Arkansas News

4-H’ers compete at District 4-H O’Rama in Malvern

Sevier County 4-H’ers competed against 4-H’ers from across the state at the District 4-H O’Rama at Malvern High School on June 19. To qualify for district level, they had to compete at the local County 4-H O’Rama.

The winners in the Senior Division (ages 14-19) were as follows:

Jacob Seymour placed 1st in Animal Science, Zae-Lei Frachiseur placed 1st in Wildlife, Evan Wolcott placed 3rd in Wildlife, John Moe placed 4th in Sports Fishing & Bait Casting, Chip Stamps placed 6th in Sports Fishing & Bait Casting, and Charlie Collins placed 8th in Gun Safety.

All 1st – 7th place senior winners are eligible to compete and represent Sevier County at the State 4-H O’Rama to be held at the University of Arkansas Campus in Fayetteville in July.

Junior Division (ages 9-13) winners were as follows:

Madison Tabler placed 1st in Performing Arts-Instrumental, Wayland Risley placed 3rd in Wildlife, and Asher Frachiseur placed 4th in Sports Fishing & Bait Casting.

Also recognized at District O’Rama are District winning Record Books. Record Keeping is part of the overall 4-H experience, and a record book is an important part of completing each project. It is a written history of a 4-H’ers project work and a narrative of their success and learning in 4-H. Record Books are judged at a local level, district level, and state level.

Beginner Category (ages 9-12) winners were as follows:

Rebecca Trauger in Foods & Nutrition, Madison Tabler in Music, and Leighton Frachiseur in Animal Science.

Intermediate Category (ages 13-15) winners were as follows:

Evan Wolcott in Wildlife Management, Ty Wagner in Health & Fitness, Katie Williamson in Health & Fitness and Raegan Frachiseur in Achievement.

Record Books in the Advance Category (ages 16-18) are judged at the state level. Winners in this category are recognized at State O’Rama in July. Winners in this category are:

Kyle Williamson in Wildlife Management and Jacob Seymour in Health & Fitness.

Sevier County also received the District Spirit Award for 4-H’ers demonstrating a positive attitude, extending generosity for others, and providing role models who set the standard for excellence.

The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture offers all its Extension and Research programs and services without regard to race, color, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, religion, age, disability, marital or veteran status, genetic information, or any other legally protected status, and is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.

Front row left to right: Landon Tabler, Asher Frachiseur, and Wayland Risley. Back row: Madison Tabler, Emily Stamps, Evan Wolcott, Chip Stamps, Jacob Seymour, John Moe, Charlie Collins, and Zae-Lei Frachiseur.

Gov. Sanders signs tax cut bills into law

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

Gov. Sarah Sanders signed into law Wednesday (June 19) a series of significant tax cuts that will result in personal and corporate taxes falling by a half-percent at the top income rates.

The highest personal income tax rate has been dropped from 4.4% to 3.9% and the top corporate tax rate from 4.8% to 4.3%. The financial impact of the tax cuts are $256.1 million annually for the personal income tax reduction and $66.2 million annually for the corporate tax reduction. Over 1.1 million Arkansans will benefit from the tax rate reduction.

Also, about $290 million of the state’s $708.1 million estimated budget surplus in the current fiscal year that ends June 30th will be placed in the Arkansas Reserve Fund Set-Aside fund.

Gov. Sanders signs tax cut bills into law

Arkansas lawmakers gather on first day of special session

KUAR | By Josie Lenora, Daniel Breen

The Arkansas Legislature advanced new tax cuts and funding for the Game and Fish Commission on Monday, the first day of a special legislative session. Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders called the session last week, saying “additional tax reductions can be enacted to provide further tax relief during this period of heightened inflation under ‘Bidenomics.’” This comes after the legislature adjourned a fiscal session in May without funding the commission.

Game & Fish Commission Budget

The Arkansas Legislature passed a Game and Fish budget bill through committee after a round of committee hearings on Monday amid ongoing controversy over the director’s salary.

Arkansas lawmakers gather on first day of special session

Josie Lenora/Little Rock Public Radio

The Arkansas House of Representatives gathers on the first day of a special session, Monday.

NIH Awards Additional $3.7 Million to UAMS to Continue Groundbreaking Research into High Blood Pressure

By Linda Satter

LITTLE ROCK — In a major boost to cardiovascular research, the National Institutes of Health has awarded an additional $3.7 million to Shengyu Mu, Ph.D., and his team of researchers at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to continue their groundbreaking study on the role of immune cells in hypertension.

