Walker Foundation Commits $2 Million to UAMS Health Orthopaedics & Sports Performance Center

By Andrew Vogler

LITTLE ROCK — The Willard & Pat Walker Charitable Foundation committed $2 million to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).

The gift will support construction of the UAMS Health Orthopaedics & Sports Performance Center in Springdale, Arkansas, which is scheduled to open in summer 2025.

“The Walker Foundation has been instrumental in the growth of Northwest Arkansas, and we are grateful that this support has been extended to UAMS’ operations in the area,” said Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA, UAMS chancellor and CEO of UAMS Health. “Willard and Pat Walker were amazing people, and their legacy of leadership and philanthropy will continue to inspire UAMS’ mission for many years to come.”

https://news.uams.edu/2023/09/07/walker-foundation-commits-2-million-to-uams-health-orthopaedics-sports-performance-center/

UAMS Opens First Milk Bank in Arkansas

By Andrew Vogler

LITTLE ROCK — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) opened the UAMS Milk Bank, the first facility of its kind in Arkansas, during a Sept. 6 ribbon-cutting ceremony.

Donald R. Bobbitt, president of the University of Arkansas System, addressed guests at the ceremony.Andrew Vogler

Located in the Monroe Building just off UAMS’ main campus in Little Rock, the Milk Bank is a facility that focuses on the health of mothers and newborns in Arkansas through encouragement and support of breastfeeding. The new milk bank will help ensure a ready supply of donor milk for sick and vulnerable infants in neonatal intensive care units (NICU) around the state, shortening the time it takes for regional hospitals to receive critical milk supplies and improving outcomes for babies.

Previously, Arkansas hospitals relied on donor milk purchased from milk banks in Texas, Michigan, Illinois and Oklahoma, costing more than $1 million a year.

https://news.uams.edu/2023/09/06/uams-opens-first-milk-bank-in-arkansas/

Gov. Sanders names Leslie Fisken to lead Transformation and Shared Services

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

Gov. Sarah Sanders named a new cabinet member on Tuesday (Sept. 5).

Fisken - Arkansas Business News
ArkansasBusiness.com

Sanders announced that Leslie Fisken will serve as Secretary of the Arkansas Department of Transformation and Shared Services. Fisken is replacing Secretary Joseph Wood, who recently became chairman of the Republican Party of Arkansas.

“For the past eight months, Leslie has successfully united every agency in my administration around our shared goal to make bold, transformational change for the people of Arkansas. She is a hard worker with a deep understanding of how state government works, both of which make her eminently qualified to serve as Secretary of Transformation and Shared Services,” said Sanders.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/gov-sanders-names-leslie-fisken-to-lead-transformation-and-shared-services/

Cabot partnering with Lyon College veterinary medicine school

KUAR | By Daniel Breen

Students at Arkansas’ first veterinary school will get hands-on experience thanks to a new partnership.

The agreement between Batesville-based Lyon College and the City of Cabot will see students work directly with the city’s Animal Support Services as part of their studies.

Speaking with Little Rock Public Radio ahead of Tuesday’s announcement, Lyon College President Melissa Taverner said working in a clinic setting will help give students a leg up after graduation.

“They are going to become what we call ‘practice-ready’ upon graduation. They will get the skills and the experience to make them effective immediately, and then Cabot will have access to a ready supply of students and faculty and cutting-edge technologies that are going to help them be more effective in their clinic,” Taverner said.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-09-06/cabot-partnering-with-lyon-college-veterinary-medicine-school

Michael Noble Jr. For NPR

Veterinarian Dr. Remington Pettit and veterinarian assistant Zack Harmon check up Oreo on Dec. 12, 2022, in Stillwater, Okla.

ACHI’s Dr. Joe Thompson on COVID, drug prescription negotiations

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Dr. Joe Thompson with the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement (ACHI) expects federal Medicare drug negotiations to expand in coming years as a more capitalistic and competitive approach to healthcare emerges.

