Rice malt shows potential to play a bigger role in beer

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

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Rice is showing potential to play a more prominent role in beer brewing, and it helps that Arkansas produces a lot of it.

MALTED RICE — Scott Lafontaine, left, and Bernardo P. Guimaraes raise a glass of malted rice beer following a year-long study that investigated the suitability of rice for malting and brewing. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Paden Johnson)

Arkansas grows about half of the rice in the United States, mostly long-grain. Meanwhile, climate change and international conflicts are leading to a shortage of the raw materials traditionally used for brewing beer, especially barley.

A new study titled “Investigating the Malting Suitability and Brewing Quality of Different Rice Cultivars,” published in February by the Beverages journal, suggests the potential for malted rice to yield robust fermentations in gluten-free, all-malt beer and also in styles that use high adjunct inclusions. An adjunct is an additional source of sugar for beer fermentation.

Rice and corn have been used as an adjunct grain by American brewers since the 1860s. But the rice has been milled white rice, and not malted. Since the malting qualities of U.S. rice cultivars had not yet been evaluated for brewing qualities, one goal of the study was to identify rice cultivars with high malting potential.

University of Arkansas food science graduate student Bernardo P. Guimaraes was the lead author of the malted rice study, which provides the first publicly available data on 19 rice varieties important to the U.S. rice industry that were malted and analyzed for brewing qualities. Flavor chemist and assistant professor in the food science department Scott Lafontaine served as Guimaraes’ advisor on the research.

“Does rice have what it takes? Scientifically, yes, it is possible,” Lafontaine said.

They have found rice malts with enough enzymatic capacity to fully convert their starch source into fermentable sugar, also known as self-saccharifying malts, that produce a sugary liquid called “wort” in brewing. Lafontaine says the wort from rice malt “seems to yield healthy fermentations with a standard yeast, without adding enzymes or nitrogen supplementation.”

Lafontaine and Guimaraes are both part of the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas and the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station. The experiment station is the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

No extra vessel with rice malt?

Malting is the process of germinating a grain through hydration and then drying and heating it to halt germination. The process forms enzymes required to turn the starch into sugar when soaked in hot water for the phase of brewing called “mashing.” Where rice is concerned, brewers have typically used milled white rice, and not rice malt. Using milled white rice calls for an additional brewing vessel because it needs to be boiled to gelatinize the starch so it can be converted into that sugary liquid called wort.

Malted rice, on the other hand, may not require a second vessel. Guimaraes and Lafontaine showed the malted rice to be self-saccharifying with the appropriate mashing conditions. In other words, with the right temperature and time, the starch could be broken down to fermentable sugars that yeast can assimilate and turn into alcohol.

As wheat flour is to bread, malted barley is to beer, with recipes calling for varying levels of a barley as a base malt along with other grains like wheat, rye and oats for different styles of beer. Additional ingredients like roasted barley, and roasted malted barley, develop different flavors and aromas.

In the study, long-grain rice when malted showed the most promise as a competitor to malted barley for sugar content and other brewing qualities. The study looked at short, medium and long-grain varieties of “paddy rice,” or rice with the chaff removed but not the husk. Interestingly, wild varieties of rice that had purple-pigmented brans produced naturally colored gluten-free beers with hues similar to wine.

New findings

Previous public studies on rice malt were performed on Italian and Indian varieties, and the study of U.S. rice malts offered two interesting discoveries, Lafontaine said. For one, the rice varieties had different gelatinization temperatures and mashing parameters seemed to have an impact on the onset of gelatinization.

“While we are not sure exactly what is occurring yet, this is likely due to the unique enzymatic profile of the rice malts and shows that brewers just have to alter their mashing conditions to effectively leverage this material in the brewery,” Lafontaine said of the lower gelatinization temperatures.

The other unexpected finding was that the malted rice showed higher protein levels than previously reported, which offers potential applications as an alternative protein source in foods, Lafontaine said. The new study showed the protein content ranged from 7 to 10.5 percent, and some rice cultivars had protein content comparable to malted barley.

Depending on the variety of rice grown, the study indicates the potential for a value-added product for farmers whose rice turns up with a high level of chalkiness during milling. Chalky rice is opaque and tends to break when being processed, making it less valuable as a food product. However, chalkiness would not have as much of a bearing on quality if sent to a maltster and turned into rice malt. High nighttime temperatures during a rice kernel’s development have been shown to contribute to chalkiness. As the climate warms, this will be a continual issue for farmers and scientists to contend with, Lafontaine noted.