Mu, an associate professor in the UAMS College of Medicine Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, was awarded an initial $1.89 million grant in 2019 to fund his laboratory’s exploration of the link between immune cells and hypertension, a widespread and serious health condition.

During that time, the team made substantial discoveries indicating that immune disorders contribute to high blood pressure, paving the way for the next phase of research.

NIH Awards Additional $3.7 Million to UAMS to Continue Groundbreaking Research into High Blood Pressure

Boozman Details Senate Republican Farm Bill Framework

WASHINGTON— U.S. Senator John Boozman (R-AR), ranking member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, detailed how the recently released Republican farm bill framework puts “more farm in the farm bill” and how it can be used as the basis for a bipartisan path forward in a speech on the Senate floor. 

“We believe that our framework reflects the chamber’s shared commitments across all twelve titles while putting more farm in the farm bill, something we’ve been calling for since the onset,” Boozman said. “Our farmers, ranchers, foresters, consumers, lenders and other stakeholders helped us fashion a farm bill that meets their varying needs. It’s a delicate balance… …but on the agriculture committee, we have shown we can come together to carry these heavy lifts across the finish line.”

The following are Boozman’s remarks as prepared:

Mr. President, 

Prior to breaking for the Memorial Day recess, the House Agriculture Committee did something few beltway pundits thought was possible.

The committee approved, in a bipartisan manner, a farm bill that meets the needs of farmers, ranchers, foresters, rural communities and consumers across America.

I commend Chairman GT Thompson for his stewardship of this bill through an open process that let every committee member have a say in the bill.

Likewise, I want to express my appreciation for each of the members that voted to advance this legislation out of committee.

Chairwoman Stabenow also recently released her farm bill framework, putting the Senate Majority’s priorities on paper and advancing the discussion forward.

Cumulatively, these efforts exhibit the first real progress toward passage of a new farm bill since the process began two years ago.

This week, Republicans on the agriculture committee are building on that momentum by releasing our farm bill framework.

We believe that our framework reflects the chamber’s shared commitments across all twelve titles while putting more farm in the farm bill, something we’ve been calling for since the onset.

And let’s talk about what that means.

It means we direct additional resources to the tools farmers rely upon -- and they are calling for us to invest in -- while ensuring we do no harm to our nutrition programs, which account for over eighty percent of the bill’s baseline spending. 

For example, we double funding for the farm bill’s premiere trade programs to help increase our competitiveness overseas.

This is desperately needed considering we are projected to see a record $32 billion agricultural trade deficit this year.

U.S. farmers have been able to point to their positive trade balance in agriculture as a source of pride for the better part of the last 50 years as they worked to feed, clothe and fuel the world.

Unfortunately, this administration’s refusal to engage on the issue has created an agricultural trade imbalance that is projected to reach record heights and is showing no signs of slowing.

Our framework can help reverse this unsustainable trend.

Another area where we double funding is agricultural research.

Our public-sector investment in agricultural research lags other developed economies and has fallen by more than a third over the past two decades.

This is another concerning trend that our framework can help reverse.

Agricultural research programs spur innovation and productivity -- allowing farmers to produce more while using less and in an environmentally friendly manner, even as threats from pests, diseases and unpredictable weather become more common. 

Not only do our farmers gain in the long-term, but our land-grant institutions and colleges of agriculture who conduct groundbreaking research see immediate benefits— a win-win investment.

We also make a historic investment in the conservation title while ensuring programs remain locally-led and flexible.

Farmers, ranchers and foresters have diverse conservation needs and our framework reflects that, providing equity across practices to address drought, water quality, wildlife habitat biodiversity, soil erosion and climate resiliency while continuing to provide for carbon sequestrating and greenhouse gas reducing practices.

Our framework increases funding in the conservation title by more than 25% every single year moving forward while making sure its programs continue to empower producers to make the best decisions to meet the resource concerns of their operation.  

Our farmers, ranchers and foresters also need investments in the communities they call home, and our framework makes those too.

It is no secret that rural America has seen more than its share of difficulties over the past few years.

Recent census data shows over half the nation’s rural counties have lost population.

These communities must have the modern infrastructure necessary to attract and retain talent.