This past week, the Biden administration announced 10 drugs that will be negotiated for price discounts in Medicare, a first for the program.

“This is a very significant change for the federal Medicare program. Medicare is what we care for elderly in our nation. Since 1965 when Medicare was first put in place, it did not cover prescription drugs. The Part D program that went in place after the turn of the century did cover prescription drugs, but it did not allow the federal government to negotiate price on prescription drugs. So this is the first time Medicare, our federal insurance program for the elderly, has been able to negotiate price with pharmaceutical companies for now 10 drugs that are some of the most expensive drugs for people to pay,” Thompson said.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/achis-dr-joe-thompson-on-covid-drug-prescription-negotiations/

New report urges legislative action to provide SNAP benefits to Arkansas’ Marshallese community

KUAR | By Antoinette Grajeda / Arkansas Advocate

A report released Thursday advocates for extending Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits to the thousands of Marshallese migrants who lawfully reside in Arkansas and struggle with food insecurity.

Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families worked with the Arkansas Coalition of Marshallese for more than a year on the report, which recommends granting Marshallese migrants SNAP eligibility through one of three pieces of legislation currently under consideration by Congress, such as the Compacts of Free Association.

After testing nearly 70 nuclear bombs in the 1940s and 1950s that contaminated the Marshall Islands with radiation, the United States signed Compacts of Free Association (COFA) with the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Republic of Palau and the Federated States of Micronesia. The compacts allow the U.S. to operate military bases in the Freely Associated States, while FAS citizens may live and work in the U.S. and its territories as lawful non-immigrants.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-09-01/new-report-urges-legislative-action-to-provide-snap-benefits-to-arkansas-marshallese-community

Antoinette Grajeda/Arkansas Advocate

Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families Northwest Arkansas Director Laura Kellams (left) looks on as Arkansas Coalition of Marshallese CEO Melisa Laelan (right) discusses a new report advocating for extending SNAP benefits to the Marshallese community. The two nonprofits released the report Aug. 31, 2023, during an event at The Jones Center in Springdale.

New PGA Tour Champions event coming to Little Rock’s Pleasant Valley Country Club

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

Simmons Bank leaders, PGA officials and other dignitaries announced Thursday (Aug. 31) that a new professional golf tournament will be played at Little Rock’s Pleasant Valley Country Club starting in October 2024.

A five-year agreement establishing the event – the Simmons Bank Championship – was announced at the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame, with Simmons First National Corporation Executive Chairman George Makris, PGA Tour Champions President Miller Brady and Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders in attendance.

The Simmons Bank Championship will serve as the second round of PGA Tour Champions’ annual Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs, with the top 54 players in the Charles Schwab Cup standings competing to earn their spot among the top 36 and gain entry into the final event of the season.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/08/new-pga-tour-event-coming-to-little-rocks-pleasant-valley-country-club/

USDA grant supports study of melatonin use in pregnant cows grazing toxic fescue on calf growth

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

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — With support from a $300,000 U.S. Department of Agriculture grant, the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station is continuing research on the use of a common sleep aid for humans to improve weight gains of calves whose mothers grazed toxic fescue while pregnant.

ULTRASONOGRAPHY — Brittni Littlejohn, assistant professor of animal science, and her graduate student, Carter Culp, conduct Doppler ultrasonography on the uterine artery of a pregnant cow. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Benjamin Aaron)

Brittni Littlejohn, assistant professor of animal science for the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, and her collaborators were awarded the grant by the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture to continue evaluating the use of melatonin in pregnant cows to offset the long-term effects on calves when their mothers graze toxic fescue.

Tall fescue is the most common cool-season forage in the southeastern United States. However, it is often infected with an endophyte fungus that produces ergot alkaloids that are toxic to grazing animals and cause constriction of blood vessels. In a preliminary study for the experiment station, Littlejohn saw decreased uterine artery blood flow in pregnant heifers that consumed toxic fescue seed when compared to endophyte-free fescue seed.

