Governor’s working group issues suggestions to improve Arkansas’ foster care system

KUAR | By Tess Vrbin / Arkansas Advocate

A working group of more than 130 Arkansans with experience in child welfare and foster care released a list of 11 recommendations on Monday to improve the state’s foster system, which has long suffered from staffing and home shortages.

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders created the working group by executive order in February. The group included the secretaries of education and public safety, mental health professionals and Every Child Arkansas, a statewide network of organizations that recruit and support foster families.

The group split into three subcommittees that each came up with recommendations, according to Monday’s report:

  • Prevention and mental health services

  • Foster care safety and permanency

  • Foster home recruitment and retention

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-09-19/governors-working-group-issues-suggestions-to-improve-arkansas-foster-care-system

KATV-TV

The office of the Arkansas Department of Human Service in Little Rock.

Muenich: Agriculture offers engineers opportunities to improve sustainability

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

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Agriculture is a good field for an engineer looking to have an impact on environmental sustainability, says Becca Muenich, associate professor of engineering for the University of Arkansas System.

AG ENGINEERING — Becca Muenich joined the biological and agricultural engineering department as an associate professor in August 2023. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Paden Johnson)

Muenich is a northwest Arkansas native, so she knew a little about agriculture already. But following her bachelor’s in biological engineering from the University of Arkansas in 2009, she completed her master’s and doctorate in agricultural and biological engineering at Purdue University.

“I never thought I’d learn so much about ag,” Muenich said. “I tell my students all the time, if you want to make an impact, ag is a place to work on because it is the biggest water user and has the biggest land footprint. And I see all of that as an opportunity as an engineer to make this system we all rely on more sustainable.”

Muenich returns to Arkansas from Arizona State University, where she was an assistant professor in the School for Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment. She has more than 15 years of experience researching how environmental factors control water supplies and water quality in agricultural, urban and integrated systems.

In August, Muenich joined the biological and agricultural engineering department in the University of Arkansas College of Engineering and the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

“Dr. Muenich’s hire by the University of Arkansas is a rare opportunity, a coup for us, to have someone who not only has an amazing reputation in her field but also cares deeply about being in the area,” said Terry Howell, head of the biological and agricultural engineering department. “Our students will be enriched by the depth of experiences she brings to the classroom and her research. She will be able to relate to our students in a unique way as an alumna of the department, and the variety of experiences outside of Arkansas will allow her to bring fresh ideas to our department as well. I could not be happier to have her join us.”

Muenich is currently teaching the sustainable watershed engineering course for the biological and agricultural engineering department. She is also continuing research on projects carried over from Arizona State that are funded by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Engineering with Nature program, and the National Science Foundation’s Science and Technologies for Phosphorus Sustainability program.

Most of her work is stakeholder driven with specific goals to enhance the long-term sustainability of agricultural and urban systems. For example, a research project she worked on looking at water quality in 16 states showed how clustering of smaller animal feeding operations was an important predictor for water quality outcomes at a watershed scale. Their paper, titled “The spatial organization of CAFOs and its relationship to water quality in the United States,” showed that a cluster of smaller, unregulated operations has as much of an impact on the environment as the larger, regulated operations.

“This might make intuitive sense, that if you have a lot in a small amount of space, you end up overapplying manure in that space, but that’s not really how the operations are regulated or incentivized to pay for conservation,” Muenich said.

Conservation programs, she noted, are conducted voluntarily, and regulation is on an individual basis with a focus on animal numbers at a single site rather than an area within a watershed. Muenich’s research helped provide insight on “the interconnectedness within the watersheds,” she said, “which is going to be really important for the future of how we manage water quality.”

In the future, Muenich aims to collaborate on research with several University of Arkansas and Division of Agriculture faculty members and teach a graduate-level course on water quality modeling. She also intends to develop a data science class for students of any discipline interested in environmental data.

Muenich completed a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Michigan Graham Sustainability Institute prior to her post at Arizona State. She earned her doctorate in agricultural and biological engineering from Purdue University in 2015. Muenich also served as a research scientist with the Sustainable Phosphorus Alliance and is an award-winning member of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers. She was inducted into the Arkansas Academy of Agricultural and Biological Engineers in 2020 and given an Early Career Alumni Award from the University of Arkansas in 2022 after receiving the Arizona State University Faculty Women’s Association’s Outstanding Faculty Mentor Award in 2021.