Economics and flavor

Although the chemical analysis of the malted rice is promising, Lafontaine is working with the agricultural economics and agribusiness department to conduct a feasibility study considering many economic factors that compare malted rice and malted barley.

One of the most pressing economic factors is the cost of barley, which has increased in the past four years. The increase has made long-grain rice “cost equivalent” to barley, Lafontaine said. Barley is grown in areas with cooler climates, while rice is grown in warmer climates. So, climate change and global warming are other factors for long-term economic impacts of barley and rice as beer ingredients, he added.

“By offering a more locally sourced grain for Southern and U.S. brewers, despite paddy rice being proportionally more carbon dioxide intensive to grow than malted barley, the lack of international shipping may potentially make up the difference in carbon dioxide,” the study notes. “Additionally, rice is a gluten-free source of starch for brewers and beverage/food producers.”

Lafontaine intends to conduct a sensory panel with the various beers produced from rice malt. He and Guimaraes have noticed, for example, that some aromatic varieties of rice produced elevated levels of diacetyl, which has a buttery popcorn aroma often considered an off flavor in beer.

“As a sneak peak of the next part of this study, I can say that the rice varieties had many different and interesting aromas and flavors,” Guimaraes said. “I firmly believe they have great potential either as a standalone raw material or in conjunction with barley malt.”

The rice varieties were malted in small quantities during the study using techniques comparable to industry standards. With each small test batch, the researchers measured protein content, enzyme levels and other characteristics important to brewing. Lafontaine’s lab is licensed and bonded as the U of A Beverage Development Facility with an electric, 15-gallon brewing system to provide hands-on experience to students in the University of Arkansas Certificate of Proficiency in Brewing Science program.

Collaborators on the study included rice breeders at the Division of Agriculture’s Rice Research and Extension Center, researchers with the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station’s Rice Processing Program, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center in Stuttgart, and Versuchs-und Lehranstalt für Brauerei in Berlin, Germany.

TEST BATCHES — Beers made with malted rice are seen at the U of A Beverage Development Facility. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by John Lovett)

The authors recognized the Arkansas Rice Research and Promotion Board for supporting the research.

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.

Group sues over Arkansas’ critical race theory ban

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

A group is suing to overturn a part of an Arkansas education law, claiming it violates the U.S. Constitution.

The Laux Law Group, a civil rights law firm in Little Rock, wants to repeal a part of the education law known as Arkansas LEARNS, passed by the legislature last year. Section 16 of the law bans so-called “indoctrination” and “critical race theory.”

The law says critical race theory “encourages students to discriminate against someone based on the individual's color, creed, race, ethnicity, sex, age, marital status, familial status.”

Group sues over Arkansas’ critical race theory ban

Josie Lenora/Little Rock Public Radio

Plaintiffs in the lawsuit against part of the Arkansas LEARNS Act gather at a press event Monday ahead of the lawsuit being filed.

Retailers win class-action settlement with Visa, Mastercard over swipe fees

by Kim Souza (ksouza@talkbusiness.net)

U.S. retailers and merchants reached a settlement over swipe fees with Visa and Mastercard that is expected to reduce swipe fees over the next five years by $29.79 billion.

Through the agreement, which merchants say is one of the largest in U.S. antitrust history, Visa and Mastercard will lower published credit-card interchange fees by four basis points in the U.S. for at least three years. The companies also won’t raise interchange fees for five years above the rates that were in place at the end of 2023.

“This settlement is the culmination of eight years of hard-fought litigation and detailed, painstaking negotiations. It provides comprehensive market-based solutions to too-high swipe fees while providing immediate fee relief to merchants as they make these new competitive tools work for them,” said Steve Shadowen, co-lead counsel for the retailers.

Retailers win class-action settlement with Visa, Mastercard over swipe fees

UAMS Awarded $11.48 Million Federal Grant to Establish Center for Molecular Interactions in Cancer

By Marty Trieschmann

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute received a five-year, $11.48 million federal grant to create the Center for Molecular Interactions in Cancer (CMIC).

The grant was awarded by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) program. COBRE grants are awarded to establish centers of research excellence around a specific scientific theme that will ultimately become self-sustaining.

The UAMS Center for Molecular Interactions in Cancer and its researchers will study the molecular features and properties of biomolecules that drive cancer using structural biology and high-resolution imaging with precise, quantitative analysis.