A complex system

The preliminary study also showed calves born to heifers that consumed toxic fescue seed weighed an average of 90 pounds lighter at weaning than those born to heifers that consumed endophyte-free fescue seed during gestation. The effects of the toxic fescue to decrease weight gains continue through yearling age, and ongoing research is evaluating performance of these calves in the feedlot, she added.

Prior research by Littlejohn has shown the potential for melatonin administered to pregnant cattle to improve growth performance of calves. Specifically, melatonin tended to improve birth weights of calves, and significantly improved weaning and post-weaning weights of calves whose mothers consumed toxic fescue seed during gestation, she said.

Supporting evidence from her first study showed that pregnant heifers fed melatonin as a supplement led to recovery of more than 70 percent of the loss in weaning weights of calves whose mothers were fed fescue seed infected with the fungus-produced ergot alkaloid.

“We're working to understand and separate out the impacts on the calf that are directly due to changes in the prenatal environment, such as reduced blood flow to the uterus, versus effects on the mother’s physiology after birth, such as milk production, that may indirectly impact the calf,” Littlejohn said.

The current study began in May with a 70-day treatment period where mature pregnant cattle grazed either toxic fescue or endophyte-free fescue pastures and were supplemented with or without melatonin. Uterine and tail artery blood flow, as well as milk yield and composition, are being evaluated in cows from each treatment. Calves born to cattle from each treatment will be evaluated for differences in metabolic function, microbiome populations and feed efficiency to better understand factors influencing potential differences in calf growth.

The two-year experiment is being conducted at the Livestock and Forestry Research Station in Batesville.  

“The current study is still preliminary, but it is one step closer to the producer,” Littlejohn said. “This is more of a true field study, where those pregnant cows are consuming toxic fescue in a grazing scenario.”

The study will also look at melatonin's potential side effects on the calves.

"There are no known adverse effects, but to our knowledge this is the first time melatonin supplementation has been studied in pregnant cows consuming toxic fescue, and it's a very complex system, so we are closely monitoring animals for potential adverse effects," Littlejohn said.

Because melatonin and toxic fescue have been independently associated with changes to the microbiome, Littlejohn said fecal samples will be collected from pregnant cows and calves born to those cows at various intervals for microbiome analyses.

The melatonin will be given to the pregnant cows in their feed at a dose similar to naturally occurring nighttime levels. Although melatonin is known to help people go to sleep, Littlejohn said she has not observed the cows nodding off in the middle of the day.

The groundwork on this patent-pending protocol shows that melatonin supplementation in pregnant cattle grazing toxic fescue has the potential to improve offspring growth performance and increase producer return on investment.

"We hope to not only start filling a profound gap in the current literature, but also test the potential of melatonin as a cost-effective therapeutic," Littlejohn said.

Division of Agriculture co-investigators include Shane Gadberry, professor, extension livestock specialist, and director of the Batesville research station; Beth Kegley, professor of animal science; Jeremy Powell, professor of animal science; Jiangchao Zhao, professor of animal science. Ken Coffey, an animal science professor with the experiment station.

Co-investigators in the study include Mississippi State University's Rhonda Vann, research professor of cattle growth physiology, and Caleb Lemley, associate professor of reproductive physiology. The sub-award to Mississippi State University researchers is $15,000.

The study is supported by USDA-NIFA grant number 2023-67016-39661. The USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service ranks Arkansas 11th in the nation in beef cows that have calved and beef cow replacement heifers, according to the 2023 Arkansas Agricultural Profile published by the Division of Agriculture.

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.

Ford named recipient of Society of American Foresters’ Gifford Pinchot medal

By Mary Hightower
U of A System Division of Agriculture

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Vic Ford, head of agriculture and natural resources for the Cooperative Extension Service in Arkansas, has been recognized by the Society of American Foresters with its highest honor, the Gifford Pinchot medal.

