The state House of Representatives will assemble Monday in person or by proxy to settle on a speaker for the 2007-08 biennium, an issue that until the turn of the century would have engaged almost no one outside that chamber. We might have cheered on the local boy for the puerile reason that, well, he’s our boy. It was worth about as much as having a local youngster chosen for Boys’ Nation.
Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives was a title that carried some prestige but little power. The job was rotated every two years among the longest-serving and most agreeable legislators. The speaker exercised virtually no leverage over public policy or the passage of legislation except on the rare occasions where he could use the chair to aid one side or the other in a heated parliamentary struggle. Committee chairmanships and virtually every vestige of influence in the House were functions largely of seniority. Serious lawmakers often did not want the job because it was confining.
Term limits, which began to toll in both houses of the General Assembly about the turn of the century, ended seniority and its spoils, which is about the only good thing to come out of that ill-considered change. Now the speaker of the House is by far the most important job in the legislature, and who occupies that chair is of moment to all of us. That became conspicuously evident last spring when Speaker Bill Stovall, D-Quitman, blocked the passage of legislation that would have left central Arkansas’ pristine public water supply at the mercy of private developers. The speaker now designates committee jobs, steers bills into the right committee and exercises influence similar to that of the majority leader in the federal model.
So community pride is beside the point in the election Monday between Rep. Will Bond of Jacksonville and Rep. Benny Petrus of Stuttgart, both Democrats. Were he elected under the old system we would be compelled to give Will Bond a figurative pat on the back. But this is indeed serious business and the whole state’s interests are at stake in his election. Voters in neither this community nor the state, alas, have any say in the choice. The election will reflect the intramural politics of the House of Representatives. But the votes of other House members from these latitudes will be crucial in what by all accounts is a close race.
Benny Petrus is the exemplar of a familiar kind of logrolling legislator who gathers power by coziness with corporate interests and deploys it to their benefit. During legislative sessions Petrus has maintained a hospitality suite financed by lobbyists, where lawmakers may come for free food and spirits and schmoozing with those seeking government favor. Although he had no opponent in his last campaign in 2004, Petrus soaked up $70,000 in election gifts. He guided part of the largesse into the campaigns of other legislators, even Republicans.
It is exactly that free-spending culture of lobbying and legislative backrubbing that has scandalized Washington and brought down Speaker Tom DeLay of Texas, who used his own huge lobbyist-stuffed purse and his K Street connections with Jack Abramoff and others to corrupt Republican congressmen and win special government favors for private interests.
But clearly that culture and the obligations that it has produced have made Benny Petrus a contender for the speakership of the Arkansas House. Even legislators who tend toward the progressive, professional and bipartisan lawmaking of Will Bond feel obligations to a benefactor.
Reporting on the speaker’s race last week, Warwick Sabin, an editor at the Arkansas Times, said the vote Monday “will determine whether the legislature is run like a responsible governing institution or an unprogressive instrument of corporate interest.”
Let us hope that the prick of conscience allows enough of our good public servants to revoke their Faustian bargains and elect Will Bond.
Friday, January 06, 2006
Wednesday, January 04, 2006
EDITORIAL >> Convene special session
By ERNIE DUMAS
Solemn pronouncements by Gov. Mike Huckabee generally leave one with two impulses, cheering and scoffing. So it was with the governor’s disclosure last week that he had set certain conditions that will have to be met before he will call the General Assembly into session to deal with the school crisis.
Every one of his conditions represents a good idea that would introduce a greater measure of efficiency and accountability to public education. But they need not be conditions for calling lawmakers to Little Rock to satisfy the Arkansas Supreme Court’s order to put the public schools on a constitutional basis, immediately. It is not even remotely possible that legislators, who are in repose until January 2007 or until he calls them into special session, can meet his conditions — not before they are even assembled.
Huckabee suggested again that it might not be necessary for the legislature to meet this year. If he believes that, he needs to read the Supreme Court’s very clear decision. It said the schools need to be funded at a level that will enable them to have constitutional programs this school year, 2005-06. The legislature might conclude, based on an analysis of programs and budgets this year, that schools are funded at precisely the right level this year, but that cannot be done unless the lawmakers actually meet and vote. The overwhelming proof at evidentiary hearings before the Supreme Court’s masters last fall was that the money was inadequate.
So the legislature must assemble, and it must make a few decisions right away. As the court itself said, the governor and the legislature have the evidence they need to make those decisions. The court said the legislature in 2005 flouted its own law, which said it would meet the needs of the public schools before it adopted the state budget every two years and that it would fund school needs first, a good education being the only mandated state service in the Constitution. The legislature did not make the needs determination and it gave the public schools, alone among all the services of government, no cost-of-living increase. It also found that the state came nowhere close to providing enough money for schools to bring their facilities to an adequate level.
Huckabee said that before calling a legislative session he wanted a study of the cost of adequate schools finished. But that study is not due until September and it will deal with the needs from July 1, 2007, until June 30, 2009. The legislature is under mandate to fix the funding this year. Here is a little formula that we bet will meet constitutional muster. Add a CPI quotient, about 3.5 percent, to this year’s and next year’s state foundation aid.
No higher taxes would be needed. Tax collections are running $100 million or more above the budgeted spending of all of state government this year and that sum would fund the school needs the next two years with some left over. The already fat surplus and the smaller sums that would be left after the schools’ funding over the two years could supplement the legislature’s meager appropriation for public school construction and repairs. The latter would not be enough obviously to bring the schools up to par (roughly $2 billion, according to a legislative study), but it would be a good start. The legislature could put a statewide school bond issue on the ballot at the general election to meet that need once and for all.
But we may cavil too much with the governor’s words. All his ideas are thoughtful and bold: more consolidation of tiny rural schools, stricter and more detailed accounting of spending by every school district, a statewide salary scale for administrators, consolidated administration (one superintendent per county perhaps), an audit of school district fund balances, a close up-to-date evaluation of the capital needs of the schools, and an advisory committee of honored classroom teachers who might tell legislators and the governor what is wrong that superintendents and consultants aren’t telling them.
Getting the word from actual educators is an especially good idea. Something tells us that we would get an earful about No Child Left Behind and the obsession with standardized tests. The public needs to hear it, and we don’t think the teachers will mind telling them. Huckabee wants to keep their advice secret. Bad idea.
None of those proposals are essential to addressing the court’s mandate, but the governor may want to go further and have a good and comprehensive session on education, like Gov. Bill Clinton’s in 1983 and like the one Huckabee called in 2003-04, both after similar Supreme Court mandates.
The season does not seem especially propitious politically — Huckabee is running for president and legislators are worrying about political opponents — but, hey, Huckabee is the political genius, not us.
If he thinks he can whip these nervous politicians into line for some real reforms like consolidation, we are for him.
Solemn pronouncements by Gov. Mike Huckabee generally leave one with two impulses, cheering and scoffing. So it was with the governor’s disclosure last week that he had set certain conditions that will have to be met before he will call the General Assembly into session to deal with the school crisis.
Every one of his conditions represents a good idea that would introduce a greater measure of efficiency and accountability to public education. But they need not be conditions for calling lawmakers to Little Rock to satisfy the Arkansas Supreme Court’s order to put the public schools on a constitutional basis, immediately. It is not even remotely possible that legislators, who are in repose until January 2007 or until he calls them into special session, can meet his conditions — not before they are even assembled.
Huckabee suggested again that it might not be necessary for the legislature to meet this year. If he believes that, he needs to read the Supreme Court’s very clear decision. It said the schools need to be funded at a level that will enable them to have constitutional programs this school year, 2005-06. The legislature might conclude, based on an analysis of programs and budgets this year, that schools are funded at precisely the right level this year, but that cannot be done unless the lawmakers actually meet and vote. The overwhelming proof at evidentiary hearings before the Supreme Court’s masters last fall was that the money was inadequate.
So the legislature must assemble, and it must make a few decisions right away. As the court itself said, the governor and the legislature have the evidence they need to make those decisions. The court said the legislature in 2005 flouted its own law, which said it would meet the needs of the public schools before it adopted the state budget every two years and that it would fund school needs first, a good education being the only mandated state service in the Constitution. The legislature did not make the needs determination and it gave the public schools, alone among all the services of government, no cost-of-living increase. It also found that the state came nowhere close to providing enough money for schools to bring their facilities to an adequate level.
Huckabee said that before calling a legislative session he wanted a study of the cost of adequate schools finished. But that study is not due until September and it will deal with the needs from July 1, 2007, until June 30, 2009. The legislature is under mandate to fix the funding this year. Here is a little formula that we bet will meet constitutional muster. Add a CPI quotient, about 3.5 percent, to this year’s and next year’s state foundation aid.
No higher taxes would be needed. Tax collections are running $100 million or more above the budgeted spending of all of state government this year and that sum would fund the school needs the next two years with some left over. The already fat surplus and the smaller sums that would be left after the schools’ funding over the two years could supplement the legislature’s meager appropriation for public school construction and repairs. The latter would not be enough obviously to bring the schools up to par (roughly $2 billion, according to a legislative study), but it would be a good start. The legislature could put a statewide school bond issue on the ballot at the general election to meet that need once and for all.
But we may cavil too much with the governor’s words. All his ideas are thoughtful and bold: more consolidation of tiny rural schools, stricter and more detailed accounting of spending by every school district, a statewide salary scale for administrators, consolidated administration (one superintendent per county perhaps), an audit of school district fund balances, a close up-to-date evaluation of the capital needs of the schools, and an advisory committee of honored classroom teachers who might tell legislators and the governor what is wrong that superintendents and consultants aren’t telling them.
Getting the word from actual educators is an especially good idea. Something tells us that we would get an earful about No Child Left Behind and the obsession with standardized tests. The public needs to hear it, and we don’t think the teachers will mind telling them. Huckabee wants to keep their advice secret. Bad idea.
None of those proposals are essential to addressing the court’s mandate, but the governor may want to go further and have a good and comprehensive session on education, like Gov. Bill Clinton’s in 1983 and like the one Huckabee called in 2003-04, both after similar Supreme Court mandates.
The season does not seem especially propitious politically — Huckabee is running for president and legislators are worrying about political opponents — but, hey, Huckabee is the political genius, not us.
If he thinks he can whip these nervous politicians into line for some real reforms like consolidation, we are for him.
OBITUARIES
OCY BUCHER, 97
Ocy Pearl Bucher, 97, passed away Dec. 31, 2005 at Cabot Manor Nursing and Rehab Center in Cabot. Ocy was born Sept. 28, 1908 in Brooklyn, Mo., to the late Isaac Talton and Laura Jane Edson Williams.
Ocy graduated from Ridgeway High School, Ridgeway, Mo.
She professed her commitment to God at an early age and became a member of Ridgeway Methodist Church in Ridgeway, Mo. On July 26, 1930 she was united in marriage to Lloyd S. Jones of Eagleville community until his death in 1943. Ocy Moved to Kansas City, Mo., in 1944 and worked at Gay Gibson Dress Factory until her retirement in 1973. On Nov. 8, 1948 she and Phillip B. Bucher were married in Kansas City, Mo. Ocy was preceded in death by her parents, both husbands, sisters; Jewell Nelson, Ruby Burnette and Opal Foutch as well as one brother, Kenneth Williams.
She is survived by two children, Robert L. Jones and wife, Carolyn, of Kansas City, Mo., and Dawnna J. Huitt and husband, Roger, of Lonoke. Her surviving sister is Arlynn Strait and husband, Bob of Moses Lake, Wash.; two brothers, Dean Williams and wife, Maxine of Ridgeway, Mo., and Russell Wil-liams and wife, Kathleen of Gilman City, Mo. Ocy was blessed with 10 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren and 10 great-great grandchildren.
Many nieces, nephews and other friends and family also survive her.
Ocy was a union steward for the Ladies’ Garment Union for many years and always took her job very seriously.
She also was affiliated with the American Business Women Associ-ation, and her association with these organizations gave her the opportunity to travel.
She was an avid swimmer and sports fan and remained loyal to the Kansas City Chiefs and Royals teams. Always young-at-heart, full of opinions and advice, she will be remembered by many friends, family and associates.
Ocy’s preference was cremation and Moore’s Funeral Home in Cabot is assisting with her last wishes.
There will be no services in Arkansas, and the family has requested no flowers.
Those who would like to honor her memory may make a donation to: South Bend United Methodist Church, Youth Fund, Treasurer, 140 McDonald Drive, Lonoke, Ark. 72086.
HELEN HOLCOMB, 87
Helen Louise Howell Holcomb, 87, of Austin, died Sunday, Jan. 1. She was preceded in death by her husbands, Woodrow W. Hughes and Ernie Holcomb, her son, John H. Hughes, and her parents, Hardy and Oma Howell. She is survived by her grandchildren, Tiffany Dodson and her husband Donny of Austin and David N. Hughes of Jackson-ville, and her great-grandchildren, Madison, Whitney and Matthew Dodson.
Graveside service will be at 2 p.m. today at Oak Grove Cemetery, Lonoke County. Arrangements are by West-brook Funeral Home.
FRANNA JOHNSON, 50
Franna Emery Johnson, 50, of Benton died Dec. 27 in an automobile accident in Judsonia.
She was of the Church of Christ faith, and worked as a former longtime loan officer for First Security Bank and was a recent loan assistant for Summit Bank of Benton. She was a 1973 graduate of Grubbs High School.
She was the daughter of Marvin Emery Sr. and Mary Bowen Emery.
She is survived by her husband, Matthew Johnson; two daughters, Amy Jewell of Searcy and Brooke Johnson of Little Rock; two sons, Chad Johnson of Bradford and Brad and his wife Gina Jewell of Searcy; a sister, Sharon Smith of Bradford; a brother, Marvin Emery Jr. of Beebe, and three grandchildren, Brennan Hulsey, Greenly Jewell and Eliza-beth Jewell; as well as a number of nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held Friday at Possum Grape Church of Christ with minister Shane Otts and pastor Brian Moore officiating.
Interment was at Heard Ceme-tery in Bradford.
Arrangements by Powell Fun-eral Home of Bald Knob-Judsonia.
Ocy Pearl Bucher, 97, passed away Dec. 31, 2005 at Cabot Manor Nursing and Rehab Center in Cabot. Ocy was born Sept. 28, 1908 in Brooklyn, Mo., to the late Isaac Talton and Laura Jane Edson Williams.
Ocy graduated from Ridgeway High School, Ridgeway, Mo.
She professed her commitment to God at an early age and became a member of Ridgeway Methodist Church in Ridgeway, Mo. On July 26, 1930 she was united in marriage to Lloyd S. Jones of Eagleville community until his death in 1943. Ocy Moved to Kansas City, Mo., in 1944 and worked at Gay Gibson Dress Factory until her retirement in 1973. On Nov. 8, 1948 she and Phillip B. Bucher were married in Kansas City, Mo. Ocy was preceded in death by her parents, both husbands, sisters; Jewell Nelson, Ruby Burnette and Opal Foutch as well as one brother, Kenneth Williams.
She is survived by two children, Robert L. Jones and wife, Carolyn, of Kansas City, Mo., and Dawnna J. Huitt and husband, Roger, of Lonoke. Her surviving sister is Arlynn Strait and husband, Bob of Moses Lake, Wash.; two brothers, Dean Williams and wife, Maxine of Ridgeway, Mo., and Russell Wil-liams and wife, Kathleen of Gilman City, Mo. Ocy was blessed with 10 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren and 10 great-great grandchildren.
Many nieces, nephews and other friends and family also survive her.
Ocy was a union steward for the Ladies’ Garment Union for many years and always took her job very seriously.
She also was affiliated with the American Business Women Associ-ation, and her association with these organizations gave her the opportunity to travel.
She was an avid swimmer and sports fan and remained loyal to the Kansas City Chiefs and Royals teams. Always young-at-heart, full of opinions and advice, she will be remembered by many friends, family and associates.
Ocy’s preference was cremation and Moore’s Funeral Home in Cabot is assisting with her last wishes.
There will be no services in Arkansas, and the family has requested no flowers.
Those who would like to honor her memory may make a donation to: South Bend United Methodist Church, Youth Fund, Treasurer, 140 McDonald Drive, Lonoke, Ark. 72086.
HELEN HOLCOMB, 87
Helen Louise Howell Holcomb, 87, of Austin, died Sunday, Jan. 1. She was preceded in death by her husbands, Woodrow W. Hughes and Ernie Holcomb, her son, John H. Hughes, and her parents, Hardy and Oma Howell. She is survived by her grandchildren, Tiffany Dodson and her husband Donny of Austin and David N. Hughes of Jackson-ville, and her great-grandchildren, Madison, Whitney and Matthew Dodson.
Graveside service will be at 2 p.m. today at Oak Grove Cemetery, Lonoke County. Arrangements are by West-brook Funeral Home.
FRANNA JOHNSON, 50
Franna Emery Johnson, 50, of Benton died Dec. 27 in an automobile accident in Judsonia.
She was of the Church of Christ faith, and worked as a former longtime loan officer for First Security Bank and was a recent loan assistant for Summit Bank of Benton. She was a 1973 graduate of Grubbs High School.
She was the daughter of Marvin Emery Sr. and Mary Bowen Emery.
She is survived by her husband, Matthew Johnson; two daughters, Amy Jewell of Searcy and Brooke Johnson of Little Rock; two sons, Chad Johnson of Bradford and Brad and his wife Gina Jewell of Searcy; a sister, Sharon Smith of Bradford; a brother, Marvin Emery Jr. of Beebe, and three grandchildren, Brennan Hulsey, Greenly Jewell and Eliza-beth Jewell; as well as a number of nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held Friday at Possum Grape Church of Christ with minister Shane Otts and pastor Brian Moore officiating.
Interment was at Heard Ceme-tery in Bradford.
Arrangements by Powell Fun-eral Home of Bald Knob-Judsonia.
TOP STORY >> Town could get theater
By RICKY HARVEY
Leader managing editor
Could a multi-screen movie theater be coming to Jacksonville?
The Leader has learned that a 10-screen cinema is in the works for the city, possibly being planned for the north side of Jackson Square Shopping Center on South James, next to Knight’s Super Foods.
“All I can say is there are always companies that are looking around doing cost analysis to see if the city is a good choice for various businesses,” chamber of commerce director Bonita Rownd said.
Jacksonville Mayor Tommy Swaim said, “There have been some inquiries and there is some land under consideration.”
A representative with General Properties, Inc., in North Little Rock told The Leader last week that the company “is working with some people on something, but there isn’t any kind of deal yet.”
When asked what property was being referred to, the representative confirmed Jackson Square Shopping Center, which General Properties owns.
Based in Memphis, Malco Theatres, which has cinemas in Jonesboro, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Springdale, Rogers, Blythe-ville and Monticello, is possibly the company that is in ongoing negotiations to build a location here.
When contacted by The Leader regarding possible plans of opening a location in Jacksonville, Karen Scott of Malco responded, “We do not comment on unannounced projects.”
If a theater for Jacksonville becomes a reality, it will be the first since The Flick I and II cinema closed its doors in the early 1990s. The two-screen theater was open in the Jacksonville Shopping Center on Main Street for many years.
It turned into a second-run movie theater in the late 1980s and closed a short time later.
“It’s my understanding that the Flick started suffering when all the movie screens started opening in the McCain Mall area,” Rownd said.
Leader managing editor
Could a multi-screen movie theater be coming to Jacksonville?
The Leader has learned that a 10-screen cinema is in the works for the city, possibly being planned for the north side of Jackson Square Shopping Center on South James, next to Knight’s Super Foods.
“All I can say is there are always companies that are looking around doing cost analysis to see if the city is a good choice for various businesses,” chamber of commerce director Bonita Rownd said.
Jacksonville Mayor Tommy Swaim said, “There have been some inquiries and there is some land under consideration.”
A representative with General Properties, Inc., in North Little Rock told The Leader last week that the company “is working with some people on something, but there isn’t any kind of deal yet.”
When asked what property was being referred to, the representative confirmed Jackson Square Shopping Center, which General Properties owns.
Based in Memphis, Malco Theatres, which has cinemas in Jonesboro, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Springdale, Rogers, Blythe-ville and Monticello, is possibly the company that is in ongoing negotiations to build a location here.