UAMS Awarded $11.48 Million Federal Grant to Establish Center for Molecular Interactions in Cancer

Boozman delivers key funds for Arkansas defense, health, education projects

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Senate approved a legislative package of six appropriations bills that includes funding for Arkansas defense, health and education priorities championed by U.S. Senator John Boozman (R-AR) including significant investment in the future pilot training mission in Fort Smith. The legislation was signed into law Saturday.   

“I’m proud to deliver investments to Arkansas that support growth and development as well as improve the quality of life for Natural State residents. These bills will enhance health services access and workforce capabilities to deliver quality care in addition to expanding our state’s national defense contributions. Passing appropriations bills is a basic responsibility of Congress. I’m pleased we are finally getting them across the finish line so we can deliver the certainty federal agencies and the Americans who rely on them need, and begin considering our budget priorities for the next fiscal year,” Boozman said. 

Boozman, a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee and Ranking Member of the Senate Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies (MilCon-VA), secured inclusion of the following Arkansas priorities in the final six Fiscal Year 2024 appropriations bills:

Health Care Resources and Education

  • Invests $5 million for a Women and Infants Center at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to coordinate programs across the state to reduce infant mortality.

  • Boosts dental health education in Arkansas with $15 million to support the Lyon College School of Oral Health and Dental Medicine in Little Rock.

  • Invests in future generations of nurses with $15 million to construct a new nursing school building at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff.

  • Provides $12 million for an Allied Health Building at the University of Arkansas Rich Mountain for instructional purposes, lab simulations and community health.

  • Allocates $10 million for a medical education building to accommodate allied health and nursing programs at Northwest Technical Institute.

  • Promotes student career development at Shorter College with a $2 million investment in a Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math (STEAM) Center.

  • Funds $8 million for facilities and equipment at UAMS to improve digestive disease care in the state, with a focus on cancer detection.

  • Enhances cancer screening capabilities in underserved areas by providing $4 million to purchase three mobile vans fitted with cancer screening equipment to access geographically difficult and underserved regions.

  • Strengthens the UAMS milk bank with $3 million.

  • Supplies $6 million to support the expansion of the Arkansas State University-Mountain Home healthcare education facility to develop the medical workforce.

  • Allots $5 million for the University of Arkansas – Little Rock MidSOUTH Arkansas Youth Drug Use Reduction Program.

  • Delivers robust funding for the National Institutes of Health with increased funding for the National Cancer Institute.

  • Funds the Maternal and Child Health Block Grant and the Healthy Start Initiative to reduce maternal and infant mortality rates.

  • Maintains vigorous funding for Community Health Centers to increase access to health care across Arkansas.

  • Increases funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) to support families in need.

  • Expands funding for the Children’s Hospital Graduate Medical Education Program to support training pediatric providers and bolster the pediatric care workforce.

  • Maintains funding for TRIO programs to assist first-generation, low-income students in attending college.

  • Increased funding for Career and Technical Education state grants to bolster the Arkansas workforce.

  • Invests in the Fulbright Program, the United States’ flagship educational exchange program created by former Arkansas Senator J. William Fulbright that facilitates global connections. 

  • Funds global health and nutrition programs to respond to and eradicate malaria, polio and other diseases and invests in efforts to prevent worldwide hunger.

  • Educates future generations about the men and women who serve in our nation’s uniform by supporting the Veterans History Project.  

National Security

  • Fully funds a 5.2 percent pay raise for servicemembers, the largest increase in decades.

  • $207.9 million for Ebbing Air National Guard Base in Fort Smith to continue building on last year’s investments in modernizing the base to be a premier pilot training center in the U.S. This is in addition to the $83 million allocated for construction in the MilCon-VA bill signed into law March 9.

  • $53.3 million to bolster production and capacity for the manufacturing of vital munitions for the Department of Defense (DoD) in Camden.

  • $9.5 million to support production and manufacturing of special chemical warfare protection outfits and special munitions at Pine Bluff Arsenal.  

  • $36 million for the University of Arkansas to partner with DoD on research efforts.

  • $10 million to develop the Army’s next-generation squad weapon system.

  • $47 million to support the workforce at Red River Army Depot.

  • $8 million to support training at Razorback Range. 

  • $51 million to fund multiple defense initiatives critical to enhance our national security within the state.

  • Invests $1 billion for the National Guard and Reserve Equipment modernization fund.