“I am honored and humbled to receive this award because the list of award winners includes my mentors and heroes,” Ford said. “It is extra special since I was nominated by friends and colleagues in Arkansas who thought my accomplishments qualified for the award when I did not. I am indeed grateful for their confidence and support.”

Arkansas' Vic Ford has been honored with the Gifford Pinchot medal, the highest honor given by the Society of American Foresters (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo).

The medal recognizes outstanding contributions by a forestry professional in the administration, practice, and professional development of forestry in North America, and is presented in odd-numbered years. The Society of American Foresters announced its awards on Aug. 31. Ford will receive the medal in October.

“We are very proud of Dr. Ford’s accomplishments as a forester,” said Bob Scott, director of the Cooperative Extension Service. “In his role as associate vice president for ag and natural resources, he often finds himself doing double duty in our forestry group due some vacancies and reduction in the number of staff. I join everyone in congratulating him on this well-deserved recognition.”

The medal is named for Gifford Pinchot, who is widely credited as being America's first forester and the father of the conservation movement in North America. In addition to establishing the Forest Service, Pinchot founded the Society of American Foresters in 1900. He served as its president from 1900–1908 and again from 1910–1911. He was elected an SAF Fellow in 1918. Gifford Pinchot brought a professional approach to all his endeavors, the Forest Service, natural resource conservation, and the SAF. His actions have left an indelible mark on the profession of natural resource management. 

Ford earned his Ph.D. in forest soils from Virginia Tech. He joined the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture as a professor and head of the newly opened Southwest Research and Extension Center in 1983, the same year he joined SAF. He was named associate vice president for agriculture and natural resources-extension for the Division of Agriculture in 2020. Ford has become a familiar face and voice in Arkansas, thanks to his many appearances in media outlets, and talks about edible fungi.

In November 2022, Ford was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Ouachita Society of American Foresters during its annual meeting in Oklahoma.

Early adopter of computers, spatial data
Ford was an early adopter of microcomputer use in forestry. By the late 1980s, Ford was learning geographic information systems, or GIS, and again was an early adopter in use of spatial data analysis for research and to develop operational recommendations for foresters.

His use of GIS hasn’t been limited to forestry. Over the last decade, he has used GIS to help determine the scope of large-scale row crop damage from flooding.

Ford developed a mapping system and code that used geology and geomorphology as a framework to map soils and develop recommendations. This system was used by his employer Westvaco in Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, West Virginia and Virginia. Consultants who conduct soil mapping have adapted the system to other areas.

Ford’s screening of herbicides for hardwood plantations led to significant changes to labels.  His work in water quality showed that water coming from a managed landscape was often cleaner than water entering the tract.

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

LABOR DAY: Fall foliage may fizzle

By Mary Hightower
U of A System Division of Agriculture 

HOPE, Ark. — Thanks to a string of dry days with highs in the 100s, Arkansas’ fall foliage display may fizzle this year.

“It’s going to be a pretty bad fall across the state,” said Vic Ford, a forester who is head of agriculture and natural resources for the Cooperative Extension Service. “A lot of trees are already turning brown.

Drought is likely to put a damper on fall foliage color in 2023, says Vic Ford, forester and administrator at the Cooperative Extension Service. (U of A System Division of Agriuculture photo by Mary Hightower)

“There’s a lot of drought stress going around,” he said. When drought hits, one of the tree’s survival mechanisms is to cut sap flow to its leaves, preventing moisture from evaporating from the leaves, which leads to browning and early leaf fall.

“Leaf color change of the type we like to see in fall is driven by day length and temperature,” Ford said. “The shorter day encourages the green chlorophyll to break down, revealing the yellows and reds. Cooler temperatures allow the non-green colors in the leaf to develop more fully.”