Our framework offers help by making significant investments in small business development, broadband expansion, water and energy infrastructure programs, as well as funds to increase access to rural healthcare, childcare and public safety.

Most importantly, putting more farm in the farm bill requires a modernized farm safety net. 

We accomplish this by giving producers access to risk management tools that reflect the nature of the challenges under which they operate.

And as I’ve stressed before, this isn’t an either-or decision—meaning farmers won’t be forced to choose between crop insurance and vital Title One programs.

Our framework makes crop insurance more accessible and affordable and makes meaningful increases to statutory reference prices for all producers, of all commodities, in every region.

The safety net programs our farmers operate under right now are outdated.

We cannot consider a farm bill that fails to recognize and protect farmers from the historic inflation in input costs they now face on the farm.

The world, and agriculture in particular, are in a much different place today than they were during the last farm bill.

Farmers are already experiencing unprecedented challenges and economic uncertainty for the crops they are sowing into the ground right now.

This follows historic inflation, a record trade deficit, rising interest rates, devastating natural disasters, and geopolitical unrest that have shrunk the bottom line for farmers.

Under this President, U.S. farmers have seen the largest decline in farm income of all time.

And like I said, that is only expected to get worse if we fail to put more farm in the farm bill.

In my home state of Arkansas, where agriculture accounts for about a quarter of the state’s GDP, inflation adjusted net farm income is expected to decline by more than 40% compared to 2 years ago. 

This trend is playing out across the nation, which is why reference price increases have been the top ask from farmers at the over twenty farm bill roundtables my colleagues and I have held around the country. 

While each of these states have diverse agriculture economies, the refrain has been consistent. 

In fact, it was at one of my earliest roundtables in North Dakota where the mantra of “more farm in the farm bill” was born. 

It wasn’t a Republican senator who first said it.

It was a plea from a farmer. 

And that is what this is truly about.

Our farmers, ranchers, foresters, consumers, lenders and other stakeholders helped us fashion a farm bill that meets their varying needs.

It’s a delicate balance made even more difficult this time around by the way actions taken outside of the farm bill have impacted our baseline. 

But on the agriculture committee we have shown we can come together to carry these heavy lifts across the finish line.

I have been proud to partner with Chairwoman Stabenow to shepherd significant reforms into law on priority issues, particularly in the climate and nutrition spaces.

Together, we worked to enact the Growing Climate Solutions Act, making it easier for producers to participate in emerging voluntary carbon credit markets.

And we passed that bill with the support of over ninety of our colleagues.

In the nutrition space, we worked to pass the Keep Kids Fed Act which extended needed flexibilities to schools and meal providers for an additional year at a time when supply chain breakdowns persisted and food costs soared because of inflation. 

Perhaps the achievement I am most proud of was our successful effort to modernize the outdated summer meals program to reach more food-insecure children, in both rural and urban communities, filling the gap children face during the months when classes are out.  

Marking the first substantial reform to the summer meals program in over sixty years, this investment of over $20 billion ensures that children will never again face hunger in the summer months.

That is what our work here is all about.

Identifying a problem, and then coming together to solve it. 

We’ve proven we can do that in the past.

I believe, with all my heart, that we can do it again by passing a bipartisan farm bill.

 

I look forward to taking our two frameworks, forging a bipartisan farm bill and passing it into law before the 118th session of Congress comes to a close.

Tax relief measures, Game & Fish Commission budget advance in special session

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Arkansas lawmakers on Monday (June 17) advanced an appropriation bill for the Game & Fish Commission (G&FC) and complimentary tax cut bills to reduce the top personal and corporate income tax rates.

Gov. Sarah Sanders called a special session of the 94th Arkansas General Assembly for purposes of reducing taxes and passing the G&FC appropriation measure.

Senators on the Revenue and Tax Committee advanced SB1 and SB3. SB1, led by Sen. Jonathan Dismang, R-Beebe, would reduce the top personal income tax rate from 4.4% to 3.9% and the top corporate tax rate from 4.8% to 4.3%.

Tax relief measures, Game & Fish Commission budget advance in special session

Arkansas judge tosses lawsuit over worker abortion accommodations

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

An Arkansas judge put a stop to a court challenge over workplace abortion accommodations on Friday. U.S. District Judge D. Price Marshall Jr. said plaintiffs in a lawsuit over new protections for employees seeking abortions did not have standing, meaning they did not establish that the protections for workers would actually cause them harm.