When contacted by The Leader regarding possible plans of opening a location in Jacksonville, Karen Scott of Malco responded, “We do not comment on unannounced projects.”
If a theater for Jacksonville becomes a reality, it will be the first since The Flick I and II cinema closed its doors in the early 1990s. The two-screen theater was open in the Jacksonville Shopping Center on Main Street for many years.
It turned into a second-run movie theater in the late 1980s and closed a short time later.
“It’s my understanding that the Flick started suffering when all the movie screens started opening in the McCain Mall area,” Rownd said.
SPORTS >> Carlisle, Tech win tourney in Beebe
By JASON KING
Leader sports writer
Several area teams took part in the First Security Bank/White County Medical Center Christmas Classic in Beebe last week. All five teams representing White County came away with at least one win in the tourney, with the Riverview Lady Raiders and Harding Academy Lady Wildcats both winning two out of their three games.
The Carlisle girls upped their record to 14-1 on the season on their way to winning the tournament championship over the Greene County Tech Lady Hornets 44-31, while the Greene County Tech boys team won their finals appearance over CAC 50-35 Thursday night.
The host teams got off to a solid start in the tournament, with the Beebe boys beating Newport, while the Lady Badgers got past the Southside girls in overtime.
The girls team faced top-seeded Carlisle in the second round, falling to the Lady Bison 57-43. The Lady Badgers faced Harding Academy on Thursday to determine third overall in the tourney, as the Lady Wildcats took the win over Beebe 42-30. Ashley Watkins was the high scorer for the Lady Badgers in the game with 10 points.
The boys team fell in their semi-final game as well, as the CAC Mustangs rolled on to the tournament final with a 60-45 win over Beebe. The Badgers faced Drew Central in the third-place game on Thursday, with the Pirates taking the win 68-57. Charlie Spakes led Beebe in scoring with 12 points, while Eric Griffith also hit double-digits for Beebe with 10 points.
The Harding boys also went 1-2 in the tournament, with an opening-round loss to CAC. The Wildcats got their only win of the week in the opening consolation game against Batesville Southside, beating the Rebels 68-62. The win put Harding Academy into the consolation finals, with the Bison pulling out the win over the Wildcats 65-60. Alex Beene led the Wildcats with 18 points, while brother Nick Beene scored 13 points.
The Harding girls fared the best of all the local entries, coming within one point of the tournament finals. After a convincing first-round win over the Drew girls, the Lady Wildcats dropped a heartbreaker to Greene County Tech 39-38.
Harding had to settle for playing in the third-place game, where they handily beat Beebe 42-30. Jessica Stevens led the Lady Wildcats with 10 points against the Lady Badgers.
The Riverview Lady Raiders won both of their consolation games on Wednesday and Thursday after a first-round loss to eventual tournament winners Carlisle.
Riverview bounced back with a 50-33 win over Newport on Wednesday, before rounding out the tournament with a consolation-finals win over Batesville Southside 53-40. Kori Meachum led Riverview with 24 points.
Leader sports writer
Several area teams took part in the First Security Bank/White County Medical Center Christmas Classic in Beebe last week. All five teams representing White County came away with at least one win in the tourney, with the Riverview Lady Raiders and Harding Academy Lady Wildcats both winning two out of their three games.
The Carlisle girls upped their record to 14-1 on the season on their way to winning the tournament championship over the Greene County Tech Lady Hornets 44-31, while the Greene County Tech boys team won their finals appearance over CAC 50-35 Thursday night.
The host teams got off to a solid start in the tournament, with the Beebe boys beating Newport, while the Lady Badgers got past the Southside girls in overtime.
The girls team faced top-seeded Carlisle in the second round, falling to the Lady Bison 57-43. The Lady Badgers faced Harding Academy on Thursday to determine third overall in the tourney, as the Lady Wildcats took the win over Beebe 42-30. Ashley Watkins was the high scorer for the Lady Badgers in the game with 10 points.
The boys team fell in their semi-final game as well, as the CAC Mustangs rolled on to the tournament final with a 60-45 win over Beebe. The Badgers faced Drew Central in the third-place game on Thursday, with the Pirates taking the win 68-57. Charlie Spakes led Beebe in scoring with 12 points, while Eric Griffith also hit double-digits for Beebe with 10 points.
The Harding boys also went 1-2 in the tournament, with an opening-round loss to CAC. The Wildcats got their only win of the week in the opening consolation game against Batesville Southside, beating the Rebels 68-62. The win put Harding Academy into the consolation finals, with the Bison pulling out the win over the Wildcats 65-60. Alex Beene led the Wildcats with 18 points, while brother Nick Beene scored 13 points.
The Harding girls fared the best of all the local entries, coming within one point of the tournament finals. After a convincing first-round win over the Drew girls, the Lady Wildcats dropped a heartbreaker to Greene County Tech 39-38.
Harding had to settle for playing in the third-place game, where they handily beat Beebe 42-30. Jessica Stevens led the Lady Wildcats with 10 points against the Lady Badgers.
The Riverview Lady Raiders won both of their consolation games on Wednesday and Thursday after a first-round loss to eventual tournament winners Carlisle.
Riverview bounced back with a 50-33 win over Newport on Wednesday, before rounding out the tournament with a consolation-finals win over Batesville Southside 53-40. Kori Meachum led Riverview with 24 points.
SPORTS >> Cabot girls take Goblin title
By JASON KING
Leader sports writer
The Cabot Lady Panthers made their third consecutive trip to the finals of an invitational tournament this season when they faced Harrison in the championship game of the Lendel Thomas Classic last Friday. Only this time, they won.
The Lady Panthers watched their opponents rally late in the game in their two previous final appearances. Morril-ton came back to overtake them in the RAPA finals, while CAC got the go-ahead basket in the final minute of the Ortho tourney to beat Cabot.
No such rally would occur in this game, as the Lady Panthers won decisively over the Lady Goblins 74-61. The win gives Cabot its first tournament championship in three finals appearances this season.
The Lady Panthers led 35-26 at the half, and didn’t look back for the remainder of the game. Kim Sitzmann led all scorers in the game with 31 points, the second-highest scoring game of the year for the future UALR Lady Trojan. Lauren Daniels had 15 for Cabot, while Maddie Helms and Leah Watts each had eight for the Lady Panthers.
Cabot’s strongest challenge in the tourney was a rematch with cross-county rival Lonoke. The Lady Jackrabbits beat Cabot in their first meeting in mid-December, a game that took two overtimes to decide.
The two teams went past regulation once again in the Lendel semis, but it was Cabot who came out on top this time, narrowly defeating the Lady ‘Rabbits 54-53 and ending Lonoke’s unbeaten streak at 12 games.
Jamie Sterrenberg got the Lady Panthers rolling early, scoring 13 of her total 17 points in the half. Cabot looked to have control of the game after one half, leading Lonoke 35-23.
The Lady ‘Rabbits responded in the second half, outscoring the Lady Panthers by 12 to tie the game at 48-48 at the end of regulation, sending the game into overtime for the second straight time in a meeting between the two.
Kim Sitzmann hit 3 of 4 free throws in the overtime period to secure another trip to the finals for Cabot.
Maddie Helms was the second-highest scorer for the Lady Panthers in the game with 14 points, while Sitzmann was close behind with 12 points.
Leah Watts added six points for Cabot, while sophomore starter Rachel Glover had three points and JV standout Lauren Walker had two points in the game. Jenny Evans led the Lady Jackrabbits with 22 points, while Calisha Kirk added 14 points for Lonoke.
The three wins to claim the tournament championship im-proved the Lady Panthers’ overall season record to 11-3, as they prepare for the start of the AAAAA-East conference season this week. Cabot will start their conference season on the road at West Memphis Friday night, with the junior varsity girls starting at 4:45 p.m.
Leader sports writer
The Cabot Lady Panthers made their third consecutive trip to the finals of an invitational tournament this season when they faced Harrison in the championship game of the Lendel Thomas Classic last Friday. Only this time, they won.
The Lady Panthers watched their opponents rally late in the game in their two previous final appearances. Morril-ton came back to overtake them in the RAPA finals, while CAC got the go-ahead basket in the final minute of the Ortho tourney to beat Cabot.
No such rally would occur in this game, as the Lady Panthers won decisively over the Lady Goblins 74-61. The win gives Cabot its first tournament championship in three finals appearances this season.
The Lady Panthers led 35-26 at the half, and didn’t look back for the remainder of the game. Kim Sitzmann led all scorers in the game with 31 points, the second-highest scoring game of the year for the future UALR Lady Trojan. Lauren Daniels had 15 for Cabot, while Maddie Helms and Leah Watts each had eight for the Lady Panthers.
Cabot’s strongest challenge in the tourney was a rematch with cross-county rival Lonoke. The Lady Jackrabbits beat Cabot in their first meeting in mid-December, a game that took two overtimes to decide.
The two teams went past regulation once again in the Lendel semis, but it was Cabot who came out on top this time, narrowly defeating the Lady ‘Rabbits 54-53 and ending Lonoke’s unbeaten streak at 12 games.
Jamie Sterrenberg got the Lady Panthers rolling early, scoring 13 of her total 17 points in the half. Cabot looked to have control of the game after one half, leading Lonoke 35-23.
The Lady ‘Rabbits responded in the second half, outscoring the Lady Panthers by 12 to tie the game at 48-48 at the end of regulation, sending the game into overtime for the second straight time in a meeting between the two.
Kim Sitzmann hit 3 of 4 free throws in the overtime period to secure another trip to the finals for Cabot.
Maddie Helms was the second-highest scorer for the Lady Panthers in the game with 14 points, while Sitzmann was close behind with 12 points.
Leah Watts added six points for Cabot, while sophomore starter Rachel Glover had three points and JV standout Lauren Walker had two points in the game. Jenny Evans led the Lady Jackrabbits with 22 points, while Calisha Kirk added 14 points for Lonoke.
The three wins to claim the tournament championship im-proved the Lady Panthers’ overall season record to 11-3, as they prepare for the start of the AAAAA-East conference season this week. Cabot will start their conference season on the road at West Memphis Friday night, with the junior varsity girls starting at 4:45 p.m.
NEIGHBORS >> Cabot Police Department; An inside look
By SARA GREENE
Leader staff writer
To protect and serve a growing population of nearly 20,000 residents, the Cabot Police Department is developing new operating procedures, improving technology and adding personnel.
“As Cabot spreads out, we’ve made four patrol districts to keep officers in certain parts of the city to respond faster,” said Sgt. Dewayne Roper, public information officer for the Cabot Police Department.
Metroplan, a federally mandated metropolitan planning organization, estimates Cabot’s population at 19,967 which is 30.8 percent larger than it was when the 2000 census gave the city an official population of 15,261. Cabot currently has 34 patrol officers and plans to ask the city council for three more in 2006.
Improved communications have made emergency re-sponse throughout Cabot quicker and more organized. In July 2005, the Cabot Police Department got connected to the Computer Aided Dispatch to link the police department to the area’s 911 dispatch centers, firefighters and ambulance services.
The program should be able to provide monthly statistical reports on crime trends such as what type of crime occurs in what part of town and when.
The biggest problem the department faces is traffic jams around Hwy. 89 and Second Street around the police department itself.
“We work a lot of vehicle accidents because of our traffic situation, but I think the straightening (of Hwy. 89) will help traffic flow and benefit us in being able to get in and out of the station,” Roper said.
Sgt. Brent Lucas has been with the Cabot Police Depart-ment for more than 11 years. He says being a policeman is just something he’s always wanted to do.
“Just being able to help people and the satisfaction of knowing you did something for someone is the best part of a police officer,” Lucas said.
The Cabot Police Department has four officers that work in Cabot schools to educate students about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. Officer Yvonne Kackley teaches the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) curriculum at Cabot Middle School South during the fall semester and at Cabot Middle School North during the spring semester.
Cabot Police Officer David Thrush serves as the resource officer at Cabot High School, Officer Michael Reeves serves as the resource officer at Cabot Junior High North and Officer Rick Stone serves as the resource officer at Cabot Junior High South.
School resource officers can be beneficial to a community in two ways.
First, the officers keep the students safe at school. Second, students can advise the officers on criminal activities in their neighborhoods or even their own homes.
“Most of the time Cabot is a pretty quiet town,” Roper said.
Leader staff writer
To protect and serve a growing population of nearly 20,000 residents, the Cabot Police Department is developing new operating procedures, improving technology and adding personnel.
“As Cabot spreads out, we’ve made four patrol districts to keep officers in certain parts of the city to respond faster,” said Sgt. Dewayne Roper, public information officer for the Cabot Police Department.
Metroplan, a federally mandated metropolitan planning organization, estimates Cabot’s population at 19,967 which is 30.8 percent larger than it was when the 2000 census gave the city an official population of 15,261. Cabot currently has 34 patrol officers and plans to ask the city council for three more in 2006.
Improved communications have made emergency re-sponse throughout Cabot quicker and more organized. In July 2005, the Cabot Police Department got connected to the Computer Aided Dispatch to link the police department to the area’s 911 dispatch centers, firefighters and ambulance services.
The program should be able to provide monthly statistical reports on crime trends such as what type of crime occurs in what part of town and when.
The biggest problem the department faces is traffic jams around Hwy. 89 and Second Street around the police department itself.
“We work a lot of vehicle accidents because of our traffic situation, but I think the straightening (of Hwy. 89) will help traffic flow and benefit us in being able to get in and out of the station,” Roper said.
Sgt. Brent Lucas has been with the Cabot Police Depart-ment for more than 11 years. He says being a policeman is just something he’s always wanted to do.
“Just being able to help people and the satisfaction of knowing you did something for someone is the best part of a police officer,” Lucas said.
The Cabot Police Department has four officers that work in Cabot schools to educate students about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. Officer Yvonne Kackley teaches the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) curriculum at Cabot Middle School South during the fall semester and at Cabot Middle School North during the spring semester.
Cabot Police Officer David Thrush serves as the resource officer at Cabot High School, Officer Michael Reeves serves as the resource officer at Cabot Junior High North and Officer Rick Stone serves as the resource officer at Cabot Junior High South.
School resource officers can be beneficial to a community in two ways.
First, the officers keep the students safe at school. Second, students can advise the officers on criminal activities in their neighborhoods or even their own homes.
“Most of the time Cabot is a pretty quiet town,” Roper said.
EDITORIAL >> Rename Arkansas?
In the old days it was considered graceless to name government projects for the boss. Such honors were bestowed rarely and posthumously or at least after the leader’s career was over.
At the end of his 12 years as Supreme Leader of Arkansas, in 1966, Gov. Orval E. Faubus arranged, so it was said, for a new state mental health facility that would perch on the hill above West Markham Street in Little Rock to be named the Orval E. Faubus Administrative and Intensive Treatment Center. Faubus disclaimed putting any pressure on the State Hospital Board to name the building after him. But he need not have bothered.
He had appointed friends to every position on the board.
Gov. Huckabee, in his 10th year as governor, enjoys the same rare privilege. He is the third governor, after Faubus and Bill Clinton, to fill every honorary appointment in all of state government, and it is paying off in the nomenclature of government facilities. Last week, the Game and Fish Commission dedicated a new 11-acre pond in a park in Hope, which happens to be the governor’s home town.
His friends on the Game and Fish Commission named the little body of water, which was developed at a cost of $520,000 of the taxpayers’ money, the Mike and Janet Huckabee Lake. Huckabee had supported a sales tax increase that provided the funds for the little impoundment.
The commissioners told the couple about their plans to name the water after them, and the Huckabees said they did not mind at all.
Appointment to a 10-year-term on the Game and Fish Commission is one of the great dispensations at the governor’s disposal. The appointments are highly sought and hugely appreciated.
Already, the commission has named a nature center at Pine Bluff after Huckabee, and next year another nature center at Fort Smith will be named for Mrs. Huckabee. Other Huckabee appointees named a new building at the Arkansas School for the Blind for Huckabee. We predict that there will be more. The state Highway Commission will surely name a stretch of interstate for him. Defeat of the Huckabee-backed $250 million college-building bond issues three weeks ago may have kept his name off a campus facade or two.
Except for Huckabee and Faubus, Arkansas governors have not had their names stuck on government buildings or other taxpayer-financed state facilities. An exception would be the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, but the name was applied by the University of Arkansas Board of Trustees, none of whose members he appointed, 22 years after he left the governor’s office and for his work as a U. S. senator in bringing tens of millions of grants to the university for agricultural research.
The name was applied as Bumpers was retiring from the Senate.
As governor for four years, Bumpers directed the biggest building program in the state’s history at universities, trade schools, state parks and medical facilities. He discouraged universities and agencies from naming any after him.
When the University of Arkansas wanted to name its College of Arts and Sciences after its most famous alumnus, former Senator J. William Fulbright, long after defeat had ended his political career, Fulbright objected, saying that the school would be beset by all the controversies surrounding his long career in national life.
A delegation finally persuaded him to relent, although he disagreed with them that his illustrious name would lend important prestige to the institution. It has.
How times have changed. No one any longer considers it graceless or impudent for government minions to name taxpayer-financed facilities for the leader. It is merely one of the fruits of the vast patronage given a governor who has served so much longer than the average political leader and who is still climbing, or hopes to climb.
At the end of his 12 years as Supreme Leader of Arkansas, in 1966, Gov. Orval E. Faubus arranged, so it was said, for a new state mental health facility that would perch on the hill above West Markham Street in Little Rock to be named the Orval E. Faubus Administrative and Intensive Treatment Center. Faubus disclaimed putting any pressure on the State Hospital Board to name the building after him. But he need not have bothered.
He had appointed friends to every position on the board.
Gov. Huckabee, in his 10th year as governor, enjoys the same rare privilege. He is the third governor, after Faubus and Bill Clinton, to fill every honorary appointment in all of state government, and it is paying off in the nomenclature of government facilities. Last week, the Game and Fish Commission dedicated a new 11-acre pond in a park in Hope, which happens to be the governor’s home town.
His friends on the Game and Fish Commission named the little body of water, which was developed at a cost of $520,000 of the taxpayers’ money, the Mike and Janet Huckabee Lake. Huckabee had supported a sales tax increase that provided the funds for the little impoundment.
The commissioners told the couple about their plans to name the water after them, and the Huckabees said they did not mind at all.
Appointment to a 10-year-term on the Game and Fish Commission is one of the great dispensations at the governor’s disposal. The appointments are highly sought and hugely appreciated.
Already, the commission has named a nature center at Pine Bluff after Huckabee, and next year another nature center at Fort Smith will be named for Mrs. Huckabee. Other Huckabee appointees named a new building at the Arkansas School for the Blind for Huckabee. We predict that there will be more. The state Highway Commission will surely name a stretch of interstate for him. Defeat of the Huckabee-backed $250 million college-building bond issues three weeks ago may have kept his name off a campus facade or two.
Except for Huckabee and Faubus, Arkansas governors have not had their names stuck on government buildings or other taxpayer-financed state facilities. An exception would be the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, but the name was applied by the University of Arkansas Board of Trustees, none of whose members he appointed, 22 years after he left the governor’s office and for his work as a U. S. senator in bringing tens of millions of grants to the university for agricultural research.
The name was applied as Bumpers was retiring from the Senate.
As governor for four years, Bumpers directed the biggest building program in the state’s history at universities, trade schools, state parks and medical facilities. He discouraged universities and agencies from naming any after him.
When the University of Arkansas wanted to name its College of Arts and Sciences after its most famous alumnus, former Senator J. William Fulbright, long after defeat had ended his political career, Fulbright objected, saying that the school would be beset by all the controversies surrounding his long career in national life.
A delegation finally persuaded him to relent, although he disagreed with them that his illustrious name would lend important prestige to the institution. It has.
How times have changed. No one any longer considers it graceless or impudent for government minions to name taxpayer-financed facilities for the leader. It is merely one of the fruits of the vast patronage given a governor who has served so much longer than the average political leader and who is still climbing, or hopes to climb.
FROM THE PUBLISHER >> Staffers see too many relatives die
Several Leader staffers lost their relatives during the holidays, two of them killed in car wrecks, while another relative died suddenly from a heart attack.