  • Supports Department of State efforts to strengthen its cybersecurity protocols and procedures to defend it from potential cyberattacks from foreign adversaries and other bad actors.  

  • Provides $2.75 million in DoD grant opportunities to support security and fire protection at the former Army and Navy Hospital in Hot Springs. 

Government Oversight and Community Investments 

  • Encourages the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) to provide more time for public input on rulemakings.

  • Ensures SEC rules incorporate robust economic analysis.

  • Requests the SEC Inspector General to audit the rulemaking process.

  • Requires the General Services Administration to save taxpayer money by adopting criteria to better manage extreme weather risks for public buildings.

  • Supports regulation and oversight of the contact lens marketplace.

  • Provides $8 million for North Little Rock to improve stormwater drainage capabilities and prevent flooding.

  • Delivers $4.7 million to Heber Springs for stormwater improvements to prevent damage from flash flooding.

  • Delivers adequate funding for economic growth and rural community development.

UAMS’ Cindy Stowe, Pharm.D., elected president of National Accrediting Body for Pharmacy Programs

By Benjamin Waldrum

Cindy Stowe, Pharm.D., dean of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Pharmacy, was recently elected president of the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE) Board of Directors.

Stowe was appointed to the ACPE board by the American Association of College of Pharmacy. Her one-year term as president began in January and runs through January 2025.

“It is a privilege to serve as the president of the ACPE Board of Directors,” Stowe said. “I am deeply honored to serve alongside esteemed colleagues in advancing the standards and quality of pharmacy education. I am humbled by the opportunity to contribute to the shaping of our profession’s future through the accreditation process.”

UAMS’ Cindy Stowe, Pharm.D., Elected President of National Accrediting Body for Pharmacy Programs

Manojna Konda, M.D., and Vivek Yadala, M.D., Join UAMS Baptist Health Cancer Network

By Marty Trieschmann

Oncologists Manojna Konda, M.D., and Vivek Yadala, M.D., have joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to support the expansion of UAMS cancer services to Baptist Health locations.

Konda is a medical oncologist treating patients at the UAMS Baptist Health Cancer Center at Baptist Health Medical Center in Little Rock. She is a graduate of the UAMS College of Medicine where she completed a residency in internal medicine and a fellowship in hematology-oncology. Konda received her medical degree at Gandhi Medical College in Telangana, India. She is board-certified in internal medicine, hematology and medical oncology.

UAMS provides enhanced medical oncology and infusion services for cancer patients at the UAMS Baptist Health Cancer Center in Little Rock, including access to novel clinical trials and proton therapy.

Manojna Konda, M.D., and Vivek Yadala, M.D., Join UAMS Baptist Health Cancer Network

Image by Bryan Clifton

Keep Arkansas Beautiful launches 2024 Great American Cleanup

KUAR | By Nathan Treece, Seth Hooker

Keep Arkansas Beautiful is looking to eclipse its record-breaking 2023 year by collecting even more litter during the 2024 Great American Cleanup.

In 2023, volunteers from each of Arkansas’ 75 counties collected over 630 tons of litter from across the state. Robyn Taylor, Volunteer Program Manager at Keep Arkansas Beautiful, says she is working to keep that energy going forward, but that litter prevention is key to keeping the state clean.

“Our goal is to get it clean and keep it clean,” Taylor said. “Hopefully, each year our volunteers will go up, but the amount of litter they pick up will go down.”

Keep Arkansas Beautiful launches 2024 Great American Cleanup

Nathan Treece/Little Rock Public Radio

Keep Arkansas Beautiful is seeking volunteers for the annual Great American Cleanup, running through the end of May.

Texas, California residents top out-of-staters moving to Arkansas in ’23, DMV data shows

KUAR | By Hunter Field / Arkansas Advocate

From the Arkansas Advocate:

More new Arkansans moved to the Natural State last year from Texas and California than any other states, according to state driver’s license data.

The Division of Motor Vehicles issued 44,271 license transfers in 2023, offering one of the first looks at inbound migration.

The top seven states for in-bound license transfers last year were:

  • Texas: 7,993

  • California: 4,293

  • Missouri: 3,329

  • Oklahoma: 2,652

  • Florida: 2,609

  • Tennessee: 1,852

  • Louisiana: 1,830

Texas, California residents top out-of-staters moving to Arkansas in ’23, DMV data shows

Nicole Xu For NPR

Thousands moved to Arkansas from neighboring states, California and Florida according to new data from the state Department of Finance and Administration.