The Drought Center map for Arkansas showed areas of abnormal dryness in eastern Arkansas along the Missouri border, some patches in southwest Arkansas, but a broad swath of dryness north of the Arkansas River extending from the Mississippi River as far west as Faulkner and Pulaski counties. Five counties have areas of severe drought including all of Lee County, and parts of St. Francis, Woodruff, Monroe and Phillips counties.

The dryness was also prompting counties to impose burn bans across the state as the wildfire danger increased across most of the state.

“In areas where there might be more moisture, you may get some color, such as on northern slopes,” he said.

If the dry spell is upended, the chances for color might improve slightly.

“Any moisture in the next couple of weeks could produce color in places that are marginal,” Ford said.

Speaking from Hope, he said that “elms are just turning totally brown and the privet has wilted completely.”

La Niña gives way to El Niño
While cooler temperatures were in the forecast, the National Weather Service at Little Rock was not expecting abundant rain.

“Looking ahead, La Niña has faded, with a transition to a moderate to strong El Niño in the coming months,” the weather service said. “As we head through the remainder of summer/early fall long-term data is showing largely below normal precipitation across Arkansas.

“In addition to a lack of thunderstorms, there could be extreme heat at times,” the weather service said. “Given the scenario, and if there is no rain by way of a tropical system, drought is a growing concern in the short term. We will continue monitoring the situation.”

The Cooperative Extension Service is the land grant outreach arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

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

4 Convicted in $18M Investment Fraud Scheme

by Arkansas Business Staff

A federal jury in Arkansas has convicted four men for their roles in an $18 million investment fraud and money laundering scheme.

The Brittingham Group, founded by Fayetteville investment banker John Nock, 55, promised returns as high as 300% within 20 to 30 days, according to authorities. But in reality, the group could not and did not produce those returns on their investment offerings.

https://www.arkansasbusiness.com/article/145853/4-convicted-in-18m-investment-fraud-scheme

UAMS First in State to Earn The Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval for Spinal Fusion Treatment

By Linda Satter

LITTLE ROCK — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS Health) is the first health organization in Arkansas to earn The Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval for Certification in Spinal Fusion. The Gold Seal is a symbol of quality that reflects a health care organization’s commitment to providing safe and quality patient care.

The Joint Commission, founded in 1951, is an independent, not-for-profit organization that meticulously reviews and certifies disease-specific programs in the United States. It is the nation’s oldest and largest standards-setting and accrediting body in health care.

The certification is awarded to health care organizations with protocols proven to deliver better outcomes within a practice specialty — in this case, spinal fusion. The complex surgery connects two or more bones in any part of the spine. It can help correct problems with the way the spine is formed, such as in scoliosis, or can be used to stabilize the spine in cases of severe arthritis or after a damaged disk is removed.

https://news.uams.edu/2023/08/31/uams-first-in-state-to-earn-the-joint-commissions-gold-seal-of-approval-for-spinal-fusion-treatment/

Economist highlights freight industry misconceptions, soft peak season

by Jeff Della Rosa (JDellaRosa@nwabj.com)

Peak shipping season is expected to be weak amid high inventory levels and holiday spending uncertainty, a supply chain economist said.

In a recent Project44 webinar, Jason Miller, professor of supply chain management at Michigan State University, said consumers have spending power but are strained. Still, they’ve yet to reach a breaking point.

“The real question is going to be how much gets spent on goods for the holidays versus gets spent on experiences and services,” he said. Miller explained multiple misconceptions in trucking activity, including that “we’ve fallen off a cliff. Now, we are in a freight recession and have been since the third quarter of 2022.”

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/08/economist-highlights-freight-industry-misconceptions-soft-peak-season/

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center joins prosthesis study at UA with $4.9M grant

The U.S. Department of Defense has awarded a $4.9 million grant to the University of Arkansas’ Institute for Integrative and Innovative Research (I3R).