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.

Trustees praise agreement between UA-Fayetteville, Division of Agriculture

By Mary Hightower
U of A System Division of Agriculture

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Members of the Board of Trustees on Friday praised an agreement between the University of Arkansas and the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture as a milestone.

Since the Board of Trustees created the Division of Agriculture in 1959, there have been long-standing differences between the Fayetteville campus and the division. For example, faculty with appointments in both institutions had to navigate different processes for tenure, as well as finances and facilities.

Charles Robinson (left), chancellor of the University of Arkansas, Jean-François Meullenet, director of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station and interim dean of the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences, and Deacue Fields, VP of Agriculture for the University of Arkansas System, present during the University of Arkansas Board of Trustees meeting on Sept. 15, 2023, in Fayetteville. (U of A System Division of Ag photo)

The agreement maps out processes and defines roles and responsibilities related to finance and human resources operations, services, benefits, facilities and space allocation, and management of joint faculty and staff appointments.

Land grant history

The University of Arkansas was established at Fayetteville as a land grant university, initially hosting all three land grant missions: agricultural teaching, research and extension, or outreach. In 1959, the Division of Agriculture held the research and extension functions through the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station and the Cooperative Extension Service. The teaching part was left with UAF, in what is now the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences.

At their meeting on Friday at the Fayetteville campus, the trustees heard from Deacue Fields head of the Division of Agriculture; Charles Robinson, chancellor of the University of Arkansas; and Jean-François Meullenet, interim dean of the Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences for UAF and head of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station for the division.

‘Do what they say can’t be done’

When it came to the effort to reach an agreement Fields offered a line from the “Smokey and the Bandit” theme song, saying they were going to “do what can’t be done.”

“We wanted to make sure this was shaping the trajectory of this relationship in perpetuity,” Fields said after the meeting. “We want this to follow behind us and set the tone for the new relationship we expect to happen from now on.”

Tearing down the wall

“We’ve torn down this wall,” Robinson said. “Now we’re building a culture together because we believe in the same things, and chief of them is helping Arkansas be the best state it could be.”

Meullenet, as interim leader at the Bumpers College and head of the Agricultural Experiment Station, is among those with a foot in each institution and expressed that faculty were fully invested in both.

“I think that with this agreement, we are showing that we work seamlessly toward maximizing our impact on the state and on our mission,” Meullenet said. “I want to convey — from a faculty standing — the faculty in Bumpers College, whether they are majority division or the University of Arkansas, are really fully integrated on this campus. They are as much a part of this campus as any other faculty.”

‘A major milestone’

Trustee Jeremy Wilson, who is a member of the Board of Trustees’ agricultural subcommittee, offered his congratulations.

“Thank you for all the hard work it took to accomplish this,” he said. “It’s a major milestone and I knew this was going to be a great presentation as soon as you said, ‘Smokey and the Bandit.”

Trustee Morril Harrian also gave his encouragement. He noted over the years the contentious relationship between the two institutions. 

This is “absolutely a great day,” he said. “I commend each of you for working this agreement out and look forward to actually hearing one praise the other.”

 Robinson and Fields exchanged Razorback and Division of Agriculture logo pins to mark the occasion.

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.

Sept. 29 Center for Food Animal Wellbeing symposium offers virtual and in-person attendance

By Jessica Wesson
U of A System Division of Agriculture

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The Center for Food Animal Wellbeing will host its ninth annual symposium on Sept. 29 with a focus on sustainability and animal-human interactions.

2023 SYMPOSIUM — Shawna Weimer, director of the Center for Food Animal Wellbeing, will host the centers 2023 symposium both virtually and in-person on Sept. 29. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo)

Shawna Weimer, director of the Center for Food Animal Wellbeing, said the event aims to target a variety of professionals in animal welfare. Participants can choose ­to attend online or in-person at the Don Tyson Center for Agricultural Sciences, 1371 W. Altheimer Drive, in Fayetteville.

“This year, we are focusing on multidisciplinary approaches to sustaining positive relationships with agricultural animals in our lives,” Weimer said. “From both industry and academia, speakers will delve deeper into their perspectives and dedicated efforts in the area of animal welfare research innovations and assurance, with a specific focus on advancements in the United States.”