As we were talking about the unusually high number of sudden deaths in The Leader family, word came that the 93-year-old mother of bluesman Charlie Musselwhite was strangled in Memphis during a home break-in. Musselwhite’s father died a few days later in a nursing home.
Christy Hendricks, who is an editor at The Leader, lost her aunt Franna Johnson of Benton when she was killed early last week in a car accident on Hwy. 67/167 north of Searcy. Johnson, who was 50, was buried Friday.
Gregg DeFrance, 50, of Searcy, had rear-ended two vehicles on the highway, including the Jeep that Mrs. Johnson was riding in with her husband, Matthew, 47, and two granddaughters, Greenley Jewell, 4, and Elizabeth Jewell, 1, both of Searcy.
Franna Johnson was ejected from the Jeep, along with Greenley, after it overturned several times on an embankment.
Franna was pronounced dead at the scene. Greenley was hardly hurt. Her sister and grandfather, who remained in the Jeep, had more serious injuries. They were all hospitalized overnight and then released.
Christy Hendricks says, “I think what I’ll remember most about my aunt Franna is her smile. She had a good smile, and I rarely saw her without one. I can’t remember one time when I saw her that she didn’t mention every one of her children, not just her two — Amy and Brad — but her two step-children also, Chad and Brooke. She was crazy over her grandchildren.
“Every time I saw her and my uncle Matt together they were happy. She was a good person, and you could see that just by looking at her. She was a tiny woman but she didn’t have to say one word for you to know she was in the room. She had presence. And a good heart.”
Mrs. Johnson wore a seat belt, but she was apparently ejected from the Jeep because she was a small woman.
DeFrance, the driver who caused the accident, was ticketed for reckless driving and no proof of insurance.
Matt Robinson, an account executive at The Leader, attended a memorial service for his cousin in Houston over the weekend after he was killed in a work-related accident early last week.
Robert Norton, 29, had been repairing a telephone line near an intersection when his Southwest-ern Bell truck was hit by a driver who had run a red light as the truck was leaving the repair site.
Norton was ejected from the truck and run over. He and his wife, Tina, had three children. Jan. 1 was the couple’s 12th wedding anniversary.
“He was always outgoing,” Robinson recalls. “He loved life and his family.”
Charges have been filed against the driver for running the red light.
Magen Henderson of Beebe, who is the daughter-in-law of John Henderson, The Leader’s sales manager, lost her cousin from Russellville on Christmas Eve. Matt Moore, who was only 30, had a heart attack while doing some household chores.
“They last spoke to each other the week before, making plans to see each other for the holidays,” John Henderson told us.
Staff writer Joan McCoy’s cousin, Danny Coe, 51, died of a heart attack just before New Year’s Eve.
“He was a big teddy bear,” she said. “He hugged everybody. He was an incredibly sweet man. He’s a big loss. At the funeral, they said they’d never seen so many grown men cry.”
A death that does not involve The Leader family, but is just as shocking, is the senseless murder of Ruth Maxine Musselwhite, who was strangled in her Memphis home last month.
Her body was found Dec. 19. Quinton Burks, a 24-year-old neighbor, has been charged with first-degree murder and burglary. He had allegedly stolen her jewelry and automobile. The car was later recovered and its theft linked to Burks.
Mrs. Musselwhite’s husband, Charles, Sr., 88, died in a nursing home last Wednesday.
“Why do bad things happen to good people?” said blues great Charlie Musselwhite after the terrible news about his parents.
As B.B. King wails, “How blue can you get?”
It’s been a sad holiday for many people. Hope yours was better.
As we were talking about the unusually high number of sudden deaths in The Leader family, word came that the 93-year-old mother of bluesman Charlie Musselwhite was strangled in Memphis during a home break-in. Musselwhite’s father died a few days later in a nursing home.
Christy Hendricks, who is an editor at The Leader, lost her aunt Franna Johnson of Benton when she was killed early last week in a car accident on Hwy. 67/167 north of Searcy. Johnson, who was 50, was buried Friday.
Gregg DeFrance, 50, of Searcy, had rear-ended two vehicles on the highway, including the Jeep that Mrs. Johnson was riding in with her husband, Matthew, 47, and two granddaughters, Greenley Jewell, 4, and Elizabeth Jewell, 1, both of Searcy.
Franna Johnson was ejected from the Jeep, along with Greenley, after it overturned several times on an embankment.
Franna was pronounced dead at the scene. Greenley was hardly hurt. Her sister and grandfather, who remained in the Jeep, had more serious injuries. They were all hospitalized overnight and then released.
Christy Hendricks says, “I think what I’ll remember most about my aunt Franna is her smile. She had a good smile, and I rarely saw her without one. I can’t remember one time when I saw her that she didn’t mention every one of her children, not just her two — Amy and Brad — but her two step-children also, Chad and Brooke. She was crazy over her grandchildren.
“Every time I saw her and my uncle Matt together they were happy. She was a good person, and you could see that just by looking at her. She was a tiny woman but she didn’t have to say one word for you to know she was in the room. She had presence. And a good heart.”
Mrs. Johnson wore a seat belt, but she was apparently ejected from the Jeep because she was a small woman.
DeFrance, the driver who caused the accident, was ticketed for reckless driving and no proof of insurance.
Matt Robinson, an account executive at The Leader, attended a memorial service for his cousin in Houston over the weekend after he was killed in a work-related accident early last week.
Robert Norton, 29, had been repairing a telephone line near an intersection when his Southwest-ern Bell truck was hit by a driver who had run a red light as the truck was leaving the repair site.
Norton was ejected from the truck and run over. He and his wife, Tina, had three children. Jan. 1 was the couple’s 12th wedding anniversary.
“He was always outgoing,” Robinson recalls. “He loved life and his family.”
Charges have been filed against the driver for running the red light.
Magen Henderson of Beebe, who is the daughter-in-law of John Henderson, The Leader’s sales manager, lost her cousin from Russellville on Christmas Eve. Matt Moore, who was only 30, had a heart attack while doing some household chores.
“They last spoke to each other the week before, making plans to see each other for the holidays,” John Henderson told us.
Staff writer Joan McCoy’s cousin, Danny Coe, 51, died of a heart attack just before New Year’s Eve.
“He was a big teddy bear,” she said. “He hugged everybody. He was an incredibly sweet man. He’s a big loss. At the funeral, they said they’d never seen so many grown men cry.”
A death that does not involve The Leader family, but is just as shocking, is the senseless murder of Ruth Maxine Musselwhite, who was strangled in her Memphis home last month.
Her body was found Dec. 19. Quinton Burks, a 24-year-old neighbor, has been charged with first-degree murder and burglary. He had allegedly stolen her jewelry and automobile. The car was later recovered and its theft linked to Burks.
Mrs. Musselwhite’s husband, Charles, Sr., 88, died in a nursing home last Wednesday.
“Why do bad things happen to good people?” said blues great Charlie Musselwhite after the terrible news about his parents.
As B.B. King wails, “How blue can you get?”
It’s been a sad holiday for many people. Hope yours was better.
TOP STORY >> Specialist could get axe
By JOAN MCCOY
Leader staff writer
Beebe economic development director Marjorie Arm-strong found out before Christmas that she might not have a job this year.
Beebe Alderman Janice Petray says she wanted to do away with Armstrong’s job last year during budget time but held off out of respect for those who opposed her, in-cluding the mayor and the economic development commission.
But this year, with the proposed annexation that would have allowed the city to grow de-feated at the polls, Petray sees no reason to keep an economic developer, especially considering that the city doesn’t have enough money to budget street maintenance.
Cutting the job Armstrong has held for three years would free up about $70,000. That may not be enough to make many re-pairs, but it would be a good start to-wards saving for those repairs, Petray says.
Economic development is a good idea that Beebe simply isn’t ready for, Petray said. Its streets are dirty and need to be repaired.
“People won’t even move here under these conditions,” Petray said. “We have no money in the street fund whatsoever and we haven’t in years. It would be nice if we had money and could do everything we want to, but we’re at the point that we need to prioritize.”
But Armstrong’s supporters are rallying behind her to make sure she keeps her job.
Last year at this time, members of the Beebe Economic Develop-ment Commission attended a council meeting after they learned that plans to not fund Armstrong’s job were in the works.
Jim Wooten, commission chairman, praised Armstrong’s accomplishments: building a Web site for the city’s new development plan, starting a community leadership training program and regaining the city’s status as an ACE community.
But so far, her attempts to attract even a major restaurant to the area have been fruitless.
“I think Marjorie has tried hard, but right now I don’t think we’re in any position for much development,” Petray said.
Wooten says that what everyone needs to remember is that economic development doesn’t happen overnight.
“Economic development is a long-term effort,” Wooten said. “It takes a long time to see tangible results.”
Although the city council voted unanimously more than three years ago to create an economic development commission and hire an economic director, the only money that has been put into economic development is Armstrong’s salary and bene its and office space at city hall.
It the council takes that away, the commission will be left with no one to take care of the details of economic development and the dream for a better Beebe might not survive, Wooten said.
The council meeting last month, when Petray announced her plan to find money for streets by doing away with Armstrong’s job, was an explosive one.
Mayor Donald Ward was a strong proponent of creating the position and was angered by talk of ending it.
The council must pass a budget by Feb. 1, so Armstrong says she probably has a job at least until that time. Whether she gets to keep it will depend upon how much influence her supporters have over the council.
Wooten said like last year, the commission intends to make sure the council knows how important it is that Armstrong stays.
Leader staff writer
Beebe economic development director Marjorie Arm-strong found out before Christmas that she might not have a job this year.
Beebe Alderman Janice Petray says she wanted to do away with Armstrong’s job last year during budget time but held off out of respect for those who opposed her, in-cluding the mayor and the economic development commission.
But this year, with the proposed annexation that would have allowed the city to grow de-feated at the polls, Petray sees no reason to keep an economic developer, especially considering that the city doesn’t have enough money to budget street maintenance.
Cutting the job Armstrong has held for three years would free up about $70,000. That may not be enough to make many re-pairs, but it would be a good start to-wards saving for those repairs, Petray says.
Economic development is a good idea that Beebe simply isn’t ready for, Petray said. Its streets are dirty and need to be repaired.
“People won’t even move here under these conditions,” Petray said. “We have no money in the street fund whatsoever and we haven’t in years. It would be nice if we had money and could do everything we want to, but we’re at the point that we need to prioritize.”
But Armstrong’s supporters are rallying behind her to make sure she keeps her job.
Last year at this time, members of the Beebe Economic Develop-ment Commission attended a council meeting after they learned that plans to not fund Armstrong’s job were in the works.
Jim Wooten, commission chairman, praised Armstrong’s accomplishments: building a Web site for the city’s new development plan, starting a community leadership training program and regaining the city’s status as an ACE community.
But so far, her attempts to attract even a major restaurant to the area have been fruitless.
“I think Marjorie has tried hard, but right now I don’t think we’re in any position for much development,” Petray said.
Wooten says that what everyone needs to remember is that economic development doesn’t happen overnight.
“Economic development is a long-term effort,” Wooten said. “It takes a long time to see tangible results.”
Although the city council voted unanimously more than three years ago to create an economic development commission and hire an economic director, the only money that has been put into economic development is Armstrong’s salary and bene its and office space at city hall.
It the council takes that away, the commission will be left with no one to take care of the details of economic development and the dream for a better Beebe might not survive, Wooten said.
The council meeting last month, when Petray announced her plan to find money for streets by doing away with Armstrong’s job, was an explosive one.
Mayor Donald Ward was a strong proponent of creating the position and was angered by talk of ending it.
The council must pass a budget by Feb. 1, so Armstrong says she probably has a job at least until that time. Whether she gets to keep it will depend upon how much influence her supporters have over the council.
Wooten said like last year, the commission intends to make sure the council knows how important it is that Armstrong stays.
TOP STORY >> Female police officers are in full force
By SARA GREENE
Leader staff writer
Nearly a quarter of the Jack-sonville Police Department’s force is female, more than any other local city, with 16 of the department’s 80 officers being women.
But other area cities are catching up.
“I wanted to be a police officer since I was little,” said Jacksonville officer Cobie Loftis, who said the worst part of her job is seeing how crime impacts children, which often makes her cherish her daughter Jodie, 10.
“Jodie doesn’t worry about my work. She wants to be a police officer when she grows up,” Loftis said.
For many women, like Jacksonville K-9 Officer Regina Boyd, becoming a police officer has been a goal since childhood. Her father worked for the Lonoke County Sheriff’s Depart-ment and as an officer in Ward, Austin and Cabot.
“I enjoy the excitement of it,” Boyd said. “It’s rewarding to see the outcome of getting the bad guys off the street.”
Boyd says her daughter, Tara, 13, is more interested in sports right now than becoming a third-generation police officer. Appreciation of athletics also runs in the Boyd family.
“I hunt, fish, ride horses and Tara’s on a traveling softball team so we spend lots of time together,” Boyd said.
Det. Kimberly Lett enjoys the excitement of working for the department.
“I like the adrenaline rush, kicking in doors to serve narcotics search warrants,” Lett said.
About a tenth of the Sherwood Police Departments’ 56 officers are women. According to Lt. Cheryl Will-iams, the department just hired its seventh female officer, Angel Wil-liams, who will be entering the police academy next week.
“We’re very proud of all our female officers,” said Williams, who has served on the Sherwood police force for the past 20 years.
Fellow female police officer, Sgt. Berny Russell, has 17 years on the force.
Other female officers in Sher-wood include Pam Hopkins, who serves as the resource officer at Sylvan Hills High School and Heather Cone, who works with the department’s Community Orien-ted Policing program.
There are also three female patrol officers including Miriam Carlisle, Jamie Spence and Beverly Hughes.
The Cabot Police Department has a force of 34 patrol officers and hired its fourth female officer, Kathryn Carpenter, on Dec. 16.
Female officers get the same respect as their male counterparts on the city streets according to Sgt. Dwayne Roper, public information officer for the Cabot Police Depart-ment. “A suspect is just as likely to ‘burr-up’ to a male officer as a female officer,” Roper said.
The Lonoke Police Department has two female officers, Cathy Stivers and Barbara Ferraro. The only female police officer on the Beebe police force is Freda Calla-han.
Leader staff writer
Nearly a quarter of the Jack-sonville Police Department’s force is female, more than any other local city, with 16 of the department’s 80 officers being women.
But other area cities are catching up.
“I wanted to be a police officer since I was little,” said Jacksonville officer Cobie Loftis, who said the worst part of her job is seeing how crime impacts children, which often makes her cherish her daughter Jodie, 10.
“Jodie doesn’t worry about my work. She wants to be a police officer when she grows up,” Loftis said.
For many women, like Jacksonville K-9 Officer Regina Boyd, becoming a police officer has been a goal since childhood. Her father worked for the Lonoke County Sheriff’s Depart-ment and as an officer in Ward, Austin and Cabot.
“I enjoy the excitement of it,” Boyd said. “It’s rewarding to see the outcome of getting the bad guys off the street.”
Boyd says her daughter, Tara, 13, is more interested in sports right now than becoming a third-generation police officer. Appreciation of athletics also runs in the Boyd family.
“I hunt, fish, ride horses and Tara’s on a traveling softball team so we spend lots of time together,” Boyd said.
Det. Kimberly Lett enjoys the excitement of working for the department.
“I like the adrenaline rush, kicking in doors to serve narcotics search warrants,” Lett said.
About a tenth of the Sherwood Police Departments’ 56 officers are women. According to Lt. Cheryl Will-iams, the department just hired its seventh female officer, Angel Wil-liams, who will be entering the police academy next week.
“We’re very proud of all our female officers,” said Williams, who has served on the Sherwood police force for the past 20 years.
Fellow female police officer, Sgt. Berny Russell, has 17 years on the force.
Other female officers in Sher-wood include Pam Hopkins, who serves as the resource officer at Sylvan Hills High School and Heather Cone, who works with the department’s Community Orien-ted Policing program.
There are also three female patrol officers including Miriam Carlisle, Jamie Spence and Beverly Hughes.
The Cabot Police Department has a force of 34 patrol officers and hired its fourth female officer, Kathryn Carpenter, on Dec. 16.
Female officers get the same respect as their male counterparts on the city streets according to Sgt. Dwayne Roper, public information officer for the Cabot Police Depart-ment. “A suspect is just as likely to ‘burr-up’ to a male officer as a female officer,” Roper said.
The Lonoke Police Department has two female officers, Cathy Stivers and Barbara Ferraro. The only female police officer on the Beebe police force is Freda Calla-han.
TOP STORY >> Water works is in business
By JOAN MCCOY
Leader staff writer
Cabot Water Works, the new name for the water and sewer departments that are now separated from the city and in the hands of an autonomous commission, opened this week with no problems.
“We’re up and running and doing business,” Tim Joyner, general manager of Cabot Water Works, said three days into the venture that was overwhelmingly approved by city voters more than a year ago.
Although the council has not divvied up the equipment in the public works department so, for example, the street department couldn’t try to claim a dirt mover paid for by water or sewer or those departments couldn’t claim a truck owned by the street department, Joyner said there have been no disputes over ownership.
The only real surprise was the two new employees with water maintenance that Mayor Stubby Stumbaugh hired last week, shortly before the commission took control.
Joyner said he would keep both of them since they did fill positions that were vacant.
Peggy Moss, human resources director for the city, said the equipment operator position had been vacant since Nov. 5, but the crewman position had been vacant only since Dec. 24.
Stumbaugh said there has been a high turnover in water and wastewater over the past year and some employees transferred to other departments before the takeover. The water department was down two equipment operators before he hired one last week.
“I just hated to leave them short-handed,” he said.
As expected, the city has not turned over the bank accounts for water and wastewater but did deposit operating funds in new accounts set up by Cabot Water Works.
The commission had hoped the city would turn over the existing accounts, but Dale Walker, the city’s finance director, said as soon as the bank statement comes in and Clerk-Treasurer Marva Verkler reconciles it, the balance in the accounts, not the accounts, will be turned over.
That everything went smoothly was not a surprise.
The commission learned last week that Joyner was ready for the Jan. 1 transition from city to commission control.
Commission member Don Keesee quizzed Joyner during the Thursday meeting called to develop a strategy for getting council approval of all the measures necessary in the takeover that no problems were expected.
“Can we take service calls? Can we make payroll? Can we buy gas for trucks? Can we fix a flat tire? Are we ready?” Keesee asked.
“We’re ready,” Joyner ans-wered. “I don’t see any problem.” Then with tongue in cheek, he added, “In fact, we got two more employees today.”
The commission and council still must agree on warranty deeds on the real estate and ownership of the equipment.
They also do not yet have control of the various contracts for water and sewer construction projects that are ongoing. But Keesee said during the meeting that he believes their attorney, Tad Bohannon, and City Attorney Clint McGue will be able to work out the details of that issue.
One of the measures the commission wants the council to agree to is a cooperation agreement which says essentially that the commission and city will work together to ensure that each ends up with what they are entitled to.
When the details of all the outstanding business will be worked out is unknown, because no date has been set for the commission and council to sit down together, but the council has said the separation will be completed by the end of January.
Leader staff writer
Cabot Water Works, the new name for the water and sewer departments that are now separated from the city and in the hands of an autonomous commission, opened this week with no problems.
“We’re up and running and doing business,” Tim Joyner, general manager of Cabot Water Works, said three days into the venture that was overwhelmingly approved by city voters more than a year ago.
Although the council has not divvied up the equipment in the public works department so, for example, the street department couldn’t try to claim a dirt mover paid for by water or sewer or those departments couldn’t claim a truck owned by the street department, Joyner said there have been no disputes over ownership.
The only real surprise was the two new employees with water maintenance that Mayor Stubby Stumbaugh hired last week, shortly before the commission took control.
Joyner said he would keep both of them since they did fill positions that were vacant.
Peggy Moss, human resources director for the city, said the equipment operator position had been vacant since Nov. 5, but the crewman position had been vacant only since Dec. 24.
Stumbaugh said there has been a high turnover in water and wastewater over the past year and some employees transferred to other departments before the takeover. The water department was down two equipment operators before he hired one last week.
“I just hated to leave them short-handed,” he said.
As expected, the city has not turned over the bank accounts for water and wastewater but did deposit operating funds in new accounts set up by Cabot Water Works.