According to a UA news release Tuesday (Aug. 29), the funding will expand a clinical trial for an innovative neural-enabled prosthesis currently occurring at the UA campus in Fayetteville and including Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Maryland as an additional clinical trial site.

The first-of-its-kind work aims to restore a sense of touch to individuals with upper limb amputation. It is the first time the UA has collaborated with Walter Reed, which houses one of the United States’ premier clinics for patients with amputations and is one of just three military hospitals that treat traumatic upper extremity amputations.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/08/walter-reed-national-military-medical-center-joins-prosthesis-study-at-ua-with-4-9m-grant/

A neural-enabled prosthetic hand system.

Federal agency asks states to pause Medicaid unwinding; DHS says request does not apply to Arkansas

KUAR | By Tess Vrbin / Arkansas Advocate

The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) sent a letter to all 50 states Wednesday, asking some to restore coverage for people who were recently disenrolled for procedural reasons.

The request does not apply to Arkansas, Department of Human Services spokesman Gavin Lesnick said in an email.

DHS conducts Medicaid eligibility reviews on an individual basis and does not require eligibility information for every member of someone’s household to provide benefits to that person, he said.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-08-31/federal-agency-asks-states-to-pause-medicaid-unwinding-dhs-says-request-does-not-apply-to-arkansas

Daniel Breen/Little Rock Public Radio

Members of the group Arkansas Community Organizations protest the state's Medicaid unwinding process at the State Capitol on Aug. 22, 2023.

Implementation of Arkansas LEARNS Act continues with literacy coach training

KUAR | By Antoinette Grajeda / Arkansas Advocate

Dozens of coaches are preparing to help Arkansas students meet literacy standards outlined in the LEARNS Act, an expansive new education law backed by the governor.

During a training session Monday, Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders told the new literacy coaches she knows the impact a single teacher can have on a student because an educator helped improve her daughter’s literacy skills after noticing she was “missing a couple of important markers when it came to reading.”

“When we challenge students, when we push them and when we raise the bar instead of lower it, they’re going to meet it because kids are absolutely resilient and amazing and each kid is capable of learning when given access to the right tools, the right resources and, frankly, the right teacher,” Sanders said.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-08-30/implementation-of-arkansas-learns-act-continues-with-literacy-coach-training

Screengrab From Livestream

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders gave remarks at a literacy coach training event on Aug. 28, 2023.

EPA issues post-Sackett WOTUS rule, removes numerous waterways from Clean Water Act regulation

By Drew Viguet
National Agricultural Law Center
U of A System Division of Agriculture

Brigit Rollins, staff attorney for the National Agricultural Law Center, says that numerous bodies of water previously identified as WOTUS will no longer have that classification (Division of Agriculture file photo)

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The highly anticipated new waters of the United States, or WOTUS, rule released Tuesday by the Environmental Protection Agency will remove scores of water bodies from regulation under the Clean Water Act.

Absent from the new rule is the “significant nexus”  test which had been part of WOTUS since the 2006 Supreme Court decision Rapanos vs. U.S. In that decision, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that wetlands should be included in the definition of WOTUS if they shared “significant nexus” with a water already identified as a WOTUS.

The EPA’s new WOTUS rule follows the May 25 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Sackett v. EPA. In that case, the high court narrowed the definition of WOTUS to include open, flowing bodies of water such as streams, rivers, lakes, and the ocean, along with those wetlands that share a continuous surface connection with such bodies of water.

Prior to the Sackett decision, WOTUS included adjacent wetlands, defining “adjacent” as “bordering, contiguous, or neighboring.” In its updated rule, EPA redefined '”adjacent” as “having a continuous surface connection,” bringing it in line with the Sackett decision.

“The effects of EPA’s WOTUS decision will definitely be felt by ag producers, especially when it comes to wetlands,” Brigit Rollins, staff attorney for the National Agricultural Law Center, said.

The new WOTUS rule reduces the number of waters and wetlands that would require a permit for point source pollution. 