The center’s mission is to disseminate science-based information and drive innovation towards practices and technologies that cultivate animal welfare for ethical and sustainable food systems. The Center for Food Animal Wellbeing is a unit of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

The center’s team works closely with the Division of Agriculture’s Center of Excellence for Poultry Science and department of poultry science, the department of animal science and the National Agricultural Law Center.

Five speakers will address topics on beef cattle, equine and poultry welfare. The speakers for the event and their presentations include:

  • Courtney Daigle, associate professor at Texas A&M University: “You’re not operating in a vacuum: Assessing how the structure of the beef industry impacts cattle welfare.”

  • Nichole Anderson, associate professor of animal behavior and welfare at Texas Tech University: “Gotta’ walk before you can trot: What we currently know about equine welfare.”

  • Marisa Erasmus, associate professor at Purdue University: “‘Gaitway’ to sustainability: How the environment shapes the walking ability and welfare of meat poultry”

  • Karen Christensen, senior director of animal welfare for Tyson Foods: “Light gradient promotes freedom of choice.”

  • Elizabeth Rumley, senior staff attorney for the National Agricultural Law Center: “Farming by referendum? Ballot initiatives in the United States.”

“We will wrap up the symposium by bringing speakers from a diverse spectrum of expertise to engage in a roundtable discussion to exchange ideas with the audience,” Weimer said.

Event organizers encourage anyone with an interest in animal welfare to attend the free event, either in person or online.

To register for this event, visit https://bit.ly/cfawsymposium.

Event organizers are still seeking sponsors for this event. Sponsor logos will be displayed at the event to recognize their donations. To sponsor this event, visit https://bit.ly/cfaw-symposium-2023-sponsorship.

Learn more about the Center for Food Animal Wellbeing.

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.

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/

Senate President Bart Hester: More tax cuts, more FOIA changes to come

by Roby Brock (roby@talkbusiness.net)

Senate President Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs, said this week’s special session on tax cuts and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) won’t be the last time the state legislature takes up the two issues.

Appearing on this week’s edition of Talk Business & Politics and Capitol View, Hester said additional tax cuts will likely be contemplated in the April fiscal session.

Arkansas lawmakers dropped the state’s top personal income tax rate from 4.7% to 4.4% and the state’s top corporate income tax rate from 5.1% to 4.8%. Legislators also provided a $150 one-time tax credit ($300 per family) to those making roughly $90,000 or less.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/senate-president-bart-hester-more-tax-cuts-more-foia-changes-to-come/

Sen. Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs.

Weekly Update from State Representative DeAnn Vaught

Our work for the Extraordinary Session is now complete and the legislation passed has been signed into law. 

This morning, the House passed HB1007 and SB8. These are identical bills reducing the top personal income tax rate from 4.7% to 4.4%. The bills also reduce the corporate income tax rate from 5.1% to 4.8%. In addition, the bills provide an income tax credit of $150 to taxpayers making less than $90,000 annually. The credit will be retroactive to January 1, 2023. 

The House also passed HB1012 and SB10. These are identical bills amending the Freedom of Information Act of 1967 by exempting records that reflect the planning or provision of security provided to the Governor, constitutional officers, the General Assembly, Justices of the Supreme Court, or Judges of the Court of Appeals. The bills also direct the Arkansas State Police to provide the legislature with a quarterly report on the expenses incurred by the Executive Protection Detail.  

The House passed HB1008 and SB5. These are identical bills amending the Philanthropic Investment in Arkansas Kids Program Act and the Arkansas Children’s Educational Freedom Account Program to provide access to additional funding for children with disabilities. 

In addition, the House passed SB3. This bill states that a state agency or a state or local official shall not mandate an individual to receive a vaccine or immunization for COVID-19 or any subvariants of COVID-19. 

The House also passed SB1. This bill would create the Arkansas Reserve Fund Set-Aside in the Restricted Reserve Fund and direct the transfer of $710.6 million in surplus funds to the newly created reserve fund.  

This afternoon, Governor Sanders signed all the bills passed during this session into law.

You can watch all the committee meetings and House floor proceedings from the session at arkansashouse.org.

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.

UAMS Jones Eye Institute Ophthalmology Residency Program Rises to 9th Nationally in Research Output

By Benjamin Waldrum

Sept. 13, 2023 | The Doximity online networking service recently ranked the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute’s ophthalmology residency program ninth nationally among 125 programs in research output. The institute rose four places from its ranking of 13th last year.