The commission had hoped the city would turn over the existing accounts, but Dale Walker, the city’s finance director, said as soon as the bank statement comes in and Clerk-Treasurer Marva Verkler reconciles it, the balance in the accounts, not the accounts, will be turned over.
That everything went smoothly was not a surprise.
The commission learned last week that Joyner was ready for the Jan. 1 transition from city to commission control.
Commission member Don Keesee quizzed Joyner during the Thursday meeting called to develop a strategy for getting council approval of all the measures necessary in the takeover that no problems were expected.
“Can we take service calls? Can we make payroll? Can we buy gas for trucks? Can we fix a flat tire? Are we ready?” Keesee asked.
“We’re ready,” Joyner ans-wered. “I don’t see any problem.” Then with tongue in cheek, he added, “In fact, we got two more employees today.”
The commission and council still must agree on warranty deeds on the real estate and ownership of the equipment.
They also do not yet have control of the various contracts for water and sewer construction projects that are ongoing. But Keesee said during the meeting that he believes their attorney, Tad Bohannon, and City Attorney Clint McGue will be able to work out the details of that issue.
One of the measures the commission wants the council to agree to is a cooperation agreement which says essentially that the commission and city will work together to ensure that each ends up with what they are entitled to.
When the details of all the outstanding business will be worked out is unknown, because no date has been set for the commission and council to sit down together, but the council has said the separation will be completed by the end of January.
TOP STORY >> Budget is still issue to county officials
By JOHN HOFHEIMER
Leader staff writer
Although Pulaski County substations at Gravel Ridge and McAlmont have lost five road deputies between them because of budget cuts, Justice of the Peace Bob Johnson of Jacksonville says the only way he could support any new tax would be to address area law enforcement problems across the board.
Johnson, a Republican, said the county needs $24 million to $25 million a year to not only open the required number of jail beds and hire back jailers and deputies, but also to get people arrested, through the courts, into drug rehabilitation programs and to do intervention on the front end to keep people off drugs and out of the system.
Johnson said that a one-eighth or one-quarter-cent county sales tax increase could fund all the needed improvements, not just more jail beds and more deputies.
“We go to look at the long term,” Johnson said. “Can we do something real about crime? I’d support it if we could do something to stop these meth-heads. We have some crime issues that are severe.”
Johnson said the courts are backed up, the county coroner has ceded much of his responsibility to the state crime lab, which has reportedly been backed up two years in processing some evidence.
The county had to cut about $7 million from the $40 million worth of non-designated revenues for this year in order to balance the budget. Before the cuts, the county was slated to pick up about $19 million of the $22 million expense of running the jail, even though about 75 percent of those incarcerated in it are from Little Rock or North Little Rock.
“We ended up with two fewer deputies in each of the six districts,” said John Rehrauer, spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office. Gravel Ridge and McAlmont will have eight road deputies, not including supervisors, Rehrauer said.
“I don’t think there’s any question that there will be slower response and prioritizing of calls,” he said. “If it’s not an emergency, it’ll take longer to get there.”
“The feedback from the field is that they are running from call to call,” he added.
The Pulaski County Detention Center, which was reduced from 1,125 beds last year to 800 before settling at 880-bed capacity, is full now and will be full from now on, he said. The additional 80 beds became available when the cites within the county, including Jacksonville, Sherwood, Little Rock and North Little Rock, agreed to kick in one-time money to help. The facility is the only real lockup in the county.
Johnson said he supports the idea of a citizens task force to determine what is needed for the jail and law enforcement and how to fund it on a permanent basis.
“I don’t want to get involved in something without any teeth,” Johnson said. “This task force forming itself is good — the citizens that care trying to do something about the problem.”
Leader staff writer
Although Pulaski County substations at Gravel Ridge and McAlmont have lost five road deputies between them because of budget cuts, Justice of the Peace Bob Johnson of Jacksonville says the only way he could support any new tax would be to address area law enforcement problems across the board.
Johnson, a Republican, said the county needs $24 million to $25 million a year to not only open the required number of jail beds and hire back jailers and deputies, but also to get people arrested, through the courts, into drug rehabilitation programs and to do intervention on the front end to keep people off drugs and out of the system.
Johnson said that a one-eighth or one-quarter-cent county sales tax increase could fund all the needed improvements, not just more jail beds and more deputies.
“We go to look at the long term,” Johnson said. “Can we do something real about crime? I’d support it if we could do something to stop these meth-heads. We have some crime issues that are severe.”
Johnson said the courts are backed up, the county coroner has ceded much of his responsibility to the state crime lab, which has reportedly been backed up two years in processing some evidence.
The county had to cut about $7 million from the $40 million worth of non-designated revenues for this year in order to balance the budget. Before the cuts, the county was slated to pick up about $19 million of the $22 million expense of running the jail, even though about 75 percent of those incarcerated in it are from Little Rock or North Little Rock.
“We ended up with two fewer deputies in each of the six districts,” said John Rehrauer, spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office. Gravel Ridge and McAlmont will have eight road deputies, not including supervisors, Rehrauer said.
“I don’t think there’s any question that there will be slower response and prioritizing of calls,” he said. “If it’s not an emergency, it’ll take longer to get there.”
“The feedback from the field is that they are running from call to call,” he added.
The Pulaski County Detention Center, which was reduced from 1,125 beds last year to 800 before settling at 880-bed capacity, is full now and will be full from now on, he said. The additional 80 beds became available when the cites within the county, including Jacksonville, Sherwood, Little Rock and North Little Rock, agreed to kick in one-time money to help. The facility is the only real lockup in the county.
Johnson said he supports the idea of a citizens task force to determine what is needed for the jail and law enforcement and how to fund it on a permanent basis.
“I don’t want to get involved in something without any teeth,” Johnson said. “This task force forming itself is good — the citizens that care trying to do something about the problem.”
TOP STORY >> Zoning hearing attracts crowd
By JOAN MCCOY
Leader staff writer
Residents of Sun Terrace subdivision in Cabot will have to wait one more month for a decision from the planning commission about whether property on their side of Hwy. 89 will be rezoned from residential to commercial.
At the request of the developers and over loud objections from 120 or so residents, the planning commission took no action on the requested rezoning Tuesday night to allow developers time to put together a proposal for a planned unit development (PUD), which is essentially a rezoning request and site plan rolled into one.
The city council refused to act on the proposed rezoning during its December meeting after about 100 residents showed up to protest any commercial development on their side of Hwy. 89, across from Wal-Mart.
Residents also were strongly opposed to an entrance into the proposed 11-acre commercial subdivision off Rockwood, the only entrance into their subdivision.
The commission had already voted in December to recommend the rezoning to the council, but aldermen sent the rezoning back to the commission with the instructions that they wanted to see it as a PUD.
“It’s going to be hard to get a rezone of this magnitude without it,” Ron Craig, commission chairman, told the developers Tuesday night. “Unanswered questions make people nervous and make people scared. They make this commission nervous and scared.”
The developers told the commission that they didn’t comply with the council’s request because they believed they couldn’t. Since they intend to develop only one lot of the multi-lot subdivision themselves, they would have no control over what happened on the other lots, they said.
After discussing the problem with the commission, they decided that a PUD is possible and asked for time to design it.
If the commission had simply turned down the rezoning request as it was presented, the developers could not ask again for 12 months.
“Vote no and let’s go home,” one man called out.
The commission’s decision to grant the request to postpone their decision for one month drew jeers from the crowd.
“You didn’t do your job,” a man standing against the wall said.
“Y’all want to do a better job, y’all are welcome to come up here,” Craig shot back.
Matt Bell and John Moore, who plan to develop the property if it is rezoned, have scheduled a meeting with Sun Terrace residents at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the courtroom across from the council chambers in the city annex building.
A flyer about the meeting says the developers intend to be completely open about all plans for the 11.15 acres at the northwest corner of Hwy. 89 and Rockwood. That plan would improve traffic flow on Rockwood, the developers say.
Leader staff writer
Residents of Sun Terrace subdivision in Cabot will have to wait one more month for a decision from the planning commission about whether property on their side of Hwy. 89 will be rezoned from residential to commercial.
At the request of the developers and over loud objections from 120 or so residents, the planning commission took no action on the requested rezoning Tuesday night to allow developers time to put together a proposal for a planned unit development (PUD), which is essentially a rezoning request and site plan rolled into one.
The city council refused to act on the proposed rezoning during its December meeting after about 100 residents showed up to protest any commercial development on their side of Hwy. 89, across from Wal-Mart.
Residents also were strongly opposed to an entrance into the proposed 11-acre commercial subdivision off Rockwood, the only entrance into their subdivision.
The commission had already voted in December to recommend the rezoning to the council, but aldermen sent the rezoning back to the commission with the instructions that they wanted to see it as a PUD.
“It’s going to be hard to get a rezone of this magnitude without it,” Ron Craig, commission chairman, told the developers Tuesday night. “Unanswered questions make people nervous and make people scared. They make this commission nervous and scared.”
The developers told the commission that they didn’t comply with the council’s request because they believed they couldn’t. Since they intend to develop only one lot of the multi-lot subdivision themselves, they would have no control over what happened on the other lots, they said.
After discussing the problem with the commission, they decided that a PUD is possible and asked for time to design it.
If the commission had simply turned down the rezoning request as it was presented, the developers could not ask again for 12 months.
“Vote no and let’s go home,” one man called out.
The commission’s decision to grant the request to postpone their decision for one month drew jeers from the crowd.
“You didn’t do your job,” a man standing against the wall said.
“Y’all want to do a better job, y’all are welcome to come up here,” Craig shot back.
Matt Bell and John Moore, who plan to develop the property if it is rezoned, have scheduled a meeting with Sun Terrace residents at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the courtroom across from the council chambers in the city annex building.
A flyer about the meeting says the developers intend to be completely open about all plans for the 11.15 acres at the northwest corner of Hwy. 89 and Rockwood. That plan would improve traffic flow on Rockwood, the developers say.
TOP STORY >> Wildfires, Could they happen here?
By JOHN HOFHEIMER, RICK KRON AND SARA GREENE
Leader staff writers
Are wildfires like those spreading through Oklahoma and Texas possible in central Arkansas?
Yes, say local fire officials.
“And it’s getting worse every day,” said assistant fire chief Mark Mahan with the Sylvan Hills Fire Department.
The dry conditions, along with record-setting high temperatures, have caused the National Weather Service to issue a warning that “a high risk of accidental wildfires will exist across Arkansas over the next five to seven days.”
“It’s a tinderbox,” said Gene Johnson, who sometimes works a 12-hour shift at his day job, then gets summoned with other members of the South Bend Volunteer Fire Depart-ment to put out grass and woods fires escaped from burn barrels and leaf piles.
“Low humidity, wind, dry grass — that’s a recipe for disaster, Johnson said. “Humidity is in the teens. Anytime it’s below 60 percent, that’s serious.”
Johnson said he spent much of the holidays driving around the area telling people to put out fires in their burn barrels and leaf piles.
“We had about 15 fires in two days,” Johnson said, referring to the Christmas weekend, when people took advantage of time off to do chores such as burning debris and leaves.
Jacksonville’s fire department has already responded to numerous grass fires in the past week.
“The only thing saving us,” ex-plained Capt. Joe Bratton, “is the lack of large areas of brush within the city. But the county has a number of areas and we’ve already responded at least twice helping them control larger brush fires.”
Central Arkansas counties, along with three-fourths of the state, are under a burn ban as a combination of dry and warm weather makes the local landscape very combustible.
Dry conditions prompted Cabot Fire Chief Phil Robinson to issue a burn ban for the city more than a week ago.
“We’ve been out extinguishing fires ever since,” Robinson said.
“We’re nice about it. We give residents the chance to put their fire out or we can do it for them.”
Most of the calls have been Cabot residents burning brush and piles of leaves, Robinson said.
“With the way the wind was blowing (Monday), a spark from a cigarette thrown out of a car window is all it would have took to cause a fire,” Robinson said.
“Residents must heed the burn ban,” Mahan said. “We’ve got a lot of construction going on and a number of developers are clearing land and want to burn, but they will just have to wait.”
Even though cigarette butts are to blame for a number of the area’s small fires, especially in the highway medians, Mahan says barrel burning is even more dangerous.
“It takes just one ember,” he said.
Mahan, who is also the fire chief of a small department near Conway, said that department battled a brush fire over the weekend. “We nearly lost two houses, all because of someone burning a cardboard box in a barrel,” he said.
According to the National Wea-ther Service, most of Pulaski and White counties are suffering severe drought conditions, while Lonoke County is under a moderate drought. Robinson said it would take a significant amount of rainfall in Cabot for him to lift the burn ban.
“It would take several heavy rains to get down under the leaves to really soak the grass and ground good,” Robinson said.
Jim Grant, with the state forestry commission, said, “We’ve got burn bans in 54 counties.”
With two exceptions, everything west of an imaginary line running from Fulton County south to Ashley County is in high fire danger, while everything east generally is designated “moderate fire danger,” he said. The exceptions are White County, which has a high fire danger and Lonoke County, which has moderate fire danger.
Those designations are based on formulas that take into consideration the amount of moisture in fire fuel, the number of days since it last rained, the amount of moisture in the ground, the number of days since a fire and the number of recent fires, according to Grant. The fuel moisture content is gauged by putting standardized sticks out in the weather, then weighing them, he said. Grant said winds in the three-to-six mph range were of little concern, but that winds of 15 mph gusting to 30 can inflame a fire, and push it ahead, and on Monday the National Weather Service issued red flag warnings because of high winds. Windy days are possible again later in the week.
“I saw a report of this woman in Oklahoma, 10 minutes after she first smelled smoke, her house was engulfed,” Robinson said. “That’s how bad those fires are.”
That’s what concerns Bratton.
“We are all worried about how quick a wildfire can threaten a home,” he said Tuesday shortly after the department received another brush fire call.
Leader staff writers
Are wildfires like those spreading through Oklahoma and Texas possible in central Arkansas?
Yes, say local fire officials.
“And it’s getting worse every day,” said assistant fire chief Mark Mahan with the Sylvan Hills Fire Department.
The dry conditions, along with record-setting high temperatures, have caused the National Weather Service to issue a warning that “a high risk of accidental wildfires will exist across Arkansas over the next five to seven days.”
“It’s a tinderbox,” said Gene Johnson, who sometimes works a 12-hour shift at his day job, then gets summoned with other members of the South Bend Volunteer Fire Depart-ment to put out grass and woods fires escaped from burn barrels and leaf piles.
“Low humidity, wind, dry grass — that’s a recipe for disaster, Johnson said. “Humidity is in the teens. Anytime it’s below 60 percent, that’s serious.”
Johnson said he spent much of the holidays driving around the area telling people to put out fires in their burn barrels and leaf piles.
“We had about 15 fires in two days,” Johnson said, referring to the Christmas weekend, when people took advantage of time off to do chores such as burning debris and leaves.
Jacksonville’s fire department has already responded to numerous grass fires in the past week.
“The only thing saving us,” ex-plained Capt. Joe Bratton, “is the lack of large areas of brush within the city. But the county has a number of areas and we’ve already responded at least twice helping them control larger brush fires.”
Central Arkansas counties, along with three-fourths of the state, are under a burn ban as a combination of dry and warm weather makes the local landscape very combustible.
Dry conditions prompted Cabot Fire Chief Phil Robinson to issue a burn ban for the city more than a week ago.
“We’ve been out extinguishing fires ever since,” Robinson said.
“We’re nice about it. We give residents the chance to put their fire out or we can do it for them.”
Most of the calls have been Cabot residents burning brush and piles of leaves, Robinson said.
“With the way the wind was blowing (Monday), a spark from a cigarette thrown out of a car window is all it would have took to cause a fire,” Robinson said.
“Residents must heed the burn ban,” Mahan said. “We’ve got a lot of construction going on and a number of developers are clearing land and want to burn, but they will just have to wait.”
Even though cigarette butts are to blame for a number of the area’s small fires, especially in the highway medians, Mahan says barrel burning is even more dangerous.
“It takes just one ember,” he said.
Mahan, who is also the fire chief of a small department near Conway, said that department battled a brush fire over the weekend. “We nearly lost two houses, all because of someone burning a cardboard box in a barrel,” he said.
According to the National Wea-ther Service, most of Pulaski and White counties are suffering severe drought conditions, while Lonoke County is under a moderate drought. Robinson said it would take a significant amount of rainfall in Cabot for him to lift the burn ban.
“It would take several heavy rains to get down under the leaves to really soak the grass and ground good,” Robinson said.
Jim Grant, with the state forestry commission, said, “We’ve got burn bans in 54 counties.”
With two exceptions, everything west of an imaginary line running from Fulton County south to Ashley County is in high fire danger, while everything east generally is designated “moderate fire danger,” he said. The exceptions are White County, which has a high fire danger and Lonoke County, which has moderate fire danger.
Those designations are based on formulas that take into consideration the amount of moisture in fire fuel, the number of days since it last rained, the amount of moisture in the ground, the number of days since a fire and the number of recent fires, according to Grant. The fuel moisture content is gauged by putting standardized sticks out in the weather, then weighing them, he said. Grant said winds in the three-to-six mph range were of little concern, but that winds of 15 mph gusting to 30 can inflame a fire, and push it ahead, and on Monday the National Weather Service issued red flag warnings because of high winds. Windy days are possible again later in the week.
“I saw a report of this woman in Oklahoma, 10 minutes after she first smelled smoke, her house was engulfed,” Robinson said. “That’s how bad those fires are.”
That’s what concerns Bratton.
“We are all worried about how quick a wildfire can threaten a home,” he said Tuesday shortly after the department received another brush fire call.
Thursday, December 29, 2005
FROM THE PUBLISHER >> Big Jack Johnson: Great Bluesman
By Garrick Feldman
Leader publisher
Big Jack Johnson has been playing at Red’s Lounge in Clarksdale, Miss., for the last couple of weekends, and if you hurry down there, you might still catch the great bluesman tonight as he rocks the juke joint down with his powerful guitar playing and soulful singing that’s as deep and satisfying as anything you’ll hear today anywhere in the Delta.
Johnson, who is 65 and a native of Clarksdale, is a gifted guitar player and a fine singer who might remind you of other blues greats from the area — Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker or even Earl Hooker, who’d moved away about the time Johnson was growing up there, but he must have absorbed their music from their records and has honored their legacy with superb blues that mixes tradition with a contemporary sound.
Listening to him one recent evening after seeing him many times over the years — the first time at Memphis in May and then at Riverfest in Little Rock — I finally realized that Jack Johnson is surely the region’s greatest living bluesman and is as good as any of those blues giants from the past.
You can hear him for free at many blues festivals — including at an unannounced appearance last October at the Arkansas Blues and Heritage Festival at Helena with Lonnie Shields, an area native who came in from Philadelphia after several years’ absence, and you can also hear Johnson at the Sunflower Blues Festival in August .
But for $8 or so, you can often catch him at Red’s Lounge, a small juke joint where Big Jack and his band play facing the bar, and what a bargain: He plays three 45-minute sets from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. not far from where Muddy Waters made his Library of Congress recordings at the nearby train depot in 1942. Honeyboy Edwards, now 90 and living in Chicago, also made his LOC recordings and played on Fourth Street near Red’s around the same time and still plays now and then in Clarksdale.
Johnson, a former oil company truck driver, is as powerfully built as Muddy Waters with a voice to match, although Big Jack is probably the better guitar player.
His blues rocks and swings and moves you like a thunderstorm blasting through the night.
Big Jack’s playlist includes “If You Love Me Like You Do,” “Oh Darling,” “Since I Met You Baby,” “Have Mercy Baby,” “Rock Me Baby,” “That’s All Right Mama,” “Kansas City,” “Catfish Blues,” “Driving Wheel,” “Clarksdale Boogie” and much more.
If these songs don’t get you on your feet, better find a doctor to check your pulse.
This is American roots music at its best, born in the Delta and spread across the globe, copied by Eric Clapton, the Beatles and every rock group and lounge band from Bakersfield, Calif., to Moscow, Idaho, to Moscow, Russia.
Only nobody plays it better than Big Jack.