The Supply Side: Hybrid shopping experience ‘is not going to go away’

by Kim Souza (ksouza@talkbusiness.net)

Five years ago, omnichannel — multiple methods to reach consumers — was a retailer’s choice. Still, following a pandemic that changed the landscape for many economic sectors, the hybrid shopping model has become table stakes.

Rick West, CEO of Field Agent, a research and retail data collection firm in Fayetteville, said omnichannel retail is here to stay, and retailers have to make room for omnichannel and the hybrid shopping experience because customers expect it.

“Specifically, from the retailer perspective, the omnichannel experience will shift again in 2024,” West said.

He said shoppers want every option and to be served efficiently whether shopping online, in physical stores or some combination of both. He said that in 2022 and 2023, many top retailers moved their staff from front checkout lanes to accommodate online pickup and delivery. West said retailers saw that as temporary, and many still needed to change their backrooms.

The Supply Side: Hybrid shopping experience ‘is not going to go away’

Arkansas Tourism Ticker: 2% tourism tax revenue sets a new record in 2023

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

Arkansas’ 2% tourism tax revenue between January and December was $25.446 million, up 5.8% compared with the $24.049 million in 2022. Revenue in each month of 2023 set a new record, with those gains compared to record numbers in 2022.

The 2% revenue was boosted in part by 13.7% and 8% year-over-year gains, respectively, in Benton and Pulaski counties.

A record for monthly 2% collections was set in June 2023 with $2.71 million. The state’s 2% tourism tax revenue fell almost 23% in 2020, and fell to levels not seen since 2014. Also, the 2023 2% revenue is up 50% compared with the $12.716 million in 2013.

Arkansas Tourism Ticker: 2% tourism tax revenue sets a new record in 2023

The perennial puzzle: Deciding whether to fertilize your pasture in the spring

By the U of A System Division of Agriculture

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — For many producers in Arkansas, fertilization in the spring isn’t so much a tradition as it is a necessity, along with crop rotation and soil testing. For pasture managers, however, the decision of whether to fertilize a grazing area depends on several factors that can change from year to year.

SPRING MEANS 'NPK' — The decision whether to fertilize a given pasture each spring should be primarily based on soil testing results. (Division of Agriculture photo.)

Dirk Philipp, associate professor of forage agronomy for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said that it all comes down to what your soil really needs.

“Fertilizer is an expensive input to livestock agriculture,” Philipp said. “The basis for the decision when and how much to apply is a regular soil sampling plan.”

At a minimum, Philipp said, soil samples should be taken every two years.

“Not only will this help producers fertilize pastures in a more targeted fashion, it also serves to record how much soil fertility changes over time,” he said.

The Cooperative Extension Service provides cost-free soil analysis. Arkansans can find their nearest extension office in extension’s online directory.

Once growers receive their results, Philipp said, they should carefully check the recommendations, particularly the pH balance of the soil as well as the potassium, phosphorous and nitrogen levels.

“It’s important to know the acidity of your soils,” Philipp said. “It’s no problem if it’s about 6.0 — many pastures are — but avoid letting it drop too low. Bringing it back up will take time and easily require a couple of tons of lime per acre.”

Likewise, pastures that have historically been fertilized with chicken litter won’t normally be phosphorous-deficient, but growers should try and keep their levels well within the normal range so that they have “room to spare” in changing conditions, Philipp said.

“Potassium is an important element for plant cell function and one that affects plant health and productivity immediately,” he said. “Unfortunately, it is also quite expensive to apply.”

Philipp encourages growers to keep adequate potassium levels in soil, so they don’t find themselves suddenly needing to make large investments in the nutrient.

“Both phosphorous and potassium can be applied in advance, so if you know how much might be missing, you can fit those in your budget better,” he said.

Nitrogen, Philipp said, is the most limiting nutrient for plant growth and should be applied right when it’s needed.

“Keep in mind that both cool and warm season plants grow most rapidly in spring because of increasing day length and temperatures,” he said. “They will substantially reduce their growth rates during fall due to decreasing day length and temperatures.”

Timely application is important, Philipp said, but can mean different things, such as:

  • Before a rain shower, when growers actually can get into the field

  • After a hay cut, when large amounts of nutrients are removed

  • At the beginning of the growing season, if a producer wants to apply a blend of all NPK

  • If poultry litter is available, depending on one’s timeline for cleanout and delivery.