The institute has 16 residency slots and ranked ahead of several larger ophthalmology programs, which can have up to double the number of residents. This year’s top 10 programs, listed with the number of residency slots, are:

  1. Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Harvard Medical School (36)

  2. Johns Hopkins University (21)

  3. University of Michigan Health System (21)

  4. University of Pennsylvania Health System, Scheie Eye Institute (15)

  5. University of California San Francisco (15)

  6. UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA Medical Center (24)

  7. University of Miami, Jackson Health System, Bascom Palmer Eye Institute (21)

  8. University of Southern California, Los Angeles General Medical Center (28)

  9. UAMS Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute (16)

  10. Duke University Hospital (24)

https://news.uams.edu/2023/09/13/uams-jones-eye-institute-ophthalmology-residency-program-rises-to-9th-nationally-in-research-output/

Image by Evan Lewis

Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance hosts food access summit

KUAR | By Maggie Ryan

The Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance held a summit Wednesday to present the findings and recommendations from a study on food access.

The report was released by the Winthrop Rockefeller Institute and the Arkansas Governor's Food Desert Working Group, which was named in 2022 under former Gov. Asa Hutchinson. According to the report, 15% of Arkansans struggle with food insecurity, compared with the nationwide average of 10%.

Jimmy Wright is the president of Wright Food solutions, a consulting agency that helps communities with a high food need respond to issues of food insecurity. Wright gave the keynote address at the summit and said those addressing food insecurity must stay rooted in the communities they want to serve.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-09-14/arkansas-hunger-relief-alliance-hosts-food-access-summit

Dan Charles/NPR

Salad greens grown in a BrightFarms greenhouse on sale at a McCaffrey's grocery store.

Gov. Sanders signs FOIA bill, says she is not finished with ‘government efficiency’

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

A vastly different bill amending the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) than what she initially wanted has been signed by Gov. Sarah Sanders. The Arkansas House and Senate approved this week FOIA changes that address only a governor’s travel records.

The Arkansas General Assembly was called into Special Session on Monday (Sept. 11) to consider bills related to tax rate changes and what was then a bill that included broad changes to the state’s FOIA.

Gov. Sanders initially asked for a bill that would change FOIA provisions by including the federal exemption that would significantly limit the information available about the deliberations of officials at state agencies, recommendations about policy, and other governance matters. She said at the time the effort was about making the government more efficient.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/gov-sanders-signs-foia-bill-says-she-is-not-finished-with-government-efficiency/

Gov. Sarah Sanders speaks about the Special Session Thursday before signing approved legislation into law. To the left is Sen. Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs and Senate president, and on the right is Rep. Matthew Shepherd, R-El Dorado and House Speaker.

UA announces $10M donation to College of Engineering

by Paul Gatling (pgatling@nwabj.com)

University of Arkansas alumnus Rick Moore has gifted $10 million to the university’s College of Engineering.

Moore was president of the Baton Rouge, La. firm Ford, Bacon & Davis, an affiliate of S&B Engineers and Constructors, for 29 years. He retired in 2020. Moore died this past summer.

According to a UA news release, Moore’s $10 million planned gift will endow funds for scholarships, a professorship, faculty recruitment and provide additional funds to benefit the Ralph E. Martin Department of Chemical Engineering.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/ua-announces-10m-donation-to-college-of-engineering/

Rick Moore

UA Little Rock part of $2.2 million grant for AI-driven cybersecurity project

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

A UA Little Rock professor and students are part of a university startup that has received a $2.2 million grant to develop an advanced artificial-intelligence automation and rapid-recovery hardware to protect industrial control systems from cybersecurity attacks.

Backed by the BIRD Foundation, Bastazo, a startup with strong ties to UA Little Rock and the University of Arkansas, will partner with Israeli-based Salvador Technologies on the project, which is known as Extracted Configuration Security (XCS). The initiative will address escalating concerns posed by sophisticated external threats, including ransomware.

“Our collaboration with Salvador Technologies represents a union of revolutionary cybersecurity concepts,” said Philip Huff, assistant professor of cybersecurity at UA Little Rock and co-founder of Bastazo. “Leveraging large language models to automate decisions in cybersecurity operations is not just a leap for us, but a giant step for the entire Operational Technology (OT) security sector.”

