAMS Health Orthopaedics & Sports Performance Center that we broke ground on last year.”

Ryan Cork named UAMS NWA vice-chancellor, starts Sept. 1

Ryan Cork

Meet the Northwest Arkansas Business Journal’s 2024 Fast 15 class

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

Northwest Arkansas is increasingly recognized for its economic prosperity and high quality of life, attracting talent nationwide. That talent is one of the region’s top resources.

The Northwest Arkansas Business Journal’s 16th annual Fast 15 class highlights some of those leaders who are driving innovation and success in business and nonprofit sectors. From groundbreaking entrepreneurs to visionary executives, they are beginning to make a lasting impact.

In this edition, we cast a spotlight on 15 young leaders under the age of 30, each with a unique story of excellence, ambition and creativity in their respective fields. From a venture capital investor with a passion for impacting the next generation of medicine to a mechanical engineer dedicated to improving water and wastewater projects, each honoree’s journey is a testament to their relentless drive for success, making their stories all the more intriguing.

Congratulations to the 2024 class of Fast 15ers.

Meet the Northwest Arkansas Business Journal’s 2024 Fast 15 class

Extension faculty to share expertise at Northwest Arkansas Homesteading and Gardening Expo April 18-20

By Rebekah Hall
U of A System Division of Agriculture

SHARING KNOWLEDGE — Extension faculty and agents will lead classes and presentations at the Northwest Arkansas Homesteading and Gardening Expo, held April 18-20 at the Benton County Fairgrounds in Bentonville. Organized by longtime Northwest Arkansas residents Barry and Mechel Wall, the pair said they wanted to share knowledge about sustainable living with attendees of all experience and skill levels. (NWA Homesteading and Gardening Expo graphic.) 

BENTONVILLE, Ark. — Many young adults and families are interested in living a sustainable lifestyle — such as growing their own food or raising animals — but don’t know where to start. Barry and Mechel Wall, longtime residents of Northwest Arkansas, said they saw this knowledge gap and decided to organize the Northwest Arkansas Homesteading and Gardening Expo, which will take place April 18-20 at the Benton County Fairgrounds in Bentonville.

Mechel Wall said she and her husband wanted the expo to include classes for the homesteading-curious at different levels of experience and access to land. 

“Many people in the young professional age group live in apartments, so some classes are designed specifically for them, such as growing microgreens, window and patio gardens and becoming a farmer’s market chef — that’s what apartment dwellers need,” Wall said. “For those who have some space in their yard, there are classes on planning a garden, succession planning and canning, drying and freezing to preserve the harvest.”

Wall said she knew it was critical for the agenda to feature University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture faculty and agents, both from the Cooperative Extension Service and the Agricultural Experiment Station.

“There is a well-respected level of expertise coming from extension agents, and we are very appreciative,” Wall said. “We can all Google questions, but having someone explain things in a way we understand, that is specific to our region, is essential. The information presented by extension agents lends credibility to the processes and techniques. They are also able to connect learners with additional resources that they provide throughout the year.”

Extension faculty and agents will lead classes and presentations on Canning 101, the 4-H youth development program, organic food production, electric fencing and other methods of fencing and long and short-term food storage. The agenda also includes classes and workshops on seed starting, building raised beds, crop rotation, composting and more.

Extension expertise

Trudy McManus, Benton County extension family and consumer sciences agent for the Division of Agriculture, will lead a class on Canning 101. McManus said her presentation will include an overview of different forms of food preservation, such water bath canning and pressure canning, as well as discussion of proper canning procedures and canning supplies.

“We will be looking closely at the research-based science and food safety that every food preserver needs to know and practice,” McManus said.

McManus said that over the past 10-15 years, interest in home food preservation has increased, but a particular resurgence took place after the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The empty grocery stores during COVID stressed the need for home food preservation for many people,” McManus said. “Although this push has slowed somewhat in the last year, there is still a lot of interest. There are also a lot of people moving to Northwest Arkansas with a goal to homestead, many of whom have not grown up with that lifestyle.”