The first time we heard of Jack Johnson was when we walked into the Blues Museum in the old Carnegie Library in Clarksdale back in 1998, and the manager said “Off Yonder Wall” by the Jelly Roll Kings (Fat Possum Records) was the best CD he had for sale.
The manager, who obviously knew his music, had tipped us off to one of the great blues groups of the last 40 years. The Jelly Roll Kings consisted of Frank Frost on harmonica and keyboards, Sam Carr on drums and Big Jack Johnson on guitar.
Frost, a native Arkansan who was still living in Helena then, has since passed away. Carr, another Arkansan, lives across the river not far from the casino near Lula, Miss. Carr is 80 and is considered the best drummer in the Delta. Johnson joined the Jelly Roll Kings when he was just a kid, and the two still play together occasionally, but these days Big Jack has his own group or picks up a band when he travels around the world, which he does often.
(Carr, by the way, is the son of Robert Nighthawk, a brilliant slide guitarist who died in Helena in the late ’60s. Nighthawk, whose real name was Robert McCollum, and Frank Frost are buried in the same cemetery in Helena.)
“Off Yonder Wall” is one of the greatest blues CDs of all-time and was produced by the late Robert Palmer, a Little Rock native who wrote about music for Rolling Stone, Down Beat and the New York Times. He is also the author of “Deep Blues,” a fine history of Delta blues and its migration to the North.
We’ve been buying Jelly Roll Kings’ music ever since our first trip to Clarksdale, although we can’t afford everything they’d put out: A used LP version of “Rockin’ the Juke Joint Down” (Earwig Records) sells for $6,500 (that’s right) from a mail-order record dealer in Oregon.
When I asked Johnson if he might sell me an LP of “Rockin’ the Juke Joint Down” for $100, he said, “I wouldn’t sell it for $100,000.”
There are very few LP copies left, although Earwig’s CD version is available from the company’s Web site. Earwig also plans to reissue the vinyl version as a two-LP set next year. It will cost a lot less than $6,500.
Look for it and catch Big Jack live.
Big Jack Johnson Discography:
“Big Boss Man,” Frank Frost
“Rockin’ the Juke Joint Down,” Jelly Roll Kings
“Off Yonder Wall,” Jelly Roll Kings
“The Oil Man,” “Live in Chicago,” “Daddy, When Is Mama Coming Home?,” “All the Way Back,’’ “We Got to Stop This Killing,” “Roots Stew,” “The Memphis Barbecue Sessions,” Big Jack Johnson and the Oilers.
Leader publisher
Big Jack Johnson has been playing at Red’s Lounge in Clarksdale, Miss., for the last couple of weekends, and if you hurry down there, you might still catch the great bluesman tonight as he rocks the juke joint down with his powerful guitar playing and soulful singing that’s as deep and satisfying as anything you’ll hear today anywhere in the Delta.
Johnson, who is 65 and a native of Clarksdale, is a gifted guitar player and a fine singer who might remind you of other blues greats from the area — Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker or even Earl Hooker, who’d moved away about the time Johnson was growing up there, but he must have absorbed their music from their records and has honored their legacy with superb blues that mixes tradition with a contemporary sound.
Listening to him one recent evening after seeing him many times over the years — the first time at Memphis in May and then at Riverfest in Little Rock — I finally realized that Jack Johnson is surely the region’s greatest living bluesman and is as good as any of those blues giants from the past.
You can hear him for free at many blues festivals — including at an unannounced appearance last October at the Arkansas Blues and Heritage Festival at Helena with Lonnie Shields, an area native who came in from Philadelphia after several years’ absence, and you can also hear Johnson at the Sunflower Blues Festival in August .
But for $8 or so, you can often catch him at Red’s Lounge, a small juke joint where Big Jack and his band play facing the bar, and what a bargain: He plays three 45-minute sets from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. not far from where Muddy Waters made his Library of Congress recordings at the nearby train depot in 1942. Honeyboy Edwards, now 90 and living in Chicago, also made his LOC recordings and played on Fourth Street near Red’s around the same time and still plays now and then in Clarksdale.
Johnson, a former oil company truck driver, is as powerfully built as Muddy Waters with a voice to match, although Big Jack is probably the better guitar player.
His blues rocks and swings and moves you like a thunderstorm blasting through the night.
Big Jack’s playlist includes “If You Love Me Like You Do,” “Oh Darling,” “Since I Met You Baby,” “Have Mercy Baby,” “Rock Me Baby,” “That’s All Right Mama,” “Kansas City,” “Catfish Blues,” “Driving Wheel,” “Clarksdale Boogie” and much more.
If these songs don’t get you on your feet, better find a doctor to check your pulse.
This is American roots music at its best, born in the Delta and spread across the globe, copied by Eric Clapton, the Beatles and every rock group and lounge band from Bakersfield, Calif., to Moscow, Idaho, to Moscow, Russia.
Only nobody plays it better than Big Jack.
The first time we heard of Jack Johnson was when we walked into the Blues Museum in the old Carnegie Library in Clarksdale back in 1998, and the manager said “Off Yonder Wall” by the Jelly Roll Kings (Fat Possum Records) was the best CD he had for sale.
The manager, who obviously knew his music, had tipped us off to one of the great blues groups of the last 40 years. The Jelly Roll Kings consisted of Frank Frost on harmonica and keyboards, Sam Carr on drums and Big Jack Johnson on guitar.
Frost, a native Arkansan who was still living in Helena then, has since passed away. Carr, another Arkansan, lives across the river not far from the casino near Lula, Miss. Carr is 80 and is considered the best drummer in the Delta. Johnson joined the Jelly Roll Kings when he was just a kid, and the two still play together occasionally, but these days Big Jack has his own group or picks up a band when he travels around the world, which he does often.
(Carr, by the way, is the son of Robert Nighthawk, a brilliant slide guitarist who died in Helena in the late ’60s. Nighthawk, whose real name was Robert McCollum, and Frank Frost are buried in the same cemetery in Helena.)
“Off Yonder Wall” is one of the greatest blues CDs of all-time and was produced by the late Robert Palmer, a Little Rock native who wrote about music for Rolling Stone, Down Beat and the New York Times. He is also the author of “Deep Blues,” a fine history of Delta blues and its migration to the North.
We’ve been buying Jelly Roll Kings’ music ever since our first trip to Clarksdale, although we can’t afford everything they’d put out: A used LP version of “Rockin’ the Juke Joint Down” (Earwig Records) sells for $6,500 (that’s right) from a mail-order record dealer in Oregon.
When I asked Johnson if he might sell me an LP of “Rockin’ the Juke Joint Down” for $100, he said, “I wouldn’t sell it for $100,000.”
There are very few LP copies left, although Earwig’s CD version is available from the company’s Web site. Earwig also plans to reissue the vinyl version as a two-LP set next year. It will cost a lot less than $6,500.
Look for it and catch Big Jack live.
Big Jack Johnson Discography:
“Big Boss Man,” Frank Frost
“Rockin’ the Juke Joint Down,” Jelly Roll Kings
“Off Yonder Wall,” Jelly Roll Kings
“The Oil Man,” “Live in Chicago,” “Daddy, When Is Mama Coming Home?,” “All the Way Back,’’ “We Got to Stop This Killing,” “Roots Stew,” “The Memphis Barbecue Sessions,” Big Jack Johnson and the Oilers.
Wednesday, December 28, 2005
OBITUARIES >> 12-28-05
BETTY EVERETT, 60
Betty Ann Bishop Everett, 60, of Jacksonville passed away Dec. 26.
She was born on Feb. 12, 1945, in Conway to the late Johnny and Ora E. Talley Bishop. Also preceding her in death was her husband, Carl Howard Everett, Jr. and sister, Irma Dean Markham. Everett is survived by five children, Leslia Lynn Sherron of Ward, Carlia S. Rickett and Daniel B. Everett both of North Little Rock, Kent K. and Brent L. Clark both of Springfield, Mo.; two brothers, Marvin Bishop of Tupelo and Bud Bishop of Vilonia and seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be 10 a.m. today at Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Home Chapel followed by interment in Chapel Hill Memorial Park in Jacksonville. Funeral arrangements are under direction of Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Home.
WALKER HITE JR., 75
Walker Hite, Jr. 75, of Jacksonville died Dec. 23 at Baptist Springhill Medical Center in North Little Rock. He was born Dec. 8, 1930, in Gilmer County, W.V., to Walker Fred and Sylvia Turner Hite. In 1947 he joined the Air Force where he served during the Vietnam War with the 555 Red Horse Squadron.
On Dec. 8, 1950, he married Elsie Hogan in Valley Head, West Virginia. They have lived in Jack-sonville since 1971.
Hite retired in 1974 as chief master sergeant. He was a recipient of the Bronze Star and Merit-orious Service Award.
He was a member of the V.F.W. and Lions Club in Jacksonville. He was preceded in death by a sister, Marjorie Starr.
He is survived by his wife, Elsie of Jacksonville; three children, Susannah Simmons, Steve and wife, Jeanne Hite, Sherri and husband, Bradford Harris, all of Jacksonville; six grandchildren, Nathan Haynes, Cody Simmons, Kelsie Hite, Brandon Harris, Braden Harris, Bailey Harris; four sisters, Barbara Shiley of Ona, W.V., Wanda Corder of Akron, Ohio, Doris Long and Linda Gould, both of Valley Head, W.V.; brother, Harold Hite of Buckhannon, W.V.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m., today at Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Chapel. Entombment will follow at Chapel Hill Mausoleum. Full Military Honors will be conducted at the service. Funeral arrangements are under direction of Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Home.
NINA ADAMS, 89
Nina Grant Adams, 89, of Ward passed away Dec. 19 in Humble, Texas. Born Nov. 8, 1916, the youngest child of Robert and Bertha Grant of Ward, she was a woman loved and respected by many. She married Marvin E. Adams on Aug. 8, 1943, and lived the life of an Air Force spouse until Marvin’s retirement in 1964.
Making a loving, secure home for her family was her priority and she often made that home a refuge for military men serving away from their families.
In 1967, Nina and Marvin returned to her Arkansas roots and lived in North Little Rock. Several years later they built a home on the same piece of land that her family bought in Ward after the turn of the century. A member of Ward United Methodist Church, Ms. Adams also loved military chapels and faithfully attended and volunteered at the Protestant Chapel, Little Rock Air Force Base.
She also had been a working, involved member of the Ward Chamber of Commerce until shortly before her death.
She was preceded in death by her parents, two sisters, three brothers and her beloved husband, Marvin, to whom she was married for 54 years at the time of his death.
She is survived by her daughters, Sammy Harvey of Humble Texas, and Becky Tislow and husband, Terry, of Niceville, Fla.; five grandchildren, Carrie Tislow Jennings and husband Brent, of Cumming, Georgia, Angie Amyx and husband, Rex, of Pasadena, Texas, James Tislow and wife, Jennifer, of Pace, Florida, Doug Harvey and wife, Shawnda, of The Woodlands, Texas, and Scott Harvey and wife, Andrea, of Humble, Texas; 13 great-grandchildren, Allison Tislow, Jordan Amyx, Nicole Tislow, Kade Harvey, Carson Amyx, Jacob Harvey, Alexander Tislow, Brooks Jennings, Avery Jennings, Caitlyn Amyx and Alyssa Bryant.
She is also survived by her nieces Joan Boles, Betty Ann Russell, Dorothy Trickey and husband Gene, and Andrea White and husband Mart as well as a host of friends and loved ones.
Services will be held at 10 a.m. today at Westbrook Funeral Home, with burial to follow at Monk Cemetery in Ward.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial gifts be given in Nina’s name to Ward United Methodist Church, P.O. Box 50, Ward, Ark., 72176.
BETTY JO YATES, 60
Betty Jo (Davis) Yates, 60, of Beebe died Dec. 25. She was a housewife and a member of the Beebe VFW Post 7769, and a Baptist.
She was preceded in death by her parents, Bruce and Eva Taylor; two brothers, Charles and William Taylor, one sister, Peggy Robert-son, one stepson, Jason Yates and her husband of 28 years, Cecil Davis. She is survived by her husband of 14 years, Ron Yates; two daughters, Angie and Earl Lewis of Beebe and Kim and Jeremy Russell of Russellville; one stepdaughter, Suzanne Yates of Conway; one stepson, Andy Hornecker of Conway; four grandchildren, Brittany Daniel, Jay Mandrell, Courtney Lewis and Victoria Mandrell; three sisters, Lela Gary of Montgomery, Texas; Barbara Pearson of Little Rock, and Virginia Brighter of Little Rock.
Funeral will be 2 p.m. today at Westbrook Funeral Home in Beebe with burial in Providence Cemetery in Judsonia.
WAYMON EDDY SR., 86
Waymon Eddy Sr. 86, of Austin, died Dec. 24 in Cabot. He was born to the late George and Lola Kirkpatrick Eddy on Dec. 4, 1919, in the Zion Hill Community. He was preceded in death by his son, David Eddy; grandson, Anthony LaFave; brother, Wesley Eddy; and sister, Jeffie Shurley.
He is survived by his wife, Elsie Eddy; eight children: Waymon and wife Ione Eddy Jr., Paul and wife Barbara Eddy, James and wife Janice Eddy, Juanita and husband Edward Brown, Darrell and wife Peggy Eddy, Patricia and husband Lloyd Balentine, Kenneth and wife Ruth Ann Eddy, Debi and husband Tom LaFave; 37 grandchildren; 60 great-grandchildren; daughter-in-law, Gladys Eddy; brothers, Bill and Ben Holtrop.
Funeral services were held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Lighthouse Pente-costal Jesus Name Church in Beebe.
Burial followed at Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Cabot. Funeral arrangements by Moore’s Cabot Funeral Home of Cabot.
JAMES BALDWIN, 74
James David Baldwin, 74, died Dec. 24. He is survived by his wife, Betty Baldwin; children, Ronny Baldwin and Doris Baldwin of Cabot and Joyce Cernicky of Chicago; four step-children, Ricky Smith of Florida, Cindy Ward, Sara Willi-ford and Sandra Stout of Lonoke; 15 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were held Tuesday at Eastside Baptist Church with interment in Sunset Memorial Gardens, arrangements by Boyd Funeral Home, Lonoke.
MARY SMITH, 71
Mary Lucille Smith, 71, of Beebe, passed away on Dec. 25. She was preceded in death by her parents, Melton and Belle Stivers.
Survivors include her husband, Lemuel Smith of the home; daughters: Barbara Peeks of Beebe, Sandy Henson and husband Russell of Bald Knob, Kathy Stock-man of McRae and Brenda Hardin and husband Edward of Jackson-ville; son, David Smith and wife Shirley of Lonoke; brother, Melton Eugene Stivers of Greenbrier; sister, Gladys Sullivan of Lonoke; 16 grandchildren and fourteen great-grandchildren.
Services are scheduled for 1 p.m. today at Lighthouse Pente-costal Church in Beebe with interment to follow at Beebe City Cemetery. Arrangements by Thomas Funeral Service 713 South Second St. Cabot, 941-7888.
MARY MUNCIE, 73
Mary Frances Tarrow Muncie, 73, of Jacksonville, died Dec. 26. She was a loving and loyal wife and mother and attended the Assembly of God Church.
She was preceded in death by her husbands, Richard Tarrow and Oscar Muncie, and a daughter, Susan Cogen.
She is survived by one son, Richard Tarrow, Jr. of Jackson-ville; four daughters, Diannah Walburn of Beebe, Nona Graves of Jacksonville, Barbara Anderson of Beebe and Sheila Lindsey of Jacksonville; 12 grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Margaret Power of Texas and Edra Reaves of Jacksonville.
Family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. today at Westbrook Funeral Home, Beebe. Graveside service will be at 3 p.m. Thursday at Meadowbrook Memorial Gardens, Beebe.
Betty Ann Bishop Everett, 60, of Jacksonville passed away Dec. 26.
She was born on Feb. 12, 1945, in Conway to the late Johnny and Ora E. Talley Bishop. Also preceding her in death was her husband, Carl Howard Everett, Jr. and sister, Irma Dean Markham. Everett is survived by five children, Leslia Lynn Sherron of Ward, Carlia S. Rickett and Daniel B. Everett both of North Little Rock, Kent K. and Brent L. Clark both of Springfield, Mo.; two brothers, Marvin Bishop of Tupelo and Bud Bishop of Vilonia and seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be 10 a.m. today at Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Home Chapel followed by interment in Chapel Hill Memorial Park in Jacksonville. Funeral arrangements are under direction of Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Home.
WALKER HITE JR., 75
Walker Hite, Jr. 75, of Jacksonville died Dec. 23 at Baptist Springhill Medical Center in North Little Rock. He was born Dec. 8, 1930, in Gilmer County, W.V., to Walker Fred and Sylvia Turner Hite. In 1947 he joined the Air Force where he served during the Vietnam War with the 555 Red Horse Squadron.
On Dec. 8, 1950, he married Elsie Hogan in Valley Head, West Virginia. They have lived in Jack-sonville since 1971.
Hite retired in 1974 as chief master sergeant. He was a recipient of the Bronze Star and Merit-orious Service Award.
He was a member of the V.F.W. and Lions Club in Jacksonville. He was preceded in death by a sister, Marjorie Starr.
He is survived by his wife, Elsie of Jacksonville; three children, Susannah Simmons, Steve and wife, Jeanne Hite, Sherri and husband, Bradford Harris, all of Jacksonville; six grandchildren, Nathan Haynes, Cody Simmons, Kelsie Hite, Brandon Harris, Braden Harris, Bailey Harris; four sisters, Barbara Shiley of Ona, W.V., Wanda Corder of Akron, Ohio, Doris Long and Linda Gould, both of Valley Head, W.V.; brother, Harold Hite of Buckhannon, W.V.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m., today at Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Chapel. Entombment will follow at Chapel Hill Mausoleum. Full Military Honors will be conducted at the service. Funeral arrangements are under direction of Moore’s Jacksonville Funeral Home.
NINA ADAMS, 89
Nina Grant Adams, 89, of Ward passed away Dec. 19 in Humble, Texas. Born Nov. 8, 1916, the youngest child of Robert and Bertha Grant of Ward, she was a woman loved and respected by many. She married Marvin E. Adams on Aug. 8, 1943, and lived the life of an Air Force spouse until Marvin’s retirement in 1964.
Making a loving, secure home for her family was her priority and she often made that home a refuge for military men serving away from their families.
In 1967, Nina and Marvin returned to her Arkansas roots and lived in North Little Rock. Several years later they built a home on the same piece of land that her family bought in Ward after the turn of the century. A member of Ward United Methodist Church, Ms. Adams also loved military chapels and faithfully attended and volunteered at the Protestant Chapel, Little Rock Air Force Base.
She also had been a working, involved member of the Ward Chamber of Commerce until shortly before her death.
She was preceded in death by her parents, two sisters, three brothers and her beloved husband, Marvin, to whom she was married for 54 years at the time of his death.
She is survived by her daughters, Sammy Harvey of Humble Texas, and Becky Tislow and husband, Terry, of Niceville, Fla.; five grandchildren, Carrie Tislow Jennings and husband Brent, of Cumming, Georgia, Angie Amyx and husband, Rex, of Pasadena, Texas, James Tislow and wife, Jennifer, of Pace, Florida, Doug Harvey and wife, Shawnda, of The Woodlands, Texas, and Scott Harvey and wife, Andrea, of Humble, Texas; 13 great-grandchildren, Allison Tislow, Jordan Amyx, Nicole Tislow, Kade Harvey, Carson Amyx, Jacob Harvey, Alexander Tislow, Brooks Jennings, Avery Jennings, Caitlyn Amyx and Alyssa Bryant.
She is also survived by her nieces Joan Boles, Betty Ann Russell, Dorothy Trickey and husband Gene, and Andrea White and husband Mart as well as a host of friends and loved ones.
Services will be held at 10 a.m. today at Westbrook Funeral Home, with burial to follow at Monk Cemetery in Ward.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial gifts be given in Nina’s name to Ward United Methodist Church, P.O. Box 50, Ward, Ark., 72176.
BETTY JO YATES, 60
Betty Jo (Davis) Yates, 60, of Beebe died Dec. 25. She was a housewife and a member of the Beebe VFW Post 7769, and a Baptist.