In 2022, The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act was passed with bipartisan support in Congress. The law required employers to accommodate pregnancy and childbirth-related medical conditions. On April 19, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission expanded the law to include accommodations that come from seeking an abortion. They passed the rule change by a vote of 3-2. The new rules will go into effect on Tuesday.

In April, Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin announced his plan to bring a lawsuit against the law's expansion.

Arkansas judge tosses lawsuit over worker abortion accommodations

Michael Hibblen/Little Rock Public Radio

Plaintiffs in the lawsuit say expansions to the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act would cause them harm; the judge disagreed.

Arkansas 4-H offers axe throwing at 4-H Outdoor Skills Challenge

By Rebekah Hall
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK — Successfully throwing an axe is tougher than it looks, but Arkansas 4-H members had a unique opportunity to give it their best shot at the 4-H Outdoor Skills Challenge, held June 10 at the C.A. Vines Arkansas 4-H Center.

AXE AT THE READY — Three 4-H members prepare to take two practice throws and five scoring throws at the axe throwing contest, part of the 2024 Arkansas 4-H Outdoor Skills Challenge. Arkansas 4-H is the only program in the country to offer axe throwing as part of a competition. (Division of Agriculture photo.) 

Arkansas 4-H is the only 4-H program in the nation to offer axe throwing as part of a contest. In addition to axe throwing, youth tested their skills in knot tying, fire building, canoeing, kayaking and atlatl, an ancient device used to throw spears. Forty-five members from 11 Arkansas counties attended the competition, first held in 2023.

Jesse Bocksnick, extension 4-H outdoor skills coordinator for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said Arkansas 4-H decided to include axe throwing in the contest to help draw interest. Only senior level 4-H members, aged 14-19, can participate in the axe throwing.

“Axe throwing was kind of a throwback,” Bocksnick said. “We wanted to do something that was kind of cool, that nobody else did and was kind of edgy. We also noticed it was huge out in the public, with all those axe-throwing facilities.”

Participants each got two practice throws and five scoring throws. Points were given if participants successfully lodged their axes in tree cookies — cross-sections cut from a fallen pine tree at the 4-H Center. The tree cookies were soaked underwater for more than a year to soften them for the competition.

Bocksnick said axe throwing teaches concentration and other important skills.

“It’s all about life skill development,” he said. “Anything to get kids to pay attention, concentrate, and help their self-confidence, that’s what it’s all about, and doing it in a fun way. We have to have a fun hook. Anything we can do to keep their interested and keep them hooked into the 4-H program, that’s what we do.”

Arkansas 4-H Outdoor Skills Challenge results

Seniors overall, individuals

First place: Caitlin Cooper, White County

Second place: Brooke Duvall, Conway County

Third place: Aaron Smith, Faulkner County

Seniors overall, teams

First place: Addison Kennon and Ava Kennon, Stone County

Second place: Justin Morris and Dominic Neal, Craighead County

Third place: Cheyanne Marshall and Christian Trombley, Howard County

Juniors overall, individuals

First place: Carleigh Cooper, White County

Second place: Mia Hefler, Conway County

Third place: Wesley Webb, Lonoke County

Juniors overall, teams

First place: Asher Howard and Rhett Young, Howard County

Second place: Calia Connelly and Molly Jackson, Grant County

Third place: Declan Barnard and Levi Jackson, Grant County

Outdoor skills for all

Creenna Bocksnick, Arkansas 4-H camping coordinator for the Division of Agriculture, said she and her husband Jesse Bocksnick began teaching extension 4-H agents about the outdoor skills program prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Then we really focused on it in 2020, as counties were looking for activities to get their county programs back up and going,” she said.

In 2023, they implemented the contest for the first time.

“The whole concept came about because we wanted to offer more outdoor skills, more outdoor involvement with Arkansas 4-H,” Jesse Bocksnick said. “Creenna and I started putting this together, and we thought about all the stuff we do at the 4-H Center, all the stuff we do in 4-H, that we could actually use as a hook for life skills development.

“We could bring in shooting sports kids, we could bring in fishing kids, forestry kids, livestock kids, anything outdoor-education based — this will bring them all together in one spot and might expose them to another part of 4-H,” he said.

The contest is designed to expose participants to a variety of outdoor skills, which they learn and practice over the course of a year. A month prior to the Outdoor Skills Challenge event, they reveal to teams which four or five skills will be included in the upcoming contest.