Kenny Simon, extension forages instructor for the Division of Agriculture, said his presentation will focus on the fundamentals of controlled grazing utilizing electric fencing. He will discuss the importance of controlled grazing, its benefits and the advantages of electric fence over traditional fencing.

Simon said that with modern internet access, it’s easy for people to find answers to their homesteading questions, but the validity of those answers is cause for concern.  

“Just because a person reads something online, doesn’t necessarily mean it’s true,” Simon said. “Producers and homeowners depend on extension to provide them with non-biased, research-based information. We’re active in the community; the general public gets to know us on a personal level. They know they can count on us to give them an honest answer.

“Extension employees practice what we preach,” Simon said. “We have the formal training to provide expert advice, along with the experience to know how to apply it.”

Joe Hannan, Agricultural Experiment Station horticulture instructor for the Division of Agriculture, will lead a class on organic food production at the expo. He said the discussion will include a brief history of organic production, “why someone may want to get certified,” the basic certification process and highlight the difference between organic certification and Certified Naturally Grown.

“We will wrap up the session by looking at profitability of organic agriculture versus conventional production,” he said.

Hannan said he has seen a lot of interest among students and potential students in homesteading. “This is an ongoing trend I have seen, not just in Northwest Arkansas but around the country for the past several years.”

In addition to dubious internet search results, Hannan noted that the influence of social media content about homesteading may not contain accurate information that’s relevant to Northwest Arkansas’s specific climate.

“Northwest Arkansas is very different than other regions,” Hannan said. “People can go online and watch videos or TikToks, visit Instagram or other social media, but that content may not always be relevant and correct for this region. If someone wants to start a small business, especially one so dependent on local environmental conditions, they really need to have access to local support and locally derived information.”

By presenting at the expo, Hannan said he’s doing what extension does best: helping meet Arkansans — and their needs — where they are.

“It’s important for extension faculty and agents to go to the people,” he said. “Sometimes, that’s supporting them at events we host, sometimes that’s through digital media, and sometimes that’s by participating in partnered or third-party events. People consume information through a variety of channels, and we have to meet them there.”

Darryl Holliday, executive director of the Arkansas Food Innovation Center at Market Center of the Ozarks for the Division of Agriculture, will share information on food safety and proper protocol for curing, salting and drying fish and other meats. He said all recommended recipes and procedures have been tested for safety, as well as user ease, to “ensure adherence resulting in safe products to make and consume at home.”

Sharing extension resources at events that aren’t organized by the Division of Agriculture helps spread the word about all that extension offers, Holliday said.

“Most extension individuals are subject matter experts, but many Arkansans do not know how to access them,” Holliday said. “Therefore, participating in events such as this, which are not sponsored by the Division of Agriculture, allows us to provide this key information to people we might not reach.”

Teaching today, sustaining tomorrow

Wall and her husband have lived in Northwest Arkansas for 30 years. She said they were inspired to organize the expo because they noticed more young people desired the kind of skills that they taught their eight children growing up.

“No one needs to be hungry in a region of the world where they can forage, grow succession crops of food, barter for items and have protein produced in their back yard,” she said. “We are in a position to help people from any walk of life to start now and set something aside for a time of need. We never know when that day will come, or whether it will be loss of employment, a supply chain disruption, tornado or ice storm.

“Our goal is to teach the skills of setting aside something for that rainy day, because it will come at some point into each of our lives,” Wall said. “To be prepared is to not be afraid when those times come.”

To learn more about or register for the Northwest Arkansas Homesteading and Gardening Expo, visit novaterranwa.com. To contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent, visit uaex.uada.edu/counties/.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk. 

Womack to host U.S. Military Service Academy Day event on Saturday

On Saturday, April 20, Congressman Steve Womack (AR-3) will host a U.S. Military Service Academy Day event for high school students from the Third District. Students will have the opportunity to speak with representatives from the U.S. Military Service Academies, alumni, and current cadets to learn more about the application, nomination, selection, and appointment processes. Information about the Arkansas National Guard and scholarships available through local Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) programs will also be provided.