“These are all valid compromises you may have to make,” Philipp said.

When it comes to linking fertilization with pasture management, producers may need to address an additional host of issues, he said.

“When applying nitrogen to tall fescue in spring, are you able to actually graze it off and avoid fescue toxicity as much as possible? You may be better off applying it in early September for stockpiling,” Philipp said.

“Some forages, such as orchardgrass, definitely need additional nitrogen to be productive, while tall fescue is less sensitive to skipping a year,” he said. “Native warm season grasses can do without nitrogen fertilization for a long time. Hay crops of any kind including summer annual forages require a fertilizer budget and should be planned accordingly.”

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.

State of the University Address Spotlights Recent and Expected Future Growth

UAMS Chancellor Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA, said during his State of the University on March 19 that several projects and initiatives last year established the foundation for a promising year ahead.

A five-minute video shown before his address highlighted them as well as other achievements.

“Thanks to all these groundbreaking advancements, we continue to shape the landscape of health care, education and research at UAMS. Together, we have not only broken ground but also paved the way for a brighter, healthier future for all Arkansans,” Patterson said. “I am confident that the best is yet to come for UAMS.”

State of the University Address Spotlights Recent and Expected Future Growth

Rep. Crawford votes to fund government for FY 2024

Washington  Representative Rick Crawford (AR-01) released the following statement after voting in favor of The Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024.

“While much more is needed to achieve operational control of the border, this bill includes key border-security policy changes that I feel are critical and time sensitive. President Biden’s progressive wave of liberal policies have been a disaster at the border and for our economy, all while more unvetted criminals pour into our communities. We must focus our undivided attention on the additional changes required to secure the border,” said Rep. Crawford.

The legislation fulfills the House Republican majority’s commitments under the Fiscal Responsibility Act and achieves additional, conservative policy victories. A few of those victories are detailed below:

  • Funds 22,000 border agents, which was a key demand included in the Republican-led border security bill, The Secure the Border Act.

  • Robustly funds Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to increase migrant detention beds from 34,000 to nearly 42,000. That will help ensure that more illegal migrants are processed appropriately and not immediately paroled into the U.S.

  • Prohibits the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) from preventing a member of Congress from entering any detention or housing facility administered by DHS. This allows Congress to oversee what DHS is doing with illegal migrants at any time and ensures that taxpayer dollars are being used wisely.

  • Provides necessary funding for our nation’s brave men and women in the military and gives our troops a 5.2% pay increase.

  • Prohibits funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). Israel has provided evidence that UNRWA employees participated in the heinous October 7th attack on innocent Israeli civilians, and there are allegations that current UNRWA employees have ties to Hamas.

  • Prohibits the State Department from flying flags other than the U.S. flag over diplomatic facilities.

  • Maintains all current, pro-life riders.

  • Rescinds billions of dollars in unnecessary, left-over COVID-19 funds from the American Rescue Plan Act and other Biden Administration-supported legislation.

  • Funds our nation’s critically important rural health programs, which directly benefit the residents of the 1st Congressional District, including those who use our rural hospitals and community health centers.

  • Prohibits the Biden Administration from using any Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) funds to advocate for gun control, which would be in direct violation of our 2nd Amendment rights.

  • Prohibits the Biden Administration’s over-reaching and foolish plan to ban gas stoves in Americans’ homes.

Cattle buying, steak sampling coming to the 2024 Beef and Forage Field Day in Hope

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Researchers and extension specialists with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture will present on future forage programs, hay verification and winter feed options at the Beef and Forage Field Day next month.

BEEF AND FORAGE — The 2024 Beef and Forage Field Day will take place on April 5 at the Southwest Research and Extension Center in Hope. Research updates, cattle buying tips and vaccine management are all on the agenda. (Division of Agriculture photo).

The event is scheduled to take place on April 5 at the Southwest Research and Extension Center in Hope. Those interested in registering or learning more about the event can contact the center at 870-777-9702. There is no cost to register.

Alongside the research and extension updates, Daniel Rivera, associate professor of animal science and the center’s director, will be introducing Jonathan Kubesch, a new assistant professor and forage specialist who starts with the Division of Agriculture on April 1. Experts from outside the Division of Agriculture will also discuss cattle markets and outlooks and the proper management of vaccines for cattle health.