“What that does is it allows them to practice the skills for the contest, whether it be mountain biking, fishing, hiking, gear judging — all that you see here today, plus several more,” Bocksnick said. “They can practice that all year long, and it doesn’t get dull. That way, their coach isn’t honing them in on four or five activities all year and burning them out. They get a fully encompassed learning experience all year long, and then they get to show off for it.”

Crenna Bocksnick said the variety of activities appeals to county agents and their club members.

“With all the possible events for this contest, agents and club leaders have multiple activities that can be conducted within the county,” Bocksnick said. “It gives youth an introduction to a wide variety of outdoor activities. It is also designed so that no one event is more important in the scoring. They are all weighted the same.” 

Alicia Hugen, Conway County extension staff chair for the Division of Agriculture, said her 4-H members benefit from the mix of old and new skills.

“Each year that they compete, they’re gaining new skills and building upon skills from last year, and I think that is just awesome,” Hugen said. “For example, with fire building, we don’t know if it’s going to be matches, or flint, or a lighter, so we have kids practice with all of those. Last year, we boiled water, and then they just announced today that they’re going to be burning through a string. Kids love this kind of thing, so we’ve had a lot of interest.”

Hugen said that the outdoor skills in-services helped revitalize the county’s 4-H program after low numbers resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Introducing this was a huge draw, not only for the current 4-H’ers, but it also brought new families in, because this was something new and different and honed in on those outdoor skills that families truly love,” Hugen said. “It has really impacted our program positively, bringing those kiddos and those new families in and introducing them to the 4-H program in a different light. A lot of people still think, ‘Oh, I have to have cows or chickens to do this,’ and that’s not the case at all. This really hit the nail on the head.”

To learn more about Arkansas 4-H, visit 4h.uada.edu. To learn more about Arkansas 4-H Outdoor Skills, visit 4h.uada.edu/programs/outdoor-skills.apx or contact Jesse Bocksnick at jbocksnick@uada.edu.

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. 

Representative French Hill champions vital provisions for Nation's defenders

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Rep. French Hill (AR-02) today released the following statement after the House passed the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which includes important provisions for military bases throughout Arkansas.

“My vote today underscores my steadfast dedication to the courageous men and women of our armed forces both at home in central Arkansas and abroad safeguarding our freedoms. Among the key provisions of this bill are substantial investments in Arkansas’s military infrastructure including funding for more training at Camp Robinson, increased production capacity in Camden for the Iron Dome system, and $73 million for an F-35 Academic Training Center at Ebbing Air National Guard Base - all of which mean creating and sustaining good paying jobs for the hardworking people of Arkansas.”

Further Background:

H.R. 8070 - 2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA): This bill includes a 4.5% pay increase for service members, counters our foreign adversaries, and supports our military and industrial base readiness.

For military spouses, this legislation makes it easier for them to transfer professional licenses across states and expands Department of Defense programs that provide employment support to spouses.

Additionally, this bill tackles waste by saving $30 billion by cutting inefficient programs and outdated weapons and cuts $4.3 billion in programs that aren’t meeting requirements. 

U.S. News & World Report Names UAMS Arkansas’ ‘Best Hospital for Equitable Access’

By Yavonda Chase

LITTLE ROCK — U.S. News & World Report named the UAMS Medical Center as an inaugural “Best Regional Hospital for Equitable Access,” recognizing 53 health care institutions that the magazine said both excel in quality and provide substantial access to care to socioeconomically disadvantaged patients.

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was the only hospital in Arkansas included in the list, which spanned 26 states.

“At UAMS, we are committed to providing the best possible care to all Arkansans,” said Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA, UAMS chancellor and chief executive officer of UAMS Health. “It is our privilege to be entrusted with the care of so many, and we are honored to be recognized for our commitment to high quality, equitable care.”

U.S. News & World Report Names UAMS Arkansas’ ‘Best Hospital for Equitable Access’

AEDC director: Income tax dip below four percent ‘sending a message’

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Arkansas Economic Development Commission Executive Director Clint O’Neal says the push to lower Arkansas’ top personal income tax rate below four percent as well as drop the corporate income tax rate will open the door for more business to come to the state.

Gov. Sarah Sanders is calling the Arkansas General Assembly into session Monday (June 17) to cut personal income tax rates from 4.4% to 3.9%, corporate tax rates from 4.8% to 4.3%, and to expand the homestead tax credit by another $75 to $500 for homeowners.