Invited organizations include:

Photo by Clay Banks

• U.S. Military Academy

• U.S. Naval Academy

• U.S. Air Force Academy

• U.S. Coast Guard Academy

• U.S. Merchant Marine Academy

• Arkansas National Guard

• Arkansas Tech University Army (ROTC)

• University of Arkansas Army and Air Force (ROTC)

• University of Arkansas-Fort Smith Army (ROTC)

Saturday, April 20, 2024

1:00 P.M. – 3:00 P.M. CT

Fayetteville High School (Cafeteria), 994 W Martin Luther King Blvd, Fayetteville, AR 72701

This event is open to the public and media. Additional information on the U.S. Military Service Academy nomination process can be found here.

Womack Hosts CDC Director Cohen in Arkansas’ Third District

Rogers, AR—April 9, 2024…Congressman Steve Womack (AR-3) hosted Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Dr. Mandy Cohen to Northwest Arkansas on Monday, April 8, to visit various partner organizations in the area, share the importance of strong investments in community health, and see the partnership between the CDC and local health care in action.

Congressman Womack said, “I was honored to welcome Dr. Cohen to Northwest Arkansas to showcase the excellence happening in our corner of the Natural State. As a senior appropriator, I see how federal investments through CDC grants foster economic growth, promote health, and enhance quality of life. I’m grateful Dr. Cohen had the opportunity to witness the incredible work of our local health providers in action.”

Dr. Cohen said, “CDC’s mission is to protect health and improve lives, and that requires a team. My visit to Northwest Arkansas highlighted partnerships across education, health care, local government, and private industry that can help us protect health. We need the resources and authorities to continue to sustain and build our team across the country and abroad, and I thank Representative Womack for his work here in Northwest Arkansas and in Congress to work with us to make that possible.”

Rep. Womack and Dr. Cohen toured the Bentonville Head Start and Early Head Start facility and engaged with UAMS Northwest and NWA Head Start staff involved in the implementation of REACH grant funding, which supported child nutrition initiatives, vaccine clinics, physical activity training, and breastfeeding rooms at Bentonville Head Start.

Rep. Womack and Dr. Cohen were welcomed by Bentonville Schools’ staff and students and toured the Ignite Professional Studies facility. Following the tour, they engaged with 100 junior and senior students participating in the Ignite Professional Studies Program.

At Community Clinic NWA, Rep. Womack and Dr. Cohen led a roundtable discussion on how CDC funding has been utilized in Northwest Arkansas by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and partner organizations. Rep. Womack, Dr. Cohen, Community Clinic CEO Judd Semingson, and Division Director of Community Programs (UAMS Northwest) Pearl McElfish, Ph.D., M.B.A. provided opening remarks. Healthcare organizations and members of Our Healthy Alliance also participated in the roundtable discussion.

Rep. Womack and Dr. Cohen also visited members of the Walmart Health team and toured the Walmart Emergency Operations Center and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.

CDC’s funded work in Arkansas’ Third District:

  • CDC’s REACH grant program provided funding to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) for the 2023-2028 program cycle to continue implementing evidence-based strategies to improve health, prevent chronic disease, and reduce health disparities among priority populations.

    • Partnerships funded through this program were previously used to reach Marshallese and Hispanic communities with health and vaccination information.

    • This program also supports work in education and early childhood programs to promote healthy environments, healthy eating, physical activity, and health education to prevent obesity and chronic disease.

  • Arkansas Maternal and Perinatal Quality Outcomes Quality Review Committee—Perinatal Quality Collaboratives provide the infrastructure that supports quality improvement efforts addressing obstetric and newborn care and outcomes in a state or region. CDC currently funds 36 state PQCs, including Arkansas.