Attendees will also have the opportunity to compare steak samples from cattle that were finished at the station against steak bought from a grocery store. This was made possible as part of an Arkansas Beef Council grant, Rivera said.

“I am excited to showcase the projects we have done at the station, as well as having a local order buyer discuss discounts and premiums and have that visual example for the producers,” he said.

A cattle order buyer purchases cattle at livestock auctions, usually on behalf of another party, like a stocker operator, feedlot or meat processing company.

“Hopefully producers can come away with insight on what type of cattle they should be producing,” Rivera said.

Rivera thanked the Ouachita district extension ag agents for working with him to put the event together.

Speakers and topics:

  • Kubesch will discuss his upcoming forage programs with the Division of Agriculture.

  • Michelle Johnson, a graduate research assistant in the department of animal science, will share updates on her beef finishing study.

  • Les Walz, agriculture and forages educator, will discuss the hay verification program.

  • Maggie Justice, assistant professor and beef cattle specialist, will discuss winter feed options.

  • Jake Cartwright, director of commodity activities and economics for beef, equine and dairy, for AR Farm Bureau.

  • Ken Blue, senior food animal technical consultant at Elanco, and Harold Newcomb, technical services veterinarian at Merck Animal Health, will host a veterinarian roundtable to discuss vaccines and methods to improve calf health.

  • Lanny Ford, owner of F&F Cattle, will discuss the good and bad traits he looks for when purchasing cattle.

The schedule is as follows:

  • 9:00-9:30 — Registration

  • 9:30-9:45 — Future forage programs with Kubesch

  • 9:45-10:00 — Beef finishing study with Johnson

  • 10:00-10:30 — Hay verification program with Walz

  • 10:30-11:00 — Winter feed options with Justice

  • 11:00-11:30 — Cattle Market Outlook with Cartwright

  • 11:30-12:30 — Veterinarian roundtable on vaccines and methods to improve calf health with Blue and Newcomb

  • 1:00 — Premiums and discounts in purchasing feeder/stocker cattle with Lanny Ford, F&F Cattle

Lunch will be served from 12:30-1:00 p.m.

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 Students Shine in Student Research Day Presentations

By Nathan Tidwell

Graduate and professional students, post doctorate fellows, and medical house staff presented research to faculty and peers during Student Research Day at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS). Nobel Prize winner Craig C. Mello, Ph.D., spoke as part of the Robert E. McGehee Jr., Ph.D., Distinguished Lectureship in Biomedical Research.

A concurrent Student Research Day was held at the Northwest Regional Campus in Fayetteville for the second consecutive year.

In addition to the Mello presentation, the March 5 event, held at the I. Dodd Wilson Education Building, consisted of two research project presentation poster sessions, the Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition and awards in various categories. More than 250 posters were submitted, with all five colleges and the Graduate School represented between the two participating campuses.

Womack supports National Security, secures funding for Ebbing Air National Guard Base

Washington, DC—March 22, 2024…Today, the House of Representatives passed H. Res. 1102, the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024,which is a package of the remaining six Fiscal Year 2024 Appropriations bills, including Congressman Steve Womack’s (AR-3) Financial Services and General Government (FSGG) bill.

Congressman Womack said, “I supported the package today because I refuse to turn my back on strengthening national security, improving border security, and additional funding for Fort Smith’s critical pilot training program—all while avoiding a painful government shutdown. Although the package is far from perfect, I’m proud of the GOP’s work to secure conservative wins. The package enables the Pentagon to focus on its core mission while expanding support for our troops. It increases the number of Border Patrol agents and expands detention capacity to address the border crisis. Committed to our friend Israel, the package provides defense assistance and halts all funding for UNRWA for its proven collusion with Hamas. My FSGG bill rescinds funding for Biden’s army of IRS agents, pulls back billions of unused COVID-era slush funds, and holds Biden’s hyper-regulatory agenda in check. In a two-to-one divided government, we must take the wins where we can. I will not let the perfect get in the way of the good.”

Legislation details:

The package includes the remaining six FY24 appropriations bills: Defense; Financial Services and General Government; Homeland Security; Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education; Legislative Branch; and State-Foreign Operations.

The Senate must pass the House-approved package for it to be signed into law by President Biden.

Ebbing Air National Guard Base:

The Defense bill includes $207.947 million for the Ebbing Air National Guard Base in Fort Smith, AR. This funding is in addition to the $83 million signed into law on March 9.