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/ua-little-rock-part-of-2-2-million-grant-for-ai-driven-cybersecurity-project/

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/

Consensus elusive on changes to Arkansas’ FOIA; lengthy Senate hearing ends without a vote (Updated)

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

The struggle continues in the Arkansas Senate to come up with proposed Freedom of Information Act changes that will placate Gov. Sarah Sanders on one side and FOIA advocates on the other.

That struggle included a more than five-hour Senate committee hearing Tuesday (Sept. 12) on a new bill that had minor changes compared with the original proposal that was pulled Monday after public opposition caused some legislators to withdraw support.

Gov. Sarah Sanders wanted a bill that would change FOIA provisions by including the federal exemption that would significantly limit the information available about the deliberations of officials at state agencies, recommendations about policy, and other governance matters. The original bill would also exempt from FOIA any records about “planning or provision of security services provided to the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, the Attorney General, the Secretary of State, the Auditor of State, the Treasurer of State, the Commissioner of State Lands, members of the General Assembly, Justices of the Supreme Court, or Judges of the Court of Appeals.”

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/consensus-elusive-on-changes-to-arkansas-foia-lengthy-senate-hearing-ends-without-a-vote-updated/

Sen. Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs and Senate president, presents SB 9 to the State Agencies and Governmental Affairs Committee.

AOG wins $18 million lawsuit against BP

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

Arkansas Oklahoma Gas (AOG), a subsidiary of Summit Utilities, Inc., won $18 million in a civil lawsuit against BP Energy Company (BP) that the company says will reduce natural gas costs for its customers.

AOG filed a lawsuit against BP for breach of contract after it had failed to deliver natural gas supply in February 2021 during Winter Storm Uri, which resulted in increased gas costs for customers. The Federal District Court ruled that BP must pay AOG $18 million in damages, plus interest and certain litigation costs.

“This is a victory for all our AOG customers and will reduce the amount of Winter Storm Uri costs collected from customers,” said Hallie Gilman, executive vice president & chief legal officer for Summit Utilities. “I am proud of the hard work our team put forward taking on this challenge. We deeply care for our customers’ best interests and are pleased with this win.”

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/aog-wins-18-million-lawsuit-against-bp/

Lawmakers offer narrower change to Arkansas FOIA after bipartisan pushback

KUAR | By Tess Vrbin / Arkansas Advocate

After two days of bipartisan backlash against proposed changes to Arkansas’ Freedom of Information Act, lawmakers late Tuesday filed narrower legislation to exempt information related to security services provided to the governor and other state officials. It’s the third attempt in as many business days to alter the state’s 1967 public records law.

The first version of the legislation, filed Friday upon Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ call for a special legislative session this week, did not have enough support to advance in the House or Senate on Monday.

A second bill filed Monday night met opposition from nearly two dozen people Tuesday in a five-hour hearing before the Senate Committee on State Agencies and Governmental Affairs, which did not vote on the bill.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2023-09-13/lawmakers-offer-narrower-change-to-arkansas-foia-after-bipartisan-pushback

John Sykes/Arkansas Advocate

Jimmie Cavin, right, is escorted from the Senate State Agencies & Governmental Affairs Committee meeting by a State Capitol Police officer after being told to leave by committee chairman Sen. Blake Johnson, R-Corning. Cavin had been expressing his opposition to SB9, which would make changes to the state’s Freedom of Information Act when he and Johnson exchanged heated words.

Arkansas Medicaid rolls drop 72,000 in August as redetermination enters final month

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

Arkansas’ Medicaid rolls fell by more than 72,000 in August, according to new figures released by the state Department of Human Services on Friday (Sept. 8).

Arkansas is unwinding, or redetermining, Medicaid eligibility for patients as part of the ending of the federal COVID-19 pandemic. There was a continuous enrollment requirement during the crisis that prevented DHS from removing most ineligible individuals from Medicaid. State law requires the unwinding process be completed in six months.

In its fifth month of redetermination, DHS officials said 72,519 Arkansans had their Medicaid cases closed – a number that includes those added to the rolls during the public health emergency and regular renewals. In August, DHS said more than 50,000 cases were renewed after eligibility was confirmed.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/09/arkansas-medicaid-rolls-drop-72000-in-august-as-redetermination-enters-final-month/

Justice focuses on the needs of beef cattle producers

By Mary Hightower
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK — About a year after Maggie Justice discovered a passion for animal science research as a sophomore at Clemson University, she found what would become her credo: “What does this mean for our producers?”