Dr. Mandy Cohen, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and U.S. Rep. Steve Womack, R-Rogers, were in Northwest Arkansas on Monday (April 8) to visit with regional health care officials.

(Talk Business & Politics) CDC director visits Northwest Arkansas, meets with local health leaders

Fayetteville man, 3 others sentenced in $18M fraud scheme

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

John Nock, a Fayetteville businessman who once owned the former Cosmopolitan Hotel in downtown Fayetteville, was one of four men sentenced last week in Fayetteville for participating in an eight-year investment fraud and money laundering scheme that defrauded over a dozen victims around the world out of more than $18 million.

According to a press release Monday (March 18) from the Department of Justice, Nock, 55, was sentenced on March 14 to 20 years and 10 months in prison; Brian Brittsan, 67, of Boise, Idaho, was sentenced on March 14 to 10 years in jail; Kevin Griffith, 68, of Orem, Utah, was sentenced on March 15 to 12 years and six months in prison; and Alexander Ituma, 57, of Lehi, Utah, was sentenced on March 15 to eight years and four months in jail.

Between 2013 and 2021, Nock, Brittsan, Griffith and Ituma colluded in an investment fraud operation under The Brittingham Group, an Arkansas-based company. The scheme falsely claimed access to exclusive investment opportunities, including deals involving the monetization of foreign bank guarantees.

Fayetteville man, 3 others sentenced in $18M fraud scheme

Steel Horse Rally adds antique motorcycle show, partners with U.S. Marshals Museum

by Tina Alvey Dale (tdale@talkbusiness.net)

The Steel Horse Rally is partnering with the U.S. Marshals Museum to add a new event to Fort Smith’s annual motorcycle event – the Bikes and Badges antique motorcycle show.

Now in its ninth year, the Steel Horse Rally is slated for May 3-4 in downtown Fort Smith. Bikes and Badges antique motorcycle show will make its debut from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 4 at the U.S. Marshals Museum, 789 Riverfront Drive. The new event is sponsored by Fort Smith Harley-Davidson, said Steel Horse Rally president and founder Dennis Snow.

That sponsorship means visitors can get into the Marshals Museum free of charge from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 4, Snow said.

Steel Horse Rally adds antique motorcycle show, partners with U.S. Marshals Museum

Arkansas education co-ops concerned about effect of reduced funding

KUAR | By Antoinette Grajeda / Arkansas Advocate

The Sanders administration’s proposal to reduce funding for Arkansas’ 15 education service cooperatives has co-op directors concerned about the impact on students, especially those in smaller school districts.

Fourteen cooperatives would receive $4.3 million less in state funds next fiscal year under the Department of Education’s 2025 budget proposal, according to estimates provided to the Advocate by co-op directors.

The Northwest Arkansas Education Service Cooperative did not return requests for comment, and ADE did not provide a funding total.

Arkansas education co-ops concerned about effect of reduced funding

Antoinette Grajeda/Arkansas Advocate

Secretary of Education Jacob Oliva discusses draft rules with state board of education members during a work session in Little Rock on March 6, 2024.

UAMS to Host Health Care Technology, Data Science Summer Camp for 10th Graders in Northwest Arkansas

By David Wise

FAYETTEVILLE — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) is hosting a two-week summer day camp for rising 10th grade students in Northwest Arkansas who are interested in learning about STEM and data science as it relates to the health care field.

The Arkansas Technology and Data Science in Health & Medicine (AR Tech DaSH) camp will be held June 3-14 on the UAMS Northwest Regional Campus in Fayetteville. Spots are limited to 25 students, and the deadline to register is April 12. Registration is available online at https://medicine.uams.edu/neurobiology/outreach/ar-tech-dash/.

The free, 10-day summer camp incorporates imaging technologies and a data science curriculum focused on health and medicine. Students who complete the AR Tech DaSH camp will be designated as STEM Ambassadors and will be expected to participate in limited community outreach activities during off-school hours during the next academic year. Program staff will also provide a short series of college preparation sessions for the STEM Ambassadors.