She was preceded in death by her parents, Bruce and Eva Taylor; two brothers, Charles and William Taylor, one sister, Peggy Robert-son, one stepson, Jason Yates and her husband of 28 years, Cecil Davis. She is survived by her husband of 14 years, Ron Yates; two daughters, Angie and Earl Lewis of Beebe and Kim and Jeremy Russell of Russellville; one stepdaughter, Suzanne Yates of Conway; one stepson, Andy Hornecker of Conway; four grandchildren, Brittany Daniel, Jay Mandrell, Courtney Lewis and Victoria Mandrell; three sisters, Lela Gary of Montgomery, Texas; Barbara Pearson of Little Rock, and Virginia Brighter of Little Rock.
Funeral will be 2 p.m. today at Westbrook Funeral Home in Beebe with burial in Providence Cemetery in Judsonia.
WAYMON EDDY SR., 86
Waymon Eddy Sr. 86, of Austin, died Dec. 24 in Cabot. He was born to the late George and Lola Kirkpatrick Eddy on Dec. 4, 1919, in the Zion Hill Community. He was preceded in death by his son, David Eddy; grandson, Anthony LaFave; brother, Wesley Eddy; and sister, Jeffie Shurley.
He is survived by his wife, Elsie Eddy; eight children: Waymon and wife Ione Eddy Jr., Paul and wife Barbara Eddy, James and wife Janice Eddy, Juanita and husband Edward Brown, Darrell and wife Peggy Eddy, Patricia and husband Lloyd Balentine, Kenneth and wife Ruth Ann Eddy, Debi and husband Tom LaFave; 37 grandchildren; 60 great-grandchildren; daughter-in-law, Gladys Eddy; brothers, Bill and Ben Holtrop.
Funeral services were held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Lighthouse Pente-costal Jesus Name Church in Beebe.
Burial followed at Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Cabot. Funeral arrangements by Moore’s Cabot Funeral Home of Cabot.
JAMES BALDWIN, 74
James David Baldwin, 74, died Dec. 24. He is survived by his wife, Betty Baldwin; children, Ronny Baldwin and Doris Baldwin of Cabot and Joyce Cernicky of Chicago; four step-children, Ricky Smith of Florida, Cindy Ward, Sara Willi-ford and Sandra Stout of Lonoke; 15 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were held Tuesday at Eastside Baptist Church with interment in Sunset Memorial Gardens, arrangements by Boyd Funeral Home, Lonoke.
MARY SMITH, 71
Mary Lucille Smith, 71, of Beebe, passed away on Dec. 25. She was preceded in death by her parents, Melton and Belle Stivers.
Survivors include her husband, Lemuel Smith of the home; daughters: Barbara Peeks of Beebe, Sandy Henson and husband Russell of Bald Knob, Kathy Stock-man of McRae and Brenda Hardin and husband Edward of Jackson-ville; son, David Smith and wife Shirley of Lonoke; brother, Melton Eugene Stivers of Greenbrier; sister, Gladys Sullivan of Lonoke; 16 grandchildren and fourteen great-grandchildren.
Services are scheduled for 1 p.m. today at Lighthouse Pente-costal Church in Beebe with interment to follow at Beebe City Cemetery. Arrangements by Thomas Funeral Service 713 South Second St. Cabot, 941-7888.
MARY MUNCIE, 73
Mary Frances Tarrow Muncie, 73, of Jacksonville, died Dec. 26. She was a loving and loyal wife and mother and attended the Assembly of God Church.
She was preceded in death by her husbands, Richard Tarrow and Oscar Muncie, and a daughter, Susan Cogen.
She is survived by one son, Richard Tarrow, Jr. of Jackson-ville; four daughters, Diannah Walburn of Beebe, Nona Graves of Jacksonville, Barbara Anderson of Beebe and Sheila Lindsey of Jacksonville; 12 grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Margaret Power of Texas and Edra Reaves of Jacksonville.
Family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. today at Westbrook Funeral Home, Beebe. Graveside service will be at 3 p.m. Thursday at Meadowbrook Memorial Gardens, Beebe.
NEIGHBORS >> Road to Bethlehem is not less traveled
BY SARA GREENE
Leader staff writer
Just off Hwy. 31 in Lonoke County, on Bethlehem Road, is a four-mile community-wide project that displays the story of the birth of Jesus for motorists driving by.
The displays are illuminated every evening from 5:30 to 10 p.m. until New Year’s Eve.
For the past 19 years, nearly all the residents along Bethlehem Road have put up life-size Biblical figures and signs with Bible verses, made out of painted plywood in their yards. With sheep, shepherds, cattle and verses, nearly every yard has a unique display making up parts of the nativity scene.
“This year we added some more shepherds and two new signs out of Isaiah 9:6 verse,” Jeaneane Nipper said.
The Nipper home has the display of the Three Wise Men riding on camels towards Bethlehem.
Just down the road, another home has angels, both in the yard and one in flight suspended from the limbs of a nearby tree.
The final display, the manger scene, is on display at Bethlehem United Methodist Church, 2540 Bethlehem Road,
In the weeks leading up to Christmas, the church has had open houses featuring programs presented by the Lonoke County Council on Aging, Glen Poole and the Pearsons, Bethlehem Carriers of the Light, Christ Worship Center Church, The Hickory Hill Blue Grass Gospel Singers and the Gospel Tones.
“We had between 600 and 700 people during the open houses,” Nipper said.
To get to the “Christmas Road to Bethlehem,” take Exit 16A off Hwy. 67/167 in Cabot and get on Hwy. 321.
Take the Hwy. 321 Spur until it dead-ends at Hwy. 31.
Turn left on Hwy. 31 and then right on Bethlehem Road.
There will be a green street sign as well as a white sign with red letters advertising Bethlehem United Methodist Church.
The final display, the manger scene, is on display at Bethlehem United
Leader staff writer
Just off Hwy. 31 in Lonoke County, on Bethlehem Road, is a four-mile community-wide project that displays the story of the birth of Jesus for motorists driving by.
The displays are illuminated every evening from 5:30 to 10 p.m. until New Year’s Eve.
For the past 19 years, nearly all the residents along Bethlehem Road have put up life-size Biblical figures and signs with Bible verses, made out of painted plywood in their yards. With sheep, shepherds, cattle and verses, nearly every yard has a unique display making up parts of the nativity scene.
“This year we added some more shepherds and two new signs out of Isaiah 9:6 verse,” Jeaneane Nipper said.
The Nipper home has the display of the Three Wise Men riding on camels towards Bethlehem.
Just down the road, another home has angels, both in the yard and one in flight suspended from the limbs of a nearby tree.
The final display, the manger scene, is on display at Bethlehem United Methodist Church, 2540 Bethlehem Road,
In the weeks leading up to Christmas, the church has had open houses featuring programs presented by the Lonoke County Council on Aging, Glen Poole and the Pearsons, Bethlehem Carriers of the Light, Christ Worship Center Church, The Hickory Hill Blue Grass Gospel Singers and the Gospel Tones.
“We had between 600 and 700 people during the open houses,” Nipper said.
To get to the “Christmas Road to Bethlehem,” take Exit 16A off Hwy. 67/167 in Cabot and get on Hwy. 321.
Take the Hwy. 321 Spur until it dead-ends at Hwy. 31.
Turn left on Hwy. 31 and then right on Bethlehem Road.
There will be a green street sign as well as a white sign with red letters advertising Bethlehem United Methodist Church.
The final display, the manger scene, is on display at Bethlehem United
SPORTS >> Red Devils put away Hughes in first round
IN SHORT: Jacksonville used a fourth-quarter flurry to bury the pesky Class AA Blue Devils Tuesday night at JHS.
BY RAY BENTON
Leader sports editor
Jacksonville let class AA Hughes hang around for a long time. Despite several opportunities to put the pesky Blue Devils away, the Red Devils couldn’t do it until a final burst at the three-minute mark that led to an 86-65 victory.
Finally, after Hughes had cut another double-digit deficit to seven points at 69-62, Jacksonville coach Vic Joyner used a Hughes’ timeout to get his team’s attention.
There was no strategizing, no play was drawn up, just a serious challenge to his players’ collective heart. It wasn’t too long ago that Jacksonville blew a big lead in a loss to Russellville, and Joyner didn’t want to see it again.
This time, his team answered the challenge with furious relentlessness.
Hughes cut the lead to seven with 3:40 left in the game. Forty-one seconds later, it was over. Jacksonville scored nine straight points, the last seven of which came without the ball crossing halfcourt, in 41 seconds to make it 78-62 with 2:59 left in the game.
At the 2:20 mark, it was 82-62 and Hughes subbed out for the remainder of the game.
Jacksonville followed suit and cruised to victory.
“Hughes is a doggone good AA basketball team,” Joyner said. “We should have put them away earlier, but they were making it hard. They kept hitting shots and just wouldn’t go away. We still have to work on that killer instinct.
“I had to chew ‘em out and I’m glad they responded, but I can’t keep doing that. They’re going to have to find their own motivation. I don’t think we’re going to have that problem against the teams in our conference though. This game got a little easy at times and we lost focus. I don’t think we’ll be doing that in our conference.”
Jacksonville center K.C. Credit had a dazzling first half, with two alley-oop dunks and a reverse dunk in open court after picking the pocket of Blue Devil standout Kevin Brown.
Credit turned his ankle late in the second quarter. The injury wasn’t serious, but the 6-foot-5 post only played sparingly the rest of the game.
Senior guard Lavar Neely picked up where Credit left off, and turned in one his most complete performances of his stellar career.
Neely scored 26 points, dished out five assists, got four steals and grabbed four rebounds.
The team’s assist total was the highest of the season, with the Red Devils dishing out 17 total. Kajaun Watson matched Neely to lead the team with five.
Watson was also the second-leading scorer in the game with 17 points. Will Christian added 12 and Credit scored 10.
The win lifts the Red Devils to 7-2 on the season. They move on to play Mills University Studies in the second round at 8:30 p.m. tonight.
Mills demolished Catholic 53-25 in its first-round game.
The other first-round match-ups saw Little Rock Christian Academy decimate Conway 55-36, while Sylvan Hills upset No. 1 ranked Little Rock Parkview 53-51.
In girls action, the Lady Devils beat Dollarway 34-33. LR Hall beat Mills 47-43, Bentonville escaped LR Central 46-44, and McCellan defeated HWHC 54-50.
BY RAY BENTON
Leader sports editor
Jacksonville let class AA Hughes hang around for a long time. Despite several opportunities to put the pesky Blue Devils away, the Red Devils couldn’t do it until a final burst at the three-minute mark that led to an 86-65 victory.
Finally, after Hughes had cut another double-digit deficit to seven points at 69-62, Jacksonville coach Vic Joyner used a Hughes’ timeout to get his team’s attention.
There was no strategizing, no play was drawn up, just a serious challenge to his players’ collective heart. It wasn’t too long ago that Jacksonville blew a big lead in a loss to Russellville, and Joyner didn’t want to see it again.
This time, his team answered the challenge with furious relentlessness.
Hughes cut the lead to seven with 3:40 left in the game. Forty-one seconds later, it was over. Jacksonville scored nine straight points, the last seven of which came without the ball crossing halfcourt, in 41 seconds to make it 78-62 with 2:59 left in the game.
At the 2:20 mark, it was 82-62 and Hughes subbed out for the remainder of the game.
Jacksonville followed suit and cruised to victory.
“Hughes is a doggone good AA basketball team,” Joyner said. “We should have put them away earlier, but they were making it hard. They kept hitting shots and just wouldn’t go away. We still have to work on that killer instinct.
“I had to chew ‘em out and I’m glad they responded, but I can’t keep doing that. They’re going to have to find their own motivation. I don’t think we’re going to have that problem against the teams in our conference though. This game got a little easy at times and we lost focus. I don’t think we’ll be doing that in our conference.”
Jacksonville center K.C. Credit had a dazzling first half, with two alley-oop dunks and a reverse dunk in open court after picking the pocket of Blue Devil standout Kevin Brown.
Credit turned his ankle late in the second quarter. The injury wasn’t serious, but the 6-foot-5 post only played sparingly the rest of the game.
Senior guard Lavar Neely picked up where Credit left off, and turned in one his most complete performances of his stellar career.
Neely scored 26 points, dished out five assists, got four steals and grabbed four rebounds.
The team’s assist total was the highest of the season, with the Red Devils dishing out 17 total. Kajaun Watson matched Neely to lead the team with five.
Watson was also the second-leading scorer in the game with 17 points. Will Christian added 12 and Credit scored 10.
The win lifts the Red Devils to 7-2 on the season. They move on to play Mills University Studies in the second round at 8:30 p.m. tonight.
Mills demolished Catholic 53-25 in its first-round game.
The other first-round match-ups saw Little Rock Christian Academy decimate Conway 55-36, while Sylvan Hills upset No. 1 ranked Little Rock Parkview 53-51.
In girls action, the Lady Devils beat Dollarway 34-33. LR Hall beat Mills 47-43, Bentonville escaped LR Central 46-44, and McCellan defeated HWHC 54-50.
SPORTS >> Beyond driven: Jacksonville senior finds his inner drive on and off court
BY RAY BENTON
Leader sports editor
He says he’s shy, he speaks like an intellectual, he acts like a driven force, and those who know him say he’s all of those things. Airic Hughes, a senior guard for the Jacksonville basketball team, hasn’t seen much of the spotlight early in his career at JHS, but has made the most of his senior season.
He made himself known immediately, leading the team with 16 points in its season-opening win against North Little Rock. It was the first time in several years that Jacksonville had beaten the Charging Wildcats, and Hughes was the player of the game.
His efforts earned him The Leader’s Spotlight Player honor that week.
Immediately after that game, first-year Jacksonville coach Vic Joyner was asked where this kid came from, but Joyner wasn’t at all surprised by the play of his team’s smallest member.
“I don’t know why nobody’s heard of Airic Hughes,” Joyner said. “When I got here, it didn’t take long to see he has more drive, and is willing to work harder than anybody we got. He’s just driven. He wants to get better and he’ll do what you ask him to do in order to get better. I love coaching kids like that.”
Hughes toiled on the junior varsity team last year, but admitted he wasn’t happy there. Once Joyner came in, he knew what he had to do.
“Last year was like someone was putting restraints on me, but I didn’t get too upset about it,” Hughes said. “My grandma, I talk to her a lot about things, she told me to just be patient, keep working hard and trust in God. I trust her so I did what she said.”
Hughes and the rest of the Red Devils went through most of the summer not knowing who their coach was going to be, but it didn’t matter to Hughes.
“I just wanted to play. I was going to work as hard as I could all the time. So whoever the coach was, wouldn’t have a chance not to play me.”
When Joyner left rival North Pulaski to take over at JHS, his impact was also immediate, and good, according to Hughes.
“You could just tell the intensity was up,” Hughes said.
“You either come with it 100 percent, or get out. Offseason was grueling. We were lifting weights three times a day. We were running. He put a big emphasis on conditioning, but that’s good. That’s what we needed. He told us when we were running that we were going to be in better shape than the teams we were playing. He told us we’re going to see guys on the other team tired, bending over trying to catch their breath. He was right. We’ve seen that.”
The Red Devils are currently 7-2, which is miles ahead of where they were at this time last year, but it’s still not enough for Hughes, who says he’s not even close to satisfied.
“I’m not satisfied at all,” Hughes said.
“We could be playing a lot better. We’ve made too many mistakes. I’m one of them. I had a big turnover against Russellville that helped them come back on us in that game. We have to learn to put teams away. We didn’t do that. We should only have one loss.”
Hughes was referring to a 30-point drubbing the Devils took from Forrest City earlier this season, but he says he still wouldn’t be satisfied had they beaten the Mustangs. “I’m not satisfied until we hang a banner,” Hughes said. “There’s not any basketball banners in that gym. I want a championship banner, at least a conference, and hopefully also a state.”
Hughes understands the difficulty in getting a banner this season. The Red Devils play in the AAAAA-East, which some say is the strongest conference the state has seen in several years. But Hughes in undaunted by the monumental task of beating all those teams enough times to win that banner.
“The good thing is we have a legit shot to do it,” Hughes said. “I know what people are saying about the conference, but I know what they’re saying about us too. And we have a legit shot to do this.
“I’m glad the conference is considered that tough because that’s who you want to measure yourself against, the best.”
Hughes’ love for his school runs deeper than that of the ordinary student or fan. He hearkens back to his childhood days of watching DaShaun Ford run the court in the Devils’ Den, and remembers wanting to play in this gym back then.
Now that he’s there, he feels at home, especially with a big part of his home sitting in the top left corner of the bleachers of home games.
“My grandma comes to every game and sits in the same spot, and I love that,” Hughes said. “It’s comforting to look up there during a timeout or something and see her there. I already know she’s going to be there, but it’s nice to look up there and see her.”
The 5-foot-9 senior’s life runs deeper than basketball. He carries a 3.8 grade-point average and scored a 25 on his ACT. He’s currently hoping that his application to academically esteemed Baylor University is accepted.
He doesn’t know exactly what he wants to do in life, but he knows he wants to study history at Baylor. The processes of life have always carried a fascination for him.
“It’s always been interesting to me how people deal with major hardships,” Hughes said. “I think about stuff like that all the time. Why do cultures act like they do and have their practices and rituals and things like that? Why do rulers treat people like they do? I think about why there’s so much persecution.”
Hughes also understands that history can only tell him that those things happened, and that his questions teeter between history and philosophy. But he says he hasn’t come up with many answers.
“No I haven’t,” Hughes said. “Not any good ones.”
Although he says he doesn’t know what he wants to pursue as a career, he does already have at least one option in mind, an option that stems from his love and loyalty for Jacksonville.
“I don’t know what I want to do, but I know I wouldn’t mind coming back here and coaching Jacksonville,” Hughes said. “It’s where I feel at home. I just like it here.”
Leader sports editor
He says he’s shy, he speaks like an intellectual, he acts like a driven force, and those who know him say he’s all of those things. Airic Hughes, a senior guard for the Jacksonville basketball team, hasn’t seen much of the spotlight early in his career at JHS, but has made the most of his senior season.
He made himself known immediately, leading the team with 16 points in its season-opening win against North Little Rock. It was the first time in several years that Jacksonville had beaten the Charging Wildcats, and Hughes was the player of the game.
His efforts earned him The Leader’s Spotlight Player honor that week.
Immediately after that game, first-year Jacksonville coach Vic Joyner was asked where this kid came from, but Joyner wasn’t at all surprised by the play of his team’s smallest member.
“I don’t know why nobody’s heard of Airic Hughes,” Joyner said. “When I got here, it didn’t take long to see he has more drive, and is willing to work harder than anybody we got. He’s just driven. He wants to get better and he’ll do what you ask him to do in order to get better. I love coaching kids like that.”
Hughes toiled on the junior varsity team last year, but admitted he wasn’t happy there. Once Joyner came in, he knew what he had to do.
“Last year was like someone was putting restraints on me, but I didn’t get too upset about it,” Hughes said. “My grandma, I talk to her a lot about things, she told me to just be patient, keep working hard and trust in God. I trust her so I did what she said.”
Hughes and the rest of the Red Devils went through most of the summer not knowing who their coach was going to be, but it didn’t matter to Hughes.
“I just wanted to play. I was going to work as hard as I could all the time. So whoever the coach was, wouldn’t have a chance not to play me.”
When Joyner left rival North Pulaski to take over at JHS, his impact was also immediate, and good, according to Hughes.
“You could just tell the intensity was up,” Hughes said.
“You either come with it 100 percent, or get out. Offseason was grueling. We were lifting weights three times a day. We were running. He put a big emphasis on conditioning, but that’s good. That’s what we needed. He told us when we were running that we were going to be in better shape than the teams we were playing. He told us we’re going to see guys on the other team tired, bending over trying to catch their breath. He was right. We’ve seen that.”
The Red Devils are currently 7-2, which is miles ahead of where they were at this time last year, but it’s still not enough for Hughes, who says he’s not even close to satisfied.
“I’m not satisfied at all,” Hughes said.
“We could be playing a lot better. We’ve made too many mistakes. I’m one of them. I had a big turnover against Russellville that helped them come back on us in that game. We have to learn to put teams away. We didn’t do that. We should only have one loss.”