Appearing on this week’s edition of Talk Business & Politics, O’Neal said the tax cuts expected to be enacted this week in a legislative special session is psychological and tangible.

AEDC director: Income tax dip below four percent ‘sending a message’

Womack votes to strengthen National Security, improve servicemember quality of life

Washington, DC—June 14, 2024…Today, Congressman Steve Womack (AR-3) voted to pass the H.R. 8070, the Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025. The annual legislation authorizes $895.2 billion for our national security, including resources to enhance military preparedness, improve quality of life for our troops and their families, deter foreign adversaries, and focus the Department of Defense on its core mission.

Congressman Womack said, “Providing for the common defense of our nation is a constitutional imperative, and supporting our troops is our moral and strategic obligation. This year’s NDAA secures Arkansas priorities, improves the quality of life for our servicemembers and their families, and makes it abundantly clear that America will stand by our allies and defend against adversarial aggression both at home and abroad. House passage of the NDAA is a step forward, but we must quickly pass full-year appropriations for the Department of Defense and fund the government to complete the mission.”

Provisions in the bill Womack strongly supports:

  • Encourages Department of Defense (DOD) to continue investing in expanding Iron Dome system production capacity in the United States, namely at the Camden, Arkansas facility.

  • Authorizes funding for Ebbing Air National Guard Base Academic Training Center in support of the F-35 FMS mission.

  • Authorizes a 19.5% pay raise for junior enlisted servicemembers, along with a 4.5% pay increase for all other servicemembers.

  • Expands access to childcare and employment opportunities for military families.

  • Refocuses the DOD on military readiness instead of domestic social policy by gutting DEI programs, prohibiting CRT, and ending affirmative action at service academies.

  • Extends the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI) and increases a funding authorization for new military technology to deter Chinese aggression in the Indo-Pacific region.

  • Reaffirms U.S. support to Israel against Iran, Hamas, and Hezbollah.

  • Reaffirms U.S. support to the defense of Taiwan against CCP threats.

  • Authorizes full funding for the deployment of National Guard troops at the southwest border and increases authorized funding by $20 million for DOD counternarcotics activities.

  • Blocks the Biden Administration’s plan to reduce the number of U.S. Special Forces, warfighting aircraft, and defense missiles.

Cosponsored Amendments:

  • Hot Springs, AR Army-Navy Hospital: Provides the state of Arkansas three years to request permanent ownership of the former Army-Navy Hospital in Hot Springs, AR, and in the event of this request, would extinguish any reversionary interest in the property by the United States.

  • National Digital Reserve Corps: Creates a National Digital Reserve Corps to help federal agencies address cyber-attacks and critical workforce gaps as needed.

  • Expansion of National Guard State Partnership Program: Directs the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, in consultation with the Secretary of State and the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, to assess and report on the feasibility and benefits of expanding the National Guard State Partnership Program in the Pacific Islands.

  • Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard Involvement in State Partnership Program: Directs the DOD to conduct a study on how to more actively consider and support the U.S. Coast Guard’s involvement in the State Partnership Program in the Pacific.

The FY25 NDAA will now advance to the Senate before a conference committee is established to reconcile the differences between the House and Senate versions.

UAMS First in Nation to Offer Groundbreaking Therapy for Treatment-Resistant Depression

By Tim Taylor

LITTLE ROCK — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) is the first medical facility in the United States to provide an innovative therapeutic treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD).

The SAINT® neuromodulation system, developed by Magnus Medical, Inc., has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat adults with depression who have not achieved improvement in their condition from the use of antidepressant medications. SAINT works by leveraging structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans to inform a proprietary algorithm that pinpoints the optimal anatomical target for precise neurostimulation in individuals with major depression.

The treatment is performed on an accelerated, five-day timeline, reducing the patient’s treatment time from weeks to days. In previous clinical trials, treatment with SAINT for MDD resulted in a significant reduction in depressive symptoms at four weeks post-treatment following the five-day treatment protocol. Currently, SAINT can only be provided to patients who are being treated as inpatients.

UAMS First in Nation to Offer Groundbreaking Therapy for Treatment-Resistant Depression

Biram named associate director of Southern Risk Management Education Center

By Tracy Courage
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK — Hunter Biram has been named associate director of the Southern Risk Management Education Center, effective June 15.