UAMS to Host Health Care Technology, Data Science Summer Camp for 10th Graders in Northwest Arkansas

NWA 18th fastest growing U.S. metro; Benton County leads state’s growth

by Jeff Della Rosa (JDellaRosa@nwabj.com)

Northwest Arkansas, or the Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers metro, remained the fastest-growing metro in the state in 2023. Benton County was the state’s fastest-growing county.

On Thursday (March 14), the U.S. Census Bureau released metro area and county population estimates as of July 1, 2023.

Alison Wright, data center division head of the Arkansas Economic Development Institute (AEDI), said the metro estimates were expected with the continued growth in Northwest Arkansas. The metro was the 18th fastest-growing in the United States. Its population rose by 2.3% to 590,337 in 2023 from 576,967 in 2022. The growth rate rank was up from 24th in the previous year. Northwest Arkansas had the 32nd largest population gain in the nation at 13,370. The rank was down from 30th in the previous year.

NWA 18th fastest growing U.S. metro; Benton County leads state’s growth

$50M funding boost will help NY retail tech firm expand Northwest Arkansas operations

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

Crisp, a New York-based retail technology company, announced a $50 million funding round Thursday (Feb. 22) that will have ripple effects in Northwest Arkansas.

The new funding will support the company’s aggressive growth efforts — building on its recent acquisition of Atlas Technology Group in Rogers — product development, expansion into new markets and additional acquisitions.

“Our strong growth is a testament to the measurable and significant value Crisp provides. We solve real problems and help CPG brands strengthen sales, marketing and their relationships with retailers,” founder and CEO Are Traasdahl said. “Accessing all data within a single platform is empowering brands to implement a collaborative commerce approach, where advanced analysis is improving forecasting, pricing strategies, inventory management, and expansion plans.”
$50M funding boost will help NY retail tech firm expand Northwest Arkansas operations

Are Traasdahl, founder and CEO of Crisp

GORP kicks off 5th outdoor recreation incubator

by Jeff Della Rosa (JDellaRosa@nwabj.com)

The Greenhouse Outdoor Recreation Program (GORP) has launched its spring startup incubator with eight Northwest Arkansas startups, including those that rent outdoor gear and make quivers, according to a Jan. 24 news release.

GORP is a business incubation program led by the Office of Entrepreneurship and Innovation (OEI) at the University of Arkansas. GORP is focused on helping outdoor recreation startups and is based at the Collaborative in Bentonville. GORP is supported by a $4.1 million gift from the Walton Family Charitable Support Foundation.

Semiannually, GORP has offered 12-week business incubators for early-stage outdoor recreation startups. The incubator offers workshop training, team mentoring and product and service development to help them scale. GORP provides up to $15,000 in non-dilutive seed money per startup. It’s money that doesn’t require the owner to give up equity in the company.

GORP kicks off 5th outdoor recreation incubator

Arkansas nonprofit receives grant to help immigrants apply for citizenship

KUAR | By Maggie Ryan

A nonprofit in Northwest Arkansas has won a grant to help people apply for U.S. citizenship.

Arkansas United supports individuals seeking citizenship in Arkansas. The organization recently received $250,000 dollars from the federal government to improve their outreach efforts.

To use these funds, Arkansas United is forming a new program to help people navigate the path to citizenship. The program, called Together Towards Citizenship, will match those seeking citizenship with resources and materials to help them in their application.

Arkansas nonprofit receives grant to help immigrants apply for citizenship

Wilfredo Lee/AP

Ericka Ames, center, of Nicaragua recites the Oath of Allegiance during a naturalization ceremony at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in Miami.

Eddyline Kayaks relocating from Pacific Northwest to Siloam Springs

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

Recreational kayak manufacturer Eddyline Kayaks is moving its corporate address from Washington to Northwest Arkansas.

The move to downtown Siloam Springs will be completed before the end of the year.