“After the decision in Sackett, naturally the EPA was going to take another look at its definition of WOTUS,” Brigit Rollins said. With “significant nexus” gone, “now only wetlands that share an unbroken or continuous surface water connection with water already identified as WOTUS are included.”

This means that numerous bodies of water that previously would have been considered WOTUS will no longer have that classification.

“EPA is saying that wetlands which would share a surface water connection with a WOTUS but no longer have that connection due to manmade barriers such as levies, dikes or sand dunes will not be included in the WOTUS definition,” Rollins said.

Pre-Sackett WOTUS

After the Biden Administration’s March 2023 WOTUS rule went into effect, courts enjoined it in 28 states. There are three lawsuits outstanding regarding the 2023 rule: Texas v. EPA, West Virginia v. EPA, and Kentucky v. EPA. With EPA’s final decision now out, the lawsuits are paused, and their future uncertain.

“It’s hard to say what will happen with those,” Rollins said. “We probably won’t know the outcome for a couple more weeks. Those lawsuits may be dropped, or those involved may go on and litigate.”

Rollins, who focuses on environmental law in her research, has been providing timely updates on WOTUS through 2023, both online and via webinar.

On Nov. 15, Rollins will continue the discussion of WOTUS in her next NALC webinar, “What’s Up with WOTUS: Post-Sackett and Beyond.” The third installment in Rollins’ series will cover subsequent events following the Sackett decision and long-term effects of the ruling. Registration is online. Recording of the first and second installment in the series are also available online.

Why WOTUS matters

WOTUS is a critical component of the Clean Water Act. The CWA was established by Congress in 1972 with the goal of improving the country’s water quality. To achieve that goal, certain bodies of water are declared as WOTUS under the CWA, granting them protections.

“The WOTUS definition has been the subject of considerable debate over the years, but 2023 has been a considerably busy year for all things WOTUS,” Rollins said.

For information about the National Agricultural Law Center, visit nationalaglawcenter.org or follow @Nataglaw on Twitter. The National Agricultural Law Center is also on Facebook and LinkedIn.

For updates on agricultural law and policy developments, subscribe free of charge to The Feed, the NALC’s newsletter highlighting recent legal developments facing agriculture, which issues twice a month.

About the National Agricultural Law Center

The National Agricultural Law Center serves as the nation’s leading source of agricultural and food law research and information. The NALC works with producers, state and federal policymakers, Congressional staffers, attorneys, land grant universities, and many others to provide objective, nonpartisan agricultural and food law research and information to the nation’s agricultural community.

The NALC is a unit of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture and works in close partnership with the USDA Agricultural Research Service, National Agricultural Library.

UAMS-led Arkansas Perinatal Quality Collaborative Launches with Support of 33 Hospitals, Takes Aim at Reducing C-Sections

By David Wise

FAYETTEVILLE — Between 2018 and 2019, 23 women in Arkansas died from pregnancy-related causes. According to the state’s review panel of medical experts, 90% of these deaths were potentially preventable.

Now, 33 hospitals in Arkansas are working together to prevent maternal deaths through the Arkansas Perinatal Quality Collaborative (ARPQC), a joint collaborative between the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and other medical institutions across the state. For the first joint initiative, hospitals will take steps to reduce cesarean deliveries for low-risk pregnancies.

“State perinatal quality collaboratives (PQCs) are leading the way toward improving the quality of maternity care and maternal health outcomes,” said William Greenfield, M.D., professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology at UAMS and medical director of the ARPQC. “With the launch of the ARPQC’s first initiative, Arkansas is joining the national effort to address the maternal health crisis.”

https://news.uams.edu/2023/08/30/uams-led-arkansas-perinatal-quality-collaborative-launches-with-support-of-33-hospitals-takes-aim-at-reducing-c-sections/

UA Cossatot chosen as #1 Best Community College in Arkansas

Best Accredited Community Colleges in Arkansas

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