LEADAER —Hunter Biram has been named associate director of the Southern Risk Management Education Center. (Division of Agriculture photo)

The new role is in addition to his current duties as assistant professor in the Department of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness at the University of Arkansas and as extension economist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

The Southern Risk Management Education Center, housed within the Division of Agriculture, is one of four centers nationwide whose mission is to educate farmers and ranchers to manage the unique risks of producing food. The center is funded by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, which is part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The center has served nearly 1 million individual farmers and ranchers in the southern region, empowering them with the skills and tools to effectively manage risk. The southern region encompasses Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

“I am excited to have Dr. Biram join our leadership team,” said Ron Rainey, center director and assistant vice president for the Division of Agriculture. “His appointment allows the center to leverage Hunter’s expertise and experience in policy and crop insurance. SRMEC will be able to enhance the depths of our outreach programs.”

Biram brings plenty of experience to the job. He grew up in Floral, Arkansas, working on a diverse family farm operation consisting of a cow-calf herd, broiler chickens, a greenhouse nursery and peach orchard. His applied research and extension program focuses on agricultural production and price risk management using federal crop insurance and commodity programs in the farm bill.

"As associate center director, I plan to raise the profile of and elevate the need for extension risk management education across the Southeast region,” Biram said. “It has become quite clear the need exists for risk management education for producers managing risk with federal crop insurance, especially those who are historically underserved. Additionally, I plan to improve measuring extension scholarship for my colleagues across the region so we can better tell our story as extension specialists to the institutions we serve our states with."

Biram has a Bachelor of Science in Agribusiness from Arkansas State University; a Master of Science in Agricultural Economics from Mississippi State University; and a Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics from Kansas State University.

Biram will work with Rainey and Erica Fields, an associate center director responsible for overseeing the center’s financial operations.

For more information about the Southern Risk Management Education Center, visit http://www.srmec.uada.edu

To learn about Extension programs, 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.

Arkansas House Delegation to McDonough: The politicization of the VA is inappropriate

Washington, D.C. — Congressmen Rick Crawford (AR-01), French Hill (AR-02), Steve Womack (AR-03), and Bruce Westerman (AR-04) sent a letter to U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Secretary Denis McDonough voicing concern for the encouragement of VA facilities to display Pride flags at the taxpayers’ expense. The letter calls on McDonough to immediately remove any flag other than the American flag, flag of the VA, state flags, and the POW-MIA recognition flag from VA facilities.

Rawpixel Image

In part, the lawmakers wrote:

“The Pride flag is once again flying over the VA facility in Little Rock, and our constituents and veterans across Arkansas have called on us to inquire about why the VA is expressing a clear political leaning. Your continuation of this policy demonstrates the continued disregard for the opinions of veterans you showed last year. The men and women who have served our country deserve to enter a facility that is free from discrimination and political posturing, and we should strive to provide them with an apolitical VA when they seek the care, benefits, and services they have earned.”

Click here for the full letter.

State Board of Education approves new accountability system, guidelines

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

The Arkansas State Board of Education approved new accountability guidelines for private schools getting tax money on Thursday.

The 2023 LEARNS Act signed into law by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders allowed public money to be used for private schools. The money comes from a pool of funds called the “education freedom account.”

Sanders and Education Secretary Jacob Oliva have promised accountability measures for these schools since the law was passed. Stacy Smith, Deputy Commissioner of the Education Department's Division of Elementary and Secondary Education, presented the new rules at a meeting on Thursday. Students at private schools getting tax dollars will be required to take standardized testing and meet accreditation standards, but there will be a lot of flexibility for them in both categories.

State Board of Education approves new accountability system, guidelines

Antoinette Grajeda/Arkansas Advocate

Arkansas Department of Education Deputy Commissioner Stacy Smith (right) at a previous meeting of the board. On Thursday she presented testing and accreditation rules for private schools receiving public money.

Cotton: Protestors who deface statues must face mandatory minimums

Washington, D.C. — Senator Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas) today introduced the Saving Treasured Artifacts Through Uniform Enforcement (STATUE) Act, legislation that would impose mandatory minimum prison sentences for defacing statues on federal land. Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tennessee) is co-sponsoring the legislation.

Senator Cotton introduced the legislation after protestors damaged the area surrounding the White House, including painting pro-Hamas and antisemitic slogans on statues in Lafayette Square Park.