Hughes was referring to a 30-point drubbing the Devils took from Forrest City earlier this season, but he says he still wouldn’t be satisfied had they beaten the Mustangs. “I’m not satisfied until we hang a banner,” Hughes said. “There’s not any basketball banners in that gym. I want a championship banner, at least a conference, and hopefully also a state.”
Hughes understands the difficulty in getting a banner this season. The Red Devils play in the AAAAA-East, which some say is the strongest conference the state has seen in several years. But Hughes in undaunted by the monumental task of beating all those teams enough times to win that banner.
“The good thing is we have a legit shot to do it,” Hughes said. “I know what people are saying about the conference, but I know what they’re saying about us too. And we have a legit shot to do this.
“I’m glad the conference is considered that tough because that’s who you want to measure yourself against, the best.”
Hughes’ love for his school runs deeper than that of the ordinary student or fan. He hearkens back to his childhood days of watching DaShaun Ford run the court in the Devils’ Den, and remembers wanting to play in this gym back then.
Now that he’s there, he feels at home, especially with a big part of his home sitting in the top left corner of the bleachers of home games.
“My grandma comes to every game and sits in the same spot, and I love that,” Hughes said. “It’s comforting to look up there during a timeout or something and see her there. I already know she’s going to be there, but it’s nice to look up there and see her.”
The 5-foot-9 senior’s life runs deeper than basketball. He carries a 3.8 grade-point average and scored a 25 on his ACT. He’s currently hoping that his application to academically esteemed Baylor University is accepted.
He doesn’t know exactly what he wants to do in life, but he knows he wants to study history at Baylor. The processes of life have always carried a fascination for him.
“It’s always been interesting to me how people deal with major hardships,” Hughes said. “I think about stuff like that all the time. Why do cultures act like they do and have their practices and rituals and things like that? Why do rulers treat people like they do? I think about why there’s so much persecution.”
Hughes also understands that history can only tell him that those things happened, and that his questions teeter between history and philosophy. But he says he hasn’t come up with many answers.
“No I haven’t,” Hughes said. “Not any good ones.”
Although he says he doesn’t know what he wants to pursue as a career, he does already have at least one option in mind, an option that stems from his love and loyalty for Jacksonville.
“I don’t know what I want to do, but I know I wouldn’t mind coming back here and coaching Jacksonville,” Hughes said. “It’s where I feel at home. I just like it here.”
EDITORIAL >> Payday lenders Democrats' pals
It is the least surprising and most surprising news of the month: The payday-lending industry has settled more than $20,000 on the Democratic Party of Arkansas. The Arkansas Business newspaper reported that development this week.
Least surprising because it will come as a shock to no one to learn that an industry that gets its way in the legislative halls spends some money on political campaigns. The payday lenders, who give short-term loans to desperate people at triple-digit interest rates, got a law passed making their operations legal in Arkansas, and they have withstood meager efforts to get it repealed. The media could compile similar reports on the generosity of hundreds of other business interests that have thrived when laws are made or regulations adopted. Money, sadly, is the grease that keeps the wheels of government turning.
Most surprising because if any person or entity ought to be wary of contributions from the payday lenders it is the Democratic Party, which prides itself upon being the tribune of working people and the poor, the victims of the wretched practices of the usurious lenders.
It will be remembered that the former Attorney General and now U.S. Senator Mark Pryor took $14,000 from the lending companies when he ran for attorney general in 1998 and then took a hands-off view of the payday-lending legislation when people sought his official opinion on it as the legislature was passing it in 1999. He would not offer his opinion on the obvious: The big fees charged to people who would get the speedy loans amounted to interest and would violate the state’s constitutional bar to usurious interest on any kind of debt. Pryor insisted time and again that the big gifts to his campaign had not influenced his implied favor for the lenders’ legal position. Well, Pryor won anyway but the coincidence of the money and his stand robbed his campaign of much ardor.
It is now a problem for Attorney General Mike Beebe, who is running for governor. Beebe is obliged officially to defend the law empowering the lenders to charge the exorbitant rates because the attorney general defends statutes when they are challenged. But the sizable gifts to the party — will there be more? — raise doubts about Beebe’s rectitude and his attitude about this working-class issue. He is apt to be the principal beneficiary of the money as the party’s standard-bearer.
A Pulaski County trial judge has upheld the constitutionality of the law and it will be appealed to the Arkansas Supreme Court, again. Let us hope that the court advances the case and makes the industry’s political slush moot by the 2006 election. Meantime, there would be nothing wrong with the attorney general saying that he believes sky-is-the-limit loans are rotten, whatever he considers his duty to be in defending the law’s constitutionality.
Least surprising because it will come as a shock to no one to learn that an industry that gets its way in the legislative halls spends some money on political campaigns. The payday lenders, who give short-term loans to desperate people at triple-digit interest rates, got a law passed making their operations legal in Arkansas, and they have withstood meager efforts to get it repealed. The media could compile similar reports on the generosity of hundreds of other business interests that have thrived when laws are made or regulations adopted. Money, sadly, is the grease that keeps the wheels of government turning.
Most surprising because if any person or entity ought to be wary of contributions from the payday lenders it is the Democratic Party, which prides itself upon being the tribune of working people and the poor, the victims of the wretched practices of the usurious lenders.
It will be remembered that the former Attorney General and now U.S. Senator Mark Pryor took $14,000 from the lending companies when he ran for attorney general in 1998 and then took a hands-off view of the payday-lending legislation when people sought his official opinion on it as the legislature was passing it in 1999. He would not offer his opinion on the obvious: The big fees charged to people who would get the speedy loans amounted to interest and would violate the state’s constitutional bar to usurious interest on any kind of debt. Pryor insisted time and again that the big gifts to his campaign had not influenced his implied favor for the lenders’ legal position. Well, Pryor won anyway but the coincidence of the money and his stand robbed his campaign of much ardor.
It is now a problem for Attorney General Mike Beebe, who is running for governor. Beebe is obliged officially to defend the law empowering the lenders to charge the exorbitant rates because the attorney general defends statutes when they are challenged. But the sizable gifts to the party — will there be more? — raise doubts about Beebe’s rectitude and his attitude about this working-class issue. He is apt to be the principal beneficiary of the money as the party’s standard-bearer.
A Pulaski County trial judge has upheld the constitutionality of the law and it will be appealed to the Arkansas Supreme Court, again. Let us hope that the court advances the case and makes the industry’s political slush moot by the 2006 election. Meantime, there would be nothing wrong with the attorney general saying that he believes sky-is-the-limit loans are rotten, whatever he considers his duty to be in defending the law’s constitutionality.
EDITORIAL>>Holiday spirit missing in D.C.
Christmas in the Year of Our Lord 2005 in Washington, D.C., finds little children, the sick, the meek and the poor in spirit more out of fashion than ever before in our nation’s capital.
The disciples are decidedly out of fashion, too, having been replaced by the less sentimental Grover Norquist and Ayn Rand.
Working into the night Wednesday, the Senate voted 51-50 for legislation that was called a deficit-reduction package because over five years it will reduce federal spending in a few programs by $39.7 billion, a trifle over 2 percent of the projected deficits over that period.
It would come out of what — corporate subsidies, investor entitlements, defense procurement?
No, it will primarily come from the neediest Americans: the elderly, the disabled and those who depend on Medicaid for their treatment and medicine. Some $12.6 billion would come from loan guarantees that help kids from working families go to college.
The Senate at least eliminated far more punitive measures against the poor and elderly that Tom DeLay’s House of Representatives had crafted and that President Bush wanted.
Still, enough Republicans refused to go along with the cuts that Vice President Cheney had to cut short his celebratory tour of the war zones so that he could cast a tie-breaking vote for the reconciliation bill.
Sen. Bill Frist, the majority leader, said the bill was a down-payment on the Republican promise to curb deficit spending.
The package was put together to blunt criticism that the GOP had become the party of deficits and fiscal doom.
Soon we will see very quietly the fruits of its work in our neighborhoods.
But don’t expect to see the deficit shrink. That is because of the other half of Congress’ seasonal blessings upon the country. To avoid the obvious judgment that the government was taking from the poor and giving to the rich, the Republican leadership separated a $70 billion package of tax cuts for corporations and well-to-do Americans, including future reductions in tax rates on stock dividends and other investment profits. They will pass it after the first of the year. Cheney’s vote may be needed then, too.
The net result by 2010 will be not a deficit reduction of $39.7 billion but an additional $30.3 billion of debt.
Senators Blanche Lincoln, who has sometimes shown a fondness for tax cuts for the super-rich, and Mark Pryor were targeted by the Republicans, but both voted against the fake deficit plan. Lincoln said she did not want people with disabilities and children to foot the bill for big tax cuts for the wealthy.
May the blessings of the season be upon them.
The disciples are decidedly out of fashion, too, having been replaced by the less sentimental Grover Norquist and Ayn Rand.
Working into the night Wednesday, the Senate voted 51-50 for legislation that was called a deficit-reduction package because over five years it will reduce federal spending in a few programs by $39.7 billion, a trifle over 2 percent of the projected deficits over that period.
It would come out of what — corporate subsidies, investor entitlements, defense procurement?
No, it will primarily come from the neediest Americans: the elderly, the disabled and those who depend on Medicaid for their treatment and medicine. Some $12.6 billion would come from loan guarantees that help kids from working families go to college.
The Senate at least eliminated far more punitive measures against the poor and elderly that Tom DeLay’s House of Representatives had crafted and that President Bush wanted.
Still, enough Republicans refused to go along with the cuts that Vice President Cheney had to cut short his celebratory tour of the war zones so that he could cast a tie-breaking vote for the reconciliation bill.
Sen. Bill Frist, the majority leader, said the bill was a down-payment on the Republican promise to curb deficit spending.
The package was put together to blunt criticism that the GOP had become the party of deficits and fiscal doom.
Soon we will see very quietly the fruits of its work in our neighborhoods.
But don’t expect to see the deficit shrink. That is because of the other half of Congress’ seasonal blessings upon the country. To avoid the obvious judgment that the government was taking from the poor and giving to the rich, the Republican leadership separated a $70 billion package of tax cuts for corporations and well-to-do Americans, including future reductions in tax rates on stock dividends and other investment profits. They will pass it after the first of the year. Cheney’s vote may be needed then, too.
The net result by 2010 will be not a deficit reduction of $39.7 billion but an additional $30.3 billion of debt.
Senators Blanche Lincoln, who has sometimes shown a fondness for tax cuts for the super-rich, and Mark Pryor were targeted by the Republicans, but both voted against the fake deficit plan. Lincoln said she did not want people with disabilities and children to foot the bill for big tax cuts for the wealthy.
May the blessings of the season be upon them.
TOP STORY >> Home invasion nightmare
IN SHORT: Two intruders in ski masks menace residents in their Cabot home a couple of days before Christmas, shooting a man in the shoulder before fleeing on foot.
BY RICK KRON
Leader staff writer
At first, Marsha Bailer thought the two men in ski masks standing in the front room of her Cabot house telling her and her family to get down on the floor were jokesters.
“I looked at them real hard,” she said, “trying to figure out who they were.”
But it didn’t take long for Marsha Bailer to discover last Thursday’s home invasion was no joking matter.
One of the two intruders ended up shooting her husband, Michael, in the shoulder before fleeing on foot from the Bailer residence at 254 Gray-hawk Cove.
Marsha Bailer said she had just gotten home from work and she, Michael, and their 2-year-old son were sitting down to dinner when the two men barged in.
“Michael told them to take whatever they wanted, but to leave us alone,” Marsha Bailer said. “When they started to get out duct tape, Michael went berserk. He threw a kitchen chair at them and then picked up the coffee table and pushed them out of the house,” she explained.
Marsha Bailer said her husband also poked one of the suspects in the eye and grabbed the other by his belt and threw him off the porch.
While pushing the suspects out of the house, one of them fired a .25-caliber pistol five times. One of the bullets struck Michael Bailer in the left shoulder.
As Michael Bailer went after the suspects, Marsha Bailer scooped up their 2-year-old son and hid in a corner. When she heard the shots fired, she ran out the back door with her son, screaming 911, she said.
“Luckily,” she said, “a neighbor was taking his trash out and immediately called 911,” Marsha Bailer said.
Once outside, the suspects fled down the street, and Michael Bailer went to his truck to follow them and that’s when he noticed he had been shot. “I’m just so proud of him,” Marsha said. “But I’m still concerned that these men are still out there. I want everyone to be aware.”
The Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office is handling the case because the Bailer’s live just outside the city limits of Cabot.
The sheriff’s office brought out canines Tuesday but the dogs were unable to pick up any scent.
Sheriff’s investigators have confirmed that five shots were fired in the home and one went through the coffee table.
The bullet that struck Michael Bailer entered the front of his left shoulder and exited out the back. He was taken to Rebsamen Medical Center where he was treated and released.
The suspects are described as white males. One is about 6-feet tall with blonde hair and a mustache. The other was a few inches shorter. The pair had on ski masks, but one didn’t have it pulled down all the way, and were wearing gloves.
The Bailers have no idea why they were singled out.
Sgt. Ruth Baker, with the Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office, said they have leads that they are working on, but would appreciate anyone with additional information to call the sheriff’s office at 676-3000.
BY RICK KRON
Leader staff writer
At first, Marsha Bailer thought the two men in ski masks standing in the front room of her Cabot house telling her and her family to get down on the floor were jokesters.
“I looked at them real hard,” she said, “trying to figure out who they were.”
But it didn’t take long for Marsha Bailer to discover last Thursday’s home invasion was no joking matter.
One of the two intruders ended up shooting her husband, Michael, in the shoulder before fleeing on foot from the Bailer residence at 254 Gray-hawk Cove.
Marsha Bailer said she had just gotten home from work and she, Michael, and their 2-year-old son were sitting down to dinner when the two men barged in.
“Michael told them to take whatever they wanted, but to leave us alone,” Marsha Bailer said. “When they started to get out duct tape, Michael went berserk. He threw a kitchen chair at them and then picked up the coffee table and pushed them out of the house,” she explained.
Marsha Bailer said her husband also poked one of the suspects in the eye and grabbed the other by his belt and threw him off the porch.
While pushing the suspects out of the house, one of them fired a .25-caliber pistol five times. One of the bullets struck Michael Bailer in the left shoulder.
As Michael Bailer went after the suspects, Marsha Bailer scooped up their 2-year-old son and hid in a corner. When she heard the shots fired, she ran out the back door with her son, screaming 911, she said.
“Luckily,” she said, “a neighbor was taking his trash out and immediately called 911,” Marsha Bailer said.
Once outside, the suspects fled down the street, and Michael Bailer went to his truck to follow them and that’s when he noticed he had been shot. “I’m just so proud of him,” Marsha said. “But I’m still concerned that these men are still out there. I want everyone to be aware.”
The Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office is handling the case because the Bailer’s live just outside the city limits of Cabot.
The sheriff’s office brought out canines Tuesday but the dogs were unable to pick up any scent.
Sheriff’s investigators have confirmed that five shots were fired in the home and one went through the coffee table.
The bullet that struck Michael Bailer entered the front of his left shoulder and exited out the back. He was taken to Rebsamen Medical Center where he was treated and released.
The suspects are described as white males. One is about 6-feet tall with blonde hair and a mustache. The other was a few inches shorter. The pair had on ski masks, but one didn’t have it pulled down all the way, and were wearing gloves.
The Bailers have no idea why they were singled out.
Sgt. Ruth Baker, with the Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office, said they have leads that they are working on, but would appreciate anyone with additional information to call the sheriff’s office at 676-3000.
FROM THE PUBLISHER >> How bodies come home from Iraq
BY GARRICK FELDMAN
Leader publisher
Editor's Note: Relatives of soldiers killed in Iraq are often surprised to find out that their loved ones are returned home on commercial airplanes. This column first appeared here on May 26, 2004.
A couple of weeks ago, passengers on an airplane flying into Little Rock heard a pilot telling them that an officer was escorting home a soldier returning from Iraq.
When the passengers stood up after they landed late at night, they could see an Army officer in the front of the plane, but there wasn’t a soldier with him.
Some of the passengers must have realized why the returning soldier wasn’t sitting with the passengers. He was coming home in a casket.
An honor guard waited for the arrival of Sgt. Hesley Box, Jr., whose casket was lowered from the cargo area out of view of the passengers.
Because of the ceremony, it took a while for the luggage to arrive at the baggage area, but most of the passengers had no idea why their bags were delayed.
The soldier was a member of the Arkansas National Guard’s 39th Infantry Brigade based in Little Rock, which has lost nine members this spring, the highest of any Guard unit in Iraq.
Three other Arkansans assigned to other units have also been killed in Iraq. They come from all walks of life and from most parts of the state, and they had no idea when they went off to war back in March and April that they would join the rising toll of American casualties there.
The number of dead is ap-proaching 800, although only a couple of weeks ago, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz was under the impression that figure was about half that many.
Apparently he hadn’t been checking his daily briefings that land on his desk.
The 39th Brigade, also known as the Arkansas Brigade, is special. “They’ve performed courageously in the face of insurmountable odds,” Staff Sgt. Mark Starr of North Little Rock told the Associated Press.
Starr survived an attack on his camp which killed four Arkansans and almost killed him.
For one thing, you won’t catch the 39th Brigade abusing prisoners.
“You see these pictures of Abu Ghraib in that prison. I tell you that would never happen in the 39th Battalion. They have a deep sense of obligation to the Iraqi people.”
But Starr, who is recovering from his wounds in his North Little Rock home, is critical of the way the war has been run since Saddam Hussein was overthrown.
“I’m very disappointed with the civilian administration,” Starr told the AP. “I feel this administration did not have a plan for the occupation after the war.”
“This president landed on an aircraft carrier,” Starr continued, “and he said combat operations were over, and it wasn’t over. The war is actually starting.”
(Postscript: U.S. combat deaths in Iraq now stand at 2,175.)
Leader publisher
Editor's Note: Relatives of soldiers killed in Iraq are often surprised to find out that their loved ones are returned home on commercial airplanes. This column first appeared here on May 26, 2004.
A couple of weeks ago, passengers on an airplane flying into Little Rock heard a pilot telling them that an officer was escorting home a soldier returning from Iraq.
When the passengers stood up after they landed late at night, they could see an Army officer in the front of the plane, but there wasn’t a soldier with him.
Some of the passengers must have realized why the returning soldier wasn’t sitting with the passengers. He was coming home in a casket.
An honor guard waited for the arrival of Sgt. Hesley Box, Jr., whose casket was lowered from the cargo area out of view of the passengers.
Because of the ceremony, it took a while for the luggage to arrive at the baggage area, but most of the passengers had no idea why their bags were delayed.
The soldier was a member of the Arkansas National Guard’s 39th Infantry Brigade based in Little Rock, which has lost nine members this spring, the highest of any Guard unit in Iraq.
Three other Arkansans assigned to other units have also been killed in Iraq. They come from all walks of life and from most parts of the state, and they had no idea when they went off to war back in March and April that they would join the rising toll of American casualties there.
The number of dead is ap-proaching 800, although only a couple of weeks ago, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz was under the impression that figure was about half that many.
Apparently he hadn’t been checking his daily briefings that land on his desk.
The 39th Brigade, also known as the Arkansas Brigade, is special. “They’ve performed courageously in the face of insurmountable odds,” Staff Sgt. Mark Starr of North Little Rock told the Associated Press.
Starr survived an attack on his camp which killed four Arkansans and almost killed him.
For one thing, you won’t catch the 39th Brigade abusing prisoners.
“You see these pictures of Abu Ghraib in that prison. I tell you that would never happen in the 39th Battalion. They have a deep sense of obligation to the Iraqi people.”
But Starr, who is recovering from his wounds in his North Little Rock home, is critical of the way the war has been run since Saddam Hussein was overthrown.
“I’m very disappointed with the civilian administration,” Starr told the AP. “I feel this administration did not have a plan for the occupation after the war.”
“This president landed on an aircraft carrier,” Starr continued, “and he said combat operations were over, and it wasn’t over. The war is actually starting.”
(Postscript: U.S. combat deaths in Iraq now stand at 2,175.)