“At Eddyline, our purpose is to build quality craft that inspires people to enjoy clean and healthy waterways,” Eddyline president and co-owner Scott Holley said. “The Natural State, Arkansas, resonates deeply with our ethos as a responsible business entity and community participant.”

Eddyline Kayaks relocating from Pacific Northwest to Siloam Springs

Paddleboarders, kayakers and more flock to WOKA Whitewater Park’s grand opening

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

One of Northwest Arkansas’ newest tourist draws is just across the border in Oklahoma. But there’s no denying that The Waters of Oklahoma and Arkansas (WOKA) Whitewater Park’s ripple effects will be far-reaching.

“We typically have to go a long way for something like this,” said Jerrid Gelinas of Siloam Springs. He’s an avid paddler and president of the Arkansas Canoe Club’s Northwest Arkansas Chapter. “Normally, we go to Tennessee, West Virginia; this is a new opportunity for a lot of paddlers around here. To be out here surfing paddleboards, boogie boards, kayaks, canoes and tubes is really cool.”

Gelinas was one of several hundred visitors to the 30-acre whitewater adventure park during its opening weekend on Sept. 15-17.

Paddleboarders, kayakers and more flock to WOKA Whitewater Park’s grand opening - Talk Business & Politics


2,000 attendees expected in Northwest Arkansas for tech summit this fall

by Jeff Della Rosa (JDellaRosa@nwabj.com)

More than 2,000 attendees are expected to attend the 2023 Northwest Arkansas Technology Summit, Director Kris Adams said. The summit will convene at the Rogers Convention Center from Oct. 29 to Nov. 1.

They’ll come from as far as Toronto and the East and West coasts. Adams said others will arrive from Austin, Texas; Dallas; the Kansas City metro; and Tulsa. Last year, the event had 1,700 attendees from 28 states.

Adams noted that the programs for the four-day event this year will return to the convention center after outgrowing the various Bentonville spaces where the event was hosted previously. Still, the networking and social aspects of the event will happen in Bentonville.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/2000-attendees-expected-in-northwest-arkansas-for-tech-summit-this-fall/

UAMS Breaks Ground in Springdale for Orthopaedics & Sports Performance Center

By David Wise

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) broke ground today on the UAMS Health Orthopaedics & Sports Performance Center in Springdale.

The 115,000-square-foot center will be located in the four-mile stretch of I-49 on the city’s west side, commonly known as the Springdale Care Corridor, which includes a dozen health care providers.

For several years now, an interdisciplinary team of highly trained surgeons and rehab specialists has been providing specialty care at UAMS orthopaedics and sports medicine clinics in Fayetteville and Lowell, as well as serving as the official sports medicine provider for all of the University of Arkansas Razorback athletic programs.

https://news.uams.edu/2023/09/15/uams-breaks-ground-in-springdale-for-orthopaedics-sports-performance-center/

Taking a closer look at headwater streams in light of climate change

By John Lovett
University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture
Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station 

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Up to 35 percent of headwater streams, which make up the vast majority of global river miles, are intermittent, yet the importance of these systems is not well understood due to the recurring wetting and drying cycles. 

HEADWATERS — Kathleen Cutting takes stream monitoring notes on Brush Creek, a headwater stream of the White River and part of the Beaver Lake watershed. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo)

Arkansas researcher Shannon Speir is part of a multi-state team working to learn more about how these small streams can affect lakes and reservoirs that supply our drinking water. The research may have implications for guidance on Clean Water Act regulations and monitoring the primary source of drinking water in northwest Arkansas in response to climate change.

Speir is an assistant professor of water quality in the crop, soil and environmental sciences department for the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas and the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

With her team of student researchers, they will study the movement of nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, in Brush Creek, a tributary of the Beaver Lake watershed. It is part of a larger study across many states that is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy to learn more about the impact headwater streams have on major bodies of surface water.

“We are looking at when the tiny streams go dry at the top and then rewet, and dry and rewet, how that affects nutrient transport downstream,” Speir said.