“Any protestor who defaces statues of America’s heroes must face the full extent of the law. As Joe Biden seeks to appease the pro-Hamas wing of the Democratic Party, it’s clear his administration won’t do anything to punish the protestors who defaced the area around the White House recently. The Senate should take up my legislation to punish these pro-Hamas lunatics,” said Senator Cotton.

Text of the legislation may be found here.

The STATUE Act would:

  • Impose a minimum sentence of five years imprisonment and a $1,000 fine or a fine equal to the amount of damage to the property, whichever is greater.

  • Amend the Veterans’ Memorial Preservation and Recognition Act so that it applies to all monuments or property under the jurisdiction of the federal government.

Boozman awarded for hunger action and modernizing summer meals program

WASHINGTON – The Congressional Hunger Center honored U.S. Senator John Boozman (R-AR) for leading passage of legislation to ensure kids have access to healthy, nutritious meals during the summer with the organization’s prestigious Bill Emerson and Mickey Leland Hunger Leadership Award. 

As ranking member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, Boozman worked with Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) to modernize U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) summer meal programs and permanently allow states flexibilities to reach more food-insecure children in need in addition to authorizing a national summer electronic benefit (EBT) program to eligible families. The pair’s measure was included in a funding package signed into law in December 2022.

“The struggle many families have putting food on the table continues beyond the school year. Senator Stabenow and I recognized USDA’s summer meal program was in desperate need of modernization and worked together to make meaningful updates so children have more opportunities to access healthy food during the summer,” Boozman said. “I’m pleased to accept this award and am committed to ensuring that our nutrition programs remain strong and accessible to Americans in their time of need.”

As a member of the Senate Hunger Caucus, Boozman is working to combat the global food security crisis. The senator is championing bipartisan legislation that creates an innovative approach to tackle the growing international challenge by leveraging private sector dollars to improve food systems.

The Congressional Hunger Center is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization that works to make domestic and international hunger issues a priority to government officials and educates future leaders on ways to fight against hunger.

The Bill Emerson and Mickey Leland Hunger Leadership Award is named after Congressional leaders who spent their careers fighting hunger and poverty. Honorees are chosen for their significant contributions to combating hunger in the United States and overseas. They exemplify the determination necessary to make hunger and poverty a focal point in the United States and within Congress.

Congressional Hunger Center Executive Director Shannon Maynard and Bryan Dierlam of Archer Daniels Midland Company present Senator Boozman with the Bill Emerson and Mickey Leland Hunger Leadership Award.

Gov. Sanders authorizes three percent pay increases for state employees

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

Gov. Sarah Sanders on Friday (June 14) authorized a three percent adjustment for pay increases for state employees, effective June 23, 2024. In a letter to state workers, Sanders also outlined a one percent base salary merit raise for executive branch employees and a three percent base salary merit raise for state workers who have exceeded performance evaluations.

“Arkansas’ state government runs on you, our state employees. As my administration works to provide exceptional services to the people of Arkansas at a lower cost, we are relying on you to deliver. In the past 18 months, you have facilitated bold changes to state government, and I am incredibly appreciative of your work,” Gov. Sanders said. “As recognition for your accomplishments – and as an acknowledgment of our need to recruit and retain talented public servants – I worked with the legislature to make a one-time, 3% increase to all Arkansas executive branch state employee’s pay. I am authorizing that adjustment to go into effect on June 23.”

In noting the merit pay raises, Sanders said they would apply to state workers who have worked in the executive branch for at least a year, and who have worked at their current executive department since January 2, 2024.

Gov. Sanders authorizes three percent pay increases for state employees

Fourth district students appointed to U.S. service academies

HOT SPRINGS – Three students from Arkansas’ Fourth Congressional District have accepted U.S. Service Academy appointments. Congressman Bruce Westerman (AR-04) hosted a send-off for the students and their families at his Hot Springs office. Westerman released the following statement:

“One of the greatest parts of my job is meeting and nominating bright young Arkansans who want to serve our country. It’s an honor to play a role in this process, and I look forward to seeing how they excel in their respective careers. I am confident these young men and women will represent Arkansas well.”

Darian Presley from Lake Hamilton High School will attend the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Ajaiah Harris from White Hall High School will attend the U.S. Air Force Academy Preparatory School.

Rhett Fultz from Clarksville High School will attend the U.S. Air Force Academy

Click here to learn more about the U.S. Service Academy nomination process.