TOP STORY >> New start for Cabot utility as '06 nears
IN SHORT: The city council approves just enough to meet its Jan. 1 takeover deadline.
BY JOAN MCCOY
Leader staff writer
The consensus of the Cabot City Council Tuesday night was that the devil was in the details of severing the water and sewer departments from the city and turning them over to a commission to run.
So to make it happen by Jan. 1 as the ordinance they passed earlier this year required, they left such details as rights-of-way and franchise fees to be worked out within the next 30 days.
The council met in special session with a full agenda of items relating to separating the city utilities from city control, but only passed the three necessary to make sure the commission would take over Jan. 1 — an ordinance cleaning up the language of Ordinance 32 which created the new commission, an ordinance setting the water and sewer rates the commission will charge, which are the same as the existing rates, and an agreement by which the commission will pay for the services of the city’s human services department to perform human resource functions for the commission’s employees.
Mayor Stubby Stumbaugh also assured the commission that control of the water and wastewater systems included control of the money.
Commission members knew going into the meeting that it might not be easy to get the entire package passed. Commissioner Bill Cypert learned earlier in the day that Alderman David Polantz would oppose turning the utilities over to the commission on Jan. 1 because he had not had time to look over the 200 pages of documents that would help make it happen. Polantz proposed postponing the transfer until Feb. 1.
But the commission had been working overtime for months to get ready for the transfer of control. To not take over would cause problems with accounting, billing and personnel records, Tad Bohannon, the commission’s attorney, said.
Bohannon told the commission during a 45-minute-long meeting before the council met that if the council took no action, the commission would still be in control of the utilities Jan. 1. But whether Com-munity Bank would turn over the accounts was an unknown.
So the commission went into the meeting prepared for Bohannon to argue their case. J.M. Park, commission chairman, said the crucial issues were “getting control of the purse strings and getting control of the personnel. If we get the purse strings and we get the personnel, we can operate,” he said, and the full commission agreed those things were what they would try to get.
But getting the council to hand them over took one and a half hours.
Stumbaugh said he appreciated all the work the commission had done to get ready for the takeover, but some of the details were problematic. If the council voted to pass them, he would veto them, he said.
Alderman Odis Waymack, who had pushed to put the commission in control, suggested passing only what was needed and Alderman Patrick Hutton listed the three that would be voted on.
Polantz voted no for all three as well as for the emergency clauses that made them take effect immediately instead of in 30 days. “This is an extremely complicated event,” he said early in the council discussion. “I’ve set here too long and I know that small words make a big difference … I don’t see where a month one way or the other will change the plan on this thing.”
Back in session for a brief meeting after the council vote, the commissioners congratulated Bohan-non for his work before the council and Bohannon in turn congratulated them: “Come Jan. 1, you have a water and wastewater system to run,” he said.
BY JOAN MCCOY
Leader staff writer
The consensus of the Cabot City Council Tuesday night was that the devil was in the details of severing the water and sewer departments from the city and turning them over to a commission to run.
So to make it happen by Jan. 1 as the ordinance they passed earlier this year required, they left such details as rights-of-way and franchise fees to be worked out within the next 30 days.
The council met in special session with a full agenda of items relating to separating the city utilities from city control, but only passed the three necessary to make sure the commission would take over Jan. 1 — an ordinance cleaning up the language of Ordinance 32 which created the new commission, an ordinance setting the water and sewer rates the commission will charge, which are the same as the existing rates, and an agreement by which the commission will pay for the services of the city’s human services department to perform human resource functions for the commission’s employees.
Mayor Stubby Stumbaugh also assured the commission that control of the water and wastewater systems included control of the money.
Commission members knew going into the meeting that it might not be easy to get the entire package passed. Commissioner Bill Cypert learned earlier in the day that Alderman David Polantz would oppose turning the utilities over to the commission on Jan. 1 because he had not had time to look over the 200 pages of documents that would help make it happen. Polantz proposed postponing the transfer until Feb. 1.
But the commission had been working overtime for months to get ready for the transfer of control. To not take over would cause problems with accounting, billing and personnel records, Tad Bohannon, the commission’s attorney, said.
Bohannon told the commission during a 45-minute-long meeting before the council met that if the council took no action, the commission would still be in control of the utilities Jan. 1. But whether Com-munity Bank would turn over the accounts was an unknown.
So the commission went into the meeting prepared for Bohannon to argue their case. J.M. Park, commission chairman, said the crucial issues were “getting control of the purse strings and getting control of the personnel. If we get the purse strings and we get the personnel, we can operate,” he said, and the full commission agreed those things were what they would try to get.
But getting the council to hand them over took one and a half hours.
Stumbaugh said he appreciated all the work the commission had done to get ready for the takeover, but some of the details were problematic. If the council voted to pass them, he would veto them, he said.
Alderman Odis Waymack, who had pushed to put the commission in control, suggested passing only what was needed and Alderman Patrick Hutton listed the three that would be voted on.
Polantz voted no for all three as well as for the emergency clauses that made them take effect immediately instead of in 30 days. “This is an extremely complicated event,” he said early in the council discussion. “I’ve set here too long and I know that small words make a big difference … I don’t see where a month one way or the other will change the plan on this thing.”
Back in session for a brief meeting after the council vote, the commissioners congratulated Bohan-non for his work before the council and Bohannon in turn congratulated them: “Come Jan. 1, you have a water and wastewater system to run,” he said.
TOP STORY>>Christmas celebrated with jobs, loved ones
IN SHORT: Somebody is always on call at the animal shelter or working at the Waffle House so others can celebrate.
BY RICKY HARVEY
Leader managing editor
Spending the day cleaning up an animal shelter isn’t what someone usually has in mind as an enjoyable way to spend Christmas Day.
Cheryl Rainbolt-Wood said she tried to make the best of it.
As an employee of the Jacksonville Animal Shelter, Rainbolt-Wood was on-call on Sunday, meaning she had to spend Christmas Day cleaning up the shelter, which included feeding the animals and hosing down the kennels. She also had to respond to any animal-control calls that the city might have received.
Surprisingly, no calls came during Rainbolt-Wood’s shift.
“I wasn’t busy at all,” she said. “Basically, we were closed, but I was on call and I expected a call or two. But I didn’t get paged one time.
“Considering I had to work, it wasn’t that bad of a day.”
Rainbolt-Wood has one of only a few professions that call for working on Christmas.
Mary Whitlow has another.
As manager of Jacksonville’s Waffle House, Whitlow was busy on Sunday, serving everything from pork chops to eggs to chili to grits, to a constant rush of customers. “It was really busy,” Whitlow said. “It was definitely Christmas. It was an all-day thing. The place was constantly full and people were waiting all day. We always have extra staff on hand for Christmas.”
Wanda Martin, manager of the Waffle House in Cabot, echoed Whitlow. “It was an awesome day,” Martin said. “We had triple our normal business.”
Waffle House is one of the only chain restaurants open 365 days a year.
“I know we got a lot of phone calls, with people asking if we were open,” Whitlow said. “We’re open every day and I think if everyone would have known that we may have been even more busy. We don’t get snowed out, iced out or blacked out.”
Whitlow said most customers were in a friendly, holiday spirit, making it easier for restaurant workers.
“The people who came in seemed to be in better moods than normal, I guess because it was Christmas,” Whitlow said. “It makes it easier for the employees who have to come in and work. I’m really lucky to have employees who don’t mind working on a day like Christmas.”
A lot of happiness with friends and family was the common Christmas theme of many area residents, while any negative aspect of the holidays was minimal — at least in comments gathered by The Leader.
“Getting to see my family who I don’t get to see that much was the best part of Christmas,” said Amanda Wawak of Cabot.
“Spending time with my family and everyone getting together is what I enjoyed most,” Debbie Place of Austin said.
Tim Snell of Cabot and Tim Reed of North Little Rock said spending time with their families was also their favorite part of the day. The worst part of the holiday?
“All the travelling,” Reed said.
“I’ve had a cold,” Rob Rodgers of Jacksonville said.
A woman going shopping at Knight’s grocery store in Jackson-ville said her holiday was dampened by the death of a close friend.
George Webster of Jacksonville said his favorite thing about Christmas was the food he had.
“The chicken and dressing with gravy was good,” he said. “The low point, though, was that we didn’t have any presents this year.”
Jacksonville Mayor Tommy Swaim appreciated the nice weather. In 2004 many families were stuck away from their loved ones due to several inches of ice and snow leaving roads too hazardous to drive.
“Christmas was very good this year,” Swaim said. “I had the pleasure of having all my immediate family home.
“The weather was nice and we had plenty of food. It was a great day.”
Staff writer Sara Greene contributed to this story.
BY RICKY HARVEY
Leader managing editor
Spending the day cleaning up an animal shelter isn’t what someone usually has in mind as an enjoyable way to spend Christmas Day.
Cheryl Rainbolt-Wood said she tried to make the best of it.
As an employee of the Jacksonville Animal Shelter, Rainbolt-Wood was on-call on Sunday, meaning she had to spend Christmas Day cleaning up the shelter, which included feeding the animals and hosing down the kennels. She also had to respond to any animal-control calls that the city might have received.
Surprisingly, no calls came during Rainbolt-Wood’s shift.
“I wasn’t busy at all,” she said. “Basically, we were closed, but I was on call and I expected a call or two. But I didn’t get paged one time.
“Considering I had to work, it wasn’t that bad of a day.”
Rainbolt-Wood has one of only a few professions that call for working on Christmas.
Mary Whitlow has another.
As manager of Jacksonville’s Waffle House, Whitlow was busy on Sunday, serving everything from pork chops to eggs to chili to grits, to a constant rush of customers. “It was really busy,” Whitlow said. “It was definitely Christmas. It was an all-day thing. The place was constantly full and people were waiting all day. We always have extra staff on hand for Christmas.”
Wanda Martin, manager of the Waffle House in Cabot, echoed Whitlow. “It was an awesome day,” Martin said. “We had triple our normal business.”
Waffle House is one of the only chain restaurants open 365 days a year.
“I know we got a lot of phone calls, with people asking if we were open,” Whitlow said. “We’re open every day and I think if everyone would have known that we may have been even more busy. We don’t get snowed out, iced out or blacked out.”
Whitlow said most customers were in a friendly, holiday spirit, making it easier for restaurant workers.
“The people who came in seemed to be in better moods than normal, I guess because it was Christmas,” Whitlow said. “It makes it easier for the employees who have to come in and work. I’m really lucky to have employees who don’t mind working on a day like Christmas.”
A lot of happiness with friends and family was the common Christmas theme of many area residents, while any negative aspect of the holidays was minimal — at least in comments gathered by The Leader.
“Getting to see my family who I don’t get to see that much was the best part of Christmas,” said Amanda Wawak of Cabot.
“Spending time with my family and everyone getting together is what I enjoyed most,” Debbie Place of Austin said.
Tim Snell of Cabot and Tim Reed of North Little Rock said spending time with their families was also their favorite part of the day. The worst part of the holiday?
“All the travelling,” Reed said.
“I’ve had a cold,” Rob Rodgers of Jacksonville said.
A woman going shopping at Knight’s grocery store in Jackson-ville said her holiday was dampened by the death of a close friend.
George Webster of Jacksonville said his favorite thing about Christmas was the food he had.
“The chicken and dressing with gravy was good,” he said. “The low point, though, was that we didn’t have any presents this year.”
Jacksonville Mayor Tommy Swaim appreciated the nice weather. In 2004 many families were stuck away from their loved ones due to several inches of ice and snow leaving roads too hazardous to drive.
“Christmas was very good this year,” Swaim said. “I had the pleasure of having all my immediate family home.
“The weather was nice and we had plenty of food. It was a great day.”
Staff writer Sara Greene contributed to this story.
TOP STORY >>Bond: 'I'll be next speaker'
IN SHORT: Jacksonville lawyer, a rising star in the Democratic Party serving his second term as a state representative, says he thinks he’ll have the 51 votes he needs to be the next speaker of the House.
BY JOHN HOFHEIMER
Leader staff writer
The most powerful voice in the state House of Representatives when it reconvenes about a year from now is likely to be Jacksonville’s favorite son, state Rep. Will Bond.
Bond, who has established himself as a careful, thoughtful legislator throughout his first and second terms, says he expects to have the 51 votes he needs for election as speaker of the House when it meets Jan. 9 expressly for the purpose of selecting its future leader.
Running against Bond is state Rep. Benny Petrus of Stuttgart. Both are Democrats.
Petrus, who is a farmer and automobile dealer, could not be reached for comment this week.
The current speaker, state Rep. Bob Stovall, D-Bigelow, will serve until the beginning of the next regular session in January 2007.
Bond has a Jacksonville law practice and was active in the Educating Our Children group that fought a hard, but so far unsuccessful battle to allow Jacksonville and north Pulaski County to detach from the Pulaski County Special School District, forming their own district.
Bond chaired the House City, County and Local Affairs Commit-tee, where Deltic Timber’s controversial bill to strip regulatory authority and the power of eminent domain from Central Arkansas Water died last session.
The bill was part of Deltic’s strategy to build mini-estates on the banks of Lake Maumelle, central Arkansas’ primary drinking water reservoir.
Petrus supported the Deltic bill, and Deltic has at least once raised funds for his campaign as speaker.
“We feel like we’re going to win,” Bond said on Monday of the speaker’s race. “I feel like we have more than 51 votes. Some are still undecided and uncommitted. We’re very confident we can maintain momentum through (the Jan. 9 election.)”
No matter how many of the House’s 100 representatives show up for the vote, it will take 51 votes to win. This will be the first time the speaker will be chosen between regular sessions, Bond said. It’s possible for him to be elected speaker Jan. 9, then lose the regular election next November.
Bond said being speaker “is about being inclusive of all points of view and encouraging vigorous debate. It’s the speaker’s job to make sure everyone’s had a fair shot.”
Bond said that because of term limits, “The House can’t be led based on experience. It must be led by knowledge and fairness.”
Bond said he hadn’t promised committee chairmanships to anyone. “We want people who work hard and are talented,” he said. “It takes a hundred members to run the House effectively. You can’t gather up 10 or 20 people and try to run it your own way.
“One of the important things is to be able to sit down and look each other in the face and talk about differences of opinions without yelling and screaming.
“I don’t think it’s the speaker’s job to have a legislative agenda.
“The speaker needs to have the big picture, knowledge of budget, how to work with the Senate and executive branch to come up with a balanced budget.”
Because he says the race is not about issues, Bond was reluctant to discuss differences between his and Petrus’ voting records, but when pressed, he did say, “My voting record for pre-K and K-12 is a lot different than Benny’s. We’ve had to increase funding levels for those. That’s the future of Arkansas, making sure our public schools are first class. That required additional funding and accountability, which I was committed to.”
Bond said he expected education, the Deltic-Lake Maumelle water and condemnation issue, economic development and in light of special election failures Dec. 13, highway and higher education funding to be among the pressing items facing the next regular session of the state legislature beginning in January 2007.
“We’re going to have a new governor for the first time in 10 years,” Bond said. “We need to work with the new governor.”
Bond said he believes he has strong support among some Republicans, but that a probable majority will back Petrus, who voted with Republicans to shut down the legislature without a budget in 2003.
Bond has practiced law in Jacksonville for 10 years and his partners have included Pat O’Brien, now the Pulaski County Circuit and County Clerk, and his current partner, Neil Chamberlin.
He and his wife, the former Gabriel Wood of North Little Rock, have a 4-year-old son and twin daughters born this year.
Bond attended Jacksonville schools and graduated from Jacksonville High School in 1988. He holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Vanderbilt University and a law degree from the Uni-versity of Arkansas at Fayetteville.
As a trial lawyer, his practice is about 50 percent personal injury, a quarter divorce and custody and the balance general law.
Bond said he serves because “to those given much, much is expected.”
“I had a wonderful upbringing by my parents, went to a great school and law school — chances many don’t have,” Bond said. “I love people, being a lawyer and hearing about people’s problems and understanding government.”
Bond said if he is re-elected for this third term next November, he intends to retire from politics at the completion of his next two-year term — at least for a while.
BY JOHN HOFHEIMER
Leader staff writer
The most powerful voice in the state House of Representatives when it reconvenes about a year from now is likely to be Jacksonville’s favorite son, state Rep. Will Bond.
Bond, who has established himself as a careful, thoughtful legislator throughout his first and second terms, says he expects to have the 51 votes he needs for election as speaker of the House when it meets Jan. 9 expressly for the purpose of selecting its future leader.
Running against Bond is state Rep. Benny Petrus of Stuttgart. Both are Democrats.
Petrus, who is a farmer and automobile dealer, could not be reached for comment this week.
The current speaker, state Rep. Bob Stovall, D-Bigelow, will serve until the beginning of the next regular session in January 2007.
Bond has a Jacksonville law practice and was active in the Educating Our Children group that fought a hard, but so far unsuccessful battle to allow Jacksonville and north Pulaski County to detach from the Pulaski County Special School District, forming their own district.
Bond chaired the House City, County and Local Affairs Commit-tee, where Deltic Timber’s controversial bill to strip regulatory authority and the power of eminent domain from Central Arkansas Water died last session.
The bill was part of Deltic’s strategy to build mini-estates on the banks of Lake Maumelle, central Arkansas’ primary drinking water reservoir.
Petrus supported the Deltic bill, and Deltic has at least once raised funds for his campaign as speaker.
“We feel like we’re going to win,” Bond said on Monday of the speaker’s race. “I feel like we have more than 51 votes. Some are still undecided and uncommitted. We’re very confident we can maintain momentum through (the Jan. 9 election.)”
No matter how many of the House’s 100 representatives show up for the vote, it will take 51 votes to win. This will be the first time the speaker will be chosen between regular sessions, Bond said. It’s possible for him to be elected speaker Jan. 9, then lose the regular election next November.
Bond said being speaker “is about being inclusive of all points of view and encouraging vigorous debate. It’s the speaker’s job to make sure everyone’s had a fair shot.”
Bond said that because of term limits, “The House can’t be led based on experience. It must be led by knowledge and fairness.”
Bond said he hadn’t promised committee chairmanships to anyone. “We want people who work hard and are talented,” he said. “It takes a hundred members to run the House effectively. You can’t gather up 10 or 20 people and try to run it your own way.
“One of the important things is to be able to sit down and look each other in the face and talk about differences of opinions without yelling and screaming.
“I don’t think it’s the speaker’s job to have a legislative agenda.
“The speaker needs to have the big picture, knowledge of budget, how to work with the Senate and executive branch to come up with a balanced budget.”
Because he says the race is not about issues, Bond was reluctant to discuss differences between his and Petrus’ voting records, but when pressed, he did say, “My voting record for pre-K and K-12 is a lot different than Benny’s. We’ve had to increase funding levels for those. That’s the future of Arkansas, making sure our public schools are first class. That required additional funding and accountability, which I was committed to.”
Bond said he expected education, the Deltic-Lake Maumelle water and condemnation issue, economic development and in light of special election failures Dec. 13, highway and higher education funding to be among the pressing items facing the next regular session of the state legislature beginning in January 2007.
“We’re going to have a new governor for the first time in 10 years,” Bond said. “We need to work with the new governor.”
Bond said he believes he has strong support among some Republicans, but that a probable majority will back Petrus, who voted with Republicans to shut down the legislature without a budget in 2003.
Bond has practiced law in Jacksonville for 10 years and his partners have included Pat O’Brien, now the Pulaski County Circuit and County Clerk, and his current partner, Neil Chamberlin.
He and his wife, the former Gabriel Wood of North Little Rock, have a 4-year-old son and twin daughters born this year.
Bond attended Jacksonville schools and graduated from Jacksonville High School in 1988. He holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Vanderbilt University and a law degree from the Uni-versity of Arkansas at Fayetteville.
As a trial lawyer, his practice is about 50 percent personal injury, a quarter divorce and custody and the balance general law.
Bond said he serves because “to those given much, much is expected.”
“I had a wonderful upbringing by my parents, went to a great school and law school — chances many don’t have,” Bond said. “I love people, being a lawyer and hearing about people’s problems and understanding government.”
Bond said if he is re-elected for this third term next November, he intends to retire from politics at the completion of his next two-year term — at least for a while.
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