Speir said there is potential for headwaters to be major transporters of nutrients and sediments throughout the year. Intermittent headwater streams tend to flow after heavy rains and carry nutrients downstream. An overabundance of nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, Speir said, can cause eutrophication, which increases the amount of plant and algae growth and decreases the amount of available oxygen for fish.

She is teaming up with water quality scientists in five other states to expand the knowledge of how these intermittent stream networks that dry up and fill back up after storms can determine the amount and quality of water that ends up downstream.

“If we can understand how conservation in one part of the watershed might affect the signal downstream, we can start to understand how much conservation we need to make changes downstream,” Speir said. “This grant provides an underlying foundational science backbone supporting more applied work.”

Headwaters researchers

The two-year research project begins this month and is supported by a $2.5 million grant awarded by the Department of Energy through its Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, or EPSCoR, program. Speir’s lab will receive about $330,000 to purchase new water quality sensors and conduct research on Brush Creek in the Beaver Lake watershed. She said sensors will be “nested” in public access areas of the creek.

The grant proposal was submitted through the University of New Mexico’s Center for Advancement of Spatial Informatics Research and Education. The award is part of a $33 million Department of Energy effort that supports 14 research projects covering a range of research topics, from fundamental science topics to efforts in fusion energy, climate and ecosystem modeling, grid integration, wind energy, and sensors for energy conversion.

Alex Webster, assistant professor in the University of New Mexico’s biology department, is the principal investigator on the project. Her team in New Mexico will study the headwaters of the Santa Fe River and serve as the hub for project data analyses.

“Historically, we treated these headwater watersheds like black boxes. We tend to care about how much water comes out of them and the quality of that water but not so much about the reasons why,” Webster said in a University of New Mexico news release. “There is a lot going on in them; they are changing very quickly because they are very sensitive to climate change, including to changes in snowpack, and because that’s where streams tend to dry up first.”

Co-principal investigators and research areas include:

  • Arial Shogren, University of Alabama biological sciences department; headwaters of the Black Warrior River

  • Joanna Blaszczak, University of Nevada, Reno’s natural resources and environmental science department; headwaters of the Truckee River

  • Adam Wymore, University of New Hampshire’s college of life sciences and agriculture; headwaters of the Great Bay Estuary

  • Yang Hong, University of Oklahoma’s college of engineering; hydrologic modeling

Speir said hydrologic modeling, using computer simulations of watershed reactions, will be the first stage of the study, and this is a specialty of Hong’s team at the University of Oklahoma. The first stage of the study calls for simulating the processes of entire watershed stream networks based on observations of water flow, precipitation, and other factors.

The second stage includes understanding each watershed’s “spatial structure” or how it influences water quality and quantity. The third phase will look at changes over time in response to changing precipitation and drought patterns. Project researchers will also collaborate with the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory to compare findings to a Tennessee watershed.

With more knowledge of headwater processes, the study could help states better monitor and manage water quality, water quantity, and ecosystem responses to a changing climate, Speir said. For example, it could help water treatment facilities better predict what’s coming into the system and adjust their process accordingly.

Speir’s team on the project includes Kathleen Cutting, a water quality science master’s degree student, and program associate Alana Strauss, both with the crop, soil and environmental sciences department. Her team will conduct “synoptic sampling campaigns,” where they take a snapshot sampling in one day of 20 sites across the watershed.

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk. To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu.

Whitewater park near Siloam Springs opens this weekend

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

The city of Siloam Springs and Oklahoma-based utility Grand River Dam Authority (GRDA) have announced the anticipated opening of WOKA Whitewater Park this weekend.

Operating hours are noon to 8 p.m. on Friday (Sept. 15) and 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. Park officials said a formal grand opening at the park is planned for next spring.

According to a news release, free parking and limited concessions will be available this weekend, with equipment available for rent on a first-come, first-served basis. Whitewater-specific personal equipment is also welcome.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/whitewater-park-near-siloam-springs-opens-this-weekend/