Conservative wins:

Increases funding to the Department of Defense to modernize our military, funds a pay raise for our troops, and cuts wasteful partisan programs:

  • Provides our servicemembers with a historic 5.2% pay raise — the largest in over two decades.

  • Includes $1.2 billion to fight against the flow of illicit fentanyl and counternarcotics — $291 million above the President’s budget.

  • Prohibits funding for the Wuhan Institute of Virology and EcoHealth Alliance in China.

Increases funding for the Department of Homeland Security for border security and enforcement while rejecting a blank check for open borders:

  • Increases ICE detention bed capacity to 41,500, an increase of 7,500 above the FY23 level.

  • Funds 22,000 Border Patrol Agents — the highest level ever funded and same as authorized in H.R. 2.

  • Restores shortfalls in border security technology and funds non-intrusive inspection equipment to counter fentanyl.

Additional policy wins:

  • Reaffirms our commitment to Israel by fully funding our annual security commitment of $3.3 billion.

  • Prevents the Consumer Product Safety Commission from banning gas stoves.

  • Only allows for the American flag and other official flags to fly over U.S. diplomatic facilities.

  • Maintains the Hyde Amendment and other pro-life protections.

Significant cuts to spending:

  • Cuts 6% of overall foreign aid funds, including enhanced and new conditions on assistance to organizations like the U.N.

  • Prohibits funds for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and U.N. Commission of Inquiry against Israel.

  • Rescinds $20.2 billion from President Biden’s IRS expansion.

  • Claws back an additional $6 billion in unused COVID funds.

Malinowski’s house searched over alleged illegal gun sales

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

Bryan Malinowski, who died after a shootout with federal agents Tuesday, is alleged to have made hundreds of illegal gun sales prompting an investigation.

On Tuesday, Officers from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives executed a search warrant for a home owned by Malinowski. After they entered his house, Malinowski fired at agents who in turn shot him in the head. Malinowski died in the hospital two days later. The 53-year-old was the executive director of Little Rock’s Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport.

Documents detailing why the initial search warrant was issued were released to the public Thursday. They include an affidavit from an undercover ATF explaining the allegations against Malinowski. The document says he bought at least 92 guns from 2021 to 2023 and 142 guns from 2019 to 2023. He would allegedly often sell them to people without checking their licensure status.

Malinowski’s house searched over alleged illegal gun sales

Jason Burt/Arkansas Business

New documents reveal former Clinton National Airport Executive Director Bryan Malinowski was illegally selling firearms to those not licensed to own guns.

Airport director dies following shootout with ATF agents

Clinton National Airport

Bryan Malinowski

KUAR | By Daniel Breen

Bryan Malinowski, the executive director of Little Rock's Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport, died from injuries sustained during a shootout with federal agents earlier in the week. He was 53 years old.

Malinowski was reportedly shot in the head following a shootout with agents of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives early Tuesday. He allegedly opened fire on agents attempting to serve a search warrant at his home in west Little Rock, injuring one agent.

Malinowski worked for the airport since 2008, serving as its executive director since 2019. The airport's deputy executive director, Tom Clarke, was named acting executive director earlier in the week.

Airport director dies following shootout with ATF agents

Attorney General Griffin calls on Congress to affirm State's authority to ban or regulate intoxicating and dangerous Delta THC products

“Arkansas has banned Delta THC products, but inconsistent court interpretations of certain provisions within the federal Farm Bill have led to challenges in Arkansas and many other states across the country. Meanwhile, these harmful products are available in convenience stores with no age restrictions for purchasing them. They’re often packaged to look like candy or mimic popular snack-food brands, so of course they are getting into the hands of children.

“This easy access and use of enticing packaging has led to more minors ingesting these unregulated and dangerous products, leading to seizures, loss of consciousness, and even death. That’s why Congress needs to create uniformity in the next five-year Farm Bill reauthorization and make clear that states have full authority to regulate and even ban these types of products.

“I am grateful to Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita for co-leading this letter with me and to the full bipartisan group of attorneys general who signed on. Protecting our children has to be our highest priority regardless of party affiliation.”

The 2018 Farm Bill reintroduced hemp as an agricultural commodity while maintaining federal prohibitions on cannabis products. However, bad actors have exploited the 2018 Farm Bill’s definition of hemp to introduce products that are intoxicating and are harming children.

Griffin and Rokita were joined by the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia and Washington.

To read the letter, click here.

For a printer-friendly version, click here.