Justice joined the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture as an assistant professor and beef cattle specialist for the Cooperative Extension Service in May.

Maggie Justice, extension beef cattle specialist for the U of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo)

In a way, Justice was born into her career.

“I grew up on a commercial cow-calf operation in South Carolina,” she said. Justice said she and her three sisters “learned to work on the farm and were part of the cattle operation. Like most of our cattle farmers, especially in the Southeast, it was secondary income.”

Justice’s father was a retired lawyer and her mother was a school teacher but “the farm was definitely a family affair on the weekends,” she said.

Growing up, “I was very active in 4-H and came to love extension because of my time in 4-H,” Justice said.

Justice followed in all of the family’s footsteps, heading to Clemson University. She knew she wanted to study animal science but didn’t want to go to vet school.

“I was kind of steered toward research as an undergrad and started that as a sophomore, and fell in love with it,” she said. “Luckily, I had a great mentor that I stayed on with for my master’s. She noticed that I like to talk to people, and kind of noticed I had a passion, in that I always asked her questions about ‘what did her research mean for our producers?’”

That mentor is Susan Duckett, professor and Ernest L. Corley Jr. Trustees endowed chair of the Animal and Veterinary Sciences department at Clemson.

About a year into the research, Justice told Duckett that she “wanted to be an extension specialist so I could help producers like the ones I grew up with.”

Going her own way

Justice gives a lot of credit to her dad, who raised four girls.

“My dad is the ultimate girl dad. He instilled in all four of us that we could do anything we set our minds to,” she said.

That “anything” included Justice’s passion for shooting sports, especially shotgun. She was a competitive shooter in 4-H and also for her high school. It’s a sport she shares with her grandfather.

Justice also describes herself as a “horse girl.”

“As far as horse stuff goes, I was the black sheep of the family,” she said.

“My sisters rodeoed and actually had a younger sister who went to school on a rodeo scholarship. But I showed horses,” Justice said. “I showed Western pleasure and hunter under saddle. Because of that, I was super competitive in the 4-H education contests; horse bowl, hippology, was a horse ambassador for the state and then eventually was a state officer because of my involvement in the horse project.”

Adapting to Arkansas

She has enjoyed her newly adopted state.

“I love Arkansas. Everyone has been so welcoming, so open to my program, and excited for me which has made my job easy and enjoyable,” Justice said. “I’m just excited to help the agents build their programs in their counties and ultimately help the producers in this state.”

Mike Looper, head of animal science for the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences and the Division of Agriclture, said Justice earned the job amid an “extremely strong applicant pool.”

“When Maggie interviewed for the job, we knew she was the perfect fit for the department as well as for our beef producers in Arkansas,” he said. “You might say she came in on day one and embraced extension and the idea of helping farmers and ranchers be more efficient, and ultimately more profitable.”    

Justice received her master’s degree at Clemson and her Ph.D. at Auburn University.

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.

Extension to offer two sessions on artificial insemination in cattle

By Ryan McGeeney
U of A System Division of Agriculture 

HOPE, Ark. — Charles Looney, professor of cattle improvement for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, and his staff will conduct a pair of two-day workshops in cattle artificial insemination. The workshops are scheduled for Oct. 12-13 and Nov. 9-10.

FALL WORKSHOPS — The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture will host workshops in cattle artificial insemination on Oct. 12-13 and Nov. 9-10, 2023. (Division of Agriculture graphic.)

Each workshop will cover basic reproductive anatomy and physiology, estrous synchronization and semen handling, as well as pregnancy determination methods and reproductive health. Participants will also receive training in artificial insemination on live cattle.

“Participants will have three sessions over the two-day course to practice on live cattle to learn the procedure entirely,” Looney said. “This workshop is one of the best opportunities to learn more about beef cattle reproduction.”

The courses will both be held at the Southwest Research and Extension Center, located at 362 Hwy. 174 N., Hope, Arkansas. The registration fee for each workshop is $450, which includes lunch. Payments must be made prior to the workshops. Registration fees are non-refundable and will not be accepted on-site. Fees are all due by Oct. 9 for the October session and by Nov. 6 for the November session. 

To register, visit https://uada.formstack.com/forms/beef_cattle_ai.

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 on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk.