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Make No Mow May the First Step to Grow Native for Wildlife

Randy Zellers Assistant Chief of Communications

LITTLE ROCK — The “No Mow May” movement making the rounds on social media first attracted me because, quite frankly, May is a fantastic time to get out and fish instead of spend my days on a lawnmower. And if my lack of enthusiasm in fighting Mother Nature’s designs for my property helped pollinators and ground-nesting birds, even better. But why limit my wildlife-friendly loafing to a single month?

No Mow May began in England as a way to help pollinators and promote the use of plants that are native for an area instead of planting monocultures of sod-forming grasses that look neat and orderly but offer little added benefit to animals. Thanks to social media, the catchy phrase has spread across the pond and has found a new home in the states, but there’s so much more that can be done for wildlife when you’re living in a place called The Natural State. 

Allison Fowler, assistant chief of wildlife management for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, worked extensively on projects to benefit pollinators and other native wildlife before recently being promoted to her new position. She says studies have shown delaying mowing a lawn by as little as a week can result in a much larger diversity of bees and other pollinating insects using your land. 

“We sort of get caught up in that routine of mowing and planting sod-forming grasses to make our yards attractive, but they’re not as attractive to the wildlife,” Fowler said. “Bees, butterflies and fireflies all benefit from the flowers of those weeds we’re cutting down. A lot of people make comments on how they don’t see the lightning bugs in an area like when they first moved in, but the reason for that disappearance never really sinks in. We have a space at my home that we let grow wild, and we still get to enjoy those fireflies.” 

Allowing some dandelions and clover enough time to bloom and benefit bees definitely is helpful, but with a little effort on the front end, private landowners can benefit wildlife much more and likely spend less money in the long run than constantly chopping up valuable habitat with a mower or bushhog. Allowing native vegetation to bloom may reveal some native wildflowers already on your property, but adding some plantings of wildflower mixes can increase the benefit. 

“The AGFC worked with the Arkansas Monarch Conservation Partnership to create a few great resources for landowners to learn more about planting or promoting native gardens and plots,” Fowler said. “Instead of spending money planting and watering exotic flowers, you can spend less and see better benefits from native plants that don’t require as much water and maintenance.”

Visit www.arkansasmonarchs.org to learn more about growing native vegetation to benefit wildlife and reduce the wear and tear on your lawnmower even more.

AGFC Biologists Fertilize Local Lakes: Hinkle, Jack Nolen, Sugarloaf

Biologists were sampling the largemouth bass population at Bob Kidd Lake in northwestern Arkansas when they came across a redear sunfish. Also known as a “shellcracker,” redear have tooth-like structures in their throats that allow them to consume snails and mussels. This rotund redear was 12 inches long and weighed nearly 2 pounds.

Several redear were caught, and all were released. Late spring is a great time to catch these fun, feisty fish as they move into shallow water to spawn. Plus, they’re almost as fun to eat as they are to catch, our AGFC biologists say.

AGFC biologists in west-central Arkansas recently completed fertilizations at AtkinsHinkleSugarloaf, and Jack Nolen lakes.

Scientific literature indicates fertilizing boosts the primary production of good algae (phytoplankton), which feed zooplankton, small crustaceans and fish. This creates more food for sport fish such as crappie and largemouth bass. 
 
The amount of fertilizer is carefully measured by the biologists and water quality is monitored during the fertilization period. Biologists plan to do a second application of fertilizer at Atkins, Hinkle, Sugarloaf and Jack Nolen lakes in June, and a third application at Lake Hinkle and Sugarloaf Lake in July. 

Scott County Extension Offers GetFit Program

On Tuesdays and Thursdays, Scott County residents gather for the Extension’s program, GetFit. The group meets from 9:30-10:30 a.m. at the Scott County Boys and Girls Club.*

The fitness class is open to all adults, and current participants range in age from 60-80+. GetFit has been available to area residents for about nine years, and according to participant, Patti Roets, “It’s a great way for the participants to get active and socialize.”

The class is led by Kaitie Golden with the Scott County Extention office in Waldron. The annual dues is $20. Those monies are in turn donated to the Boys and Girls Club.

“It’s more about having fun and to keep moving,” concluded Golden.

If you are interested in learning more about the GetFit program, you can contact the extension office at (479) 637-2173.

*The GetFit class meets at the Nazarene Church in Waldron during the summer months.

Hogs Host South Carolina This Weekend in Final Regular Season Home Series

FAYETTEVILLE-– No. 3 Arkansas (36-12, 17-7 SEC) welcomes No. 6 South Carolina (36-12, 14-9 SEC) to Baum-Walker Stadium for top-10 SEC showdown in the penultimate weekend of the regular season.

First pitch in the series opener between the Razorbacks and Gamecocks is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 12, on SEC Network+. Game two is slated to begin at 6 p.m. Saturday, May 13, on SEC Network+, while the series finale will get underway at 2 p.m. Sunday, May 14, on SEC Network+.

This weekend’s three-game set in Fayetteville marks the first top-10 series played at Baum-Walker Stadium since then-No. 1 Arkansas hosted then-No. 9 Florida in the final weekend of the 2021 regular season. The Hogs swept the Gators to clinch the regular-season SEC title and conclude the regular season with a 42-10 overall record and a 22-8 mark in SEC play, tying a program record for most SEC victories in a single season.

Schedule

Friday, May 12

#6 South Carolina vs. #3 Arkansas – 6:30 p.m. – SEC Network+ – Listen – Live Stats

Saturday, May 13

#6 South Carolina vs. #3 Arkansas – 6 p.m. – SEC Network+ – Listen – Live Stats

Sunday, May 14

#6 South Carolina vs. #3 Arkansas – 2 p.m. – SEC Network+ – Listen – Live Stats

On the Mound

Friday, May 12

South Carolina – RHP Eli Jones (4-2, 3.38 ERA)

Arkansas – LHP Hagen Smith (7-1, 2.56 ERA)

Saturday, May 13

South Carolina – TBA

Arkansas – TBA

Sunday, May 14

South Carolina – LHP Matthew Becker (4-1, 4.46 ERA)

Arkansas – TBA

Tune In

Brett Dolan (play-by-play) and Troy Eklund (analyst) will have the call of all three games on SEC Network+. The entire series can also be heard on the Razorback Sports Network from Learfield, including locally in Fayetteville on 92.1 FM or through the Razorback app, with Phil Elson (play-by-play) and Bubba Carpenter (analyst) on the call.

A full list of radio affiliates is available here.

History Lesson
Arkansas is 44-35 all-time against South Carolina, including a 22-12 record in games played in Fayetteville. Under head coach Dave Van Horn, the Hogs are 28-21 overall with a 12-9 record at home against the Gamecocks since 2003.

The Hogs, 7-3 in their last 10 games against the Gamecocks, have won three straight three-game series against South Carolina, including a pair of series wins at Baum-Walker Stadium in 2018. Arkansas won the regular-season series before defeating South Carolina in three games in the NCAA Fayetteville Super Regional to advance to the College World Series.

Arkansas has not lost a regular-season series to South Carolina since 2016 and has not dropped a three-game series at home to South Carolina since the 2012 campaign.

In the Polls
Collegiate Baseball – 3

D1Baseball – 3

NCBWA – 3

Perfect Game – 3

USA Today Coaches – 3

Baseball America – 4

Senior Saturday

Prior to Saturday night’s game, the Razorbacks will honor three members of its senior class and soon-to-be-graduates of the University of Arkansas: infielder John Bolton, infielder Brady Slavens and outfielder Jared Wegner.

Home Sweet Hogs

Arkansas is 28-3 (.903 winning percentage) at Baum-Walker Stadium this season. It represents the Hogs’ best home record since winning 29 of their first 32 games at Baum-Walker Stadium in 2018.

In 2018, the Razorbacks advanced to the College World Series and finished as the national runner-up, setting school records for single-season home wins (34) and home winning percentage (.895) in the process. Excluding 2020, the Hogs have won 28 games or more at home for six consecutive seasons, including a program-record 34 wins at home in 2018.

2017: 29-8 at home / 45-19 overall

2018: 34-4 at home / 48-21 overall

2019: 33-7 at home / 46-20 overall

2020: N/A
2021: 30-8 at home / 50-13 overall

2022: 28-7 at home / 46-21 overall

2023: 28-3 at home / TBD

Machine of Consistency
Under head coach Dave Van Horn, Arkansas has started 16-8 or better through 24 games of SEC play for four straight seasons. Including this year, the Hogs have gone 17-7 three times in that span with 20 or more wins in 2019 and 2021.

2019: 17-7 start / 20-10 final SEC

2020: N/A

2021: 17-7 start / 22-8 final SEC record

2022: 16-8 start / 18-12 final SEC record

2023: 17-7 start / TBD

Arkansas is guaranteed to finish with a winning SEC record for the sixth consecutive season. It is the first time in program history that Arkansas has recorded six straight seasons with a winning SEC record. The Hogs’ previous longest streak for was four seasons (2012-15).

Hagen on the Hill

Arkansas pitcher Hagen Smith will start his second consecutive series opener, getting the ball in Friday night’s game against South Carolina. The left-hander was the Razorbacks’ No. 1 starter to begin the year but transitioned to a “wild card” role due to early-season injuries.

For the year, Smith has made 13 appearances with seven starts, including three in SEC play. He is 7-1 with a team-leading 2.656 ERA and two saves over 42 2/3 innings of work on the mound. The true sophomore has struck out a team-high 79 batters and limited opposing hitters to a meager .181 batting average.

Smith’s three previous SEC starts this season have all come on the road. In his last SEC start, Smith spun five innings of two-run ball at Mississippi State on May 5, matching his season high with eight strikeouts in the outing to earn the win.

For complete coverage of Arkansas baseball, follow the Hogs on Twitter (@RazorbackBSB), Instagram (@RazorbackBSB) and Facebook (Arkansas Razorback Baseball).

– ArkansasRazorbacks.com || On Twitter @ArkRazorbacks || Facebook.com/ArkansasRazorbacks –

Note to Our Readers: The previous story was sourced directly and in its entirety from the University of Arkansas Office of Communicaitons, Oliver Grigg.

Arkansas to Begin Title Defense on Day 3 of the SEC Softball Tournament

FAYETTEVILLE – The defending SEC Tournament Champion Arkansas Razorback softball team hosts the 2023 SEC Tournament at Bogle Park. Arkansas will take on Alabama at 7 p.m. CT Thursday, May 11, at Bogle Park, airing on SEC Network. It’ll be the fourth game of the day, so it will start approximately 35 minutes after Game 7 (No. 2 Georgia vs. No. 10 South Carolina) concludes. 

Texas A&M vs South Carolina (RNN Sports Photo / Peggy Barger)

Tournament Results as of May 10:

Game 1: 13 Missouri 3, 12 Mississippi State 1

Game 2: 11 Ole Miss 5, 6 LSU 3

Game 3: 10 South Carolina 1, 7 Texas A&M 0

Game 4: 5 Alabama 7, 13 Missouri 2

Ole Miss vs LSU (RNN Sports Photo / Peggy Barger)

Arkansas at the SEC Tournament           

  • Arkansas is coming off the program’s first-ever SEC Tournament Championship.  
  • The SEC Tournament returns to the friendly confines of Bogle Park for just the second time in history. The marquee event was last held at Bogle in 2010. Arkansas dropped its lone game of the tournament to Alabama, 9-0.  
  • In the 2022 SEC Tournament Championship, RHP Chenise Delce tossed a two-hit shutout with five strikeouts. Delce did not allow a walk. Kacie Hoffmann starred offensively for the Hogs, finishing 2-for-3 with a triple and run scored. 
  • Four Razorbacks were named to the 2022 SEC All-Tournament team: Chenise Delce (MVP), Kacie Hoffmann, Mary Haff and Danielle Gibson.  
  • Arkansas is 14-18 overall at the SEC Tournament. 
  • The Hogs are looking for their first SEC Tournament victory at Bogle Park. 

The Standard     

Arkansas is the only SEC team to record a top-four conference finish in each of the last three seasons. Arkansas won the SEC in 2021 and 2022 and finished fourth this season. 

RPI SZN                                     

  • Arkansas sits at No. 15 in the latest RPI rankings. The Hogs also boast one of the most impressive resumes in the nation: 
  • The Hogs have played the most games in the country against opponents inside the RPI top-25 (25). 
  • Arkansas possesses a .480 win percentage and 12 wins vs. opponents inside the RPI top-25.  
  • Arkansas has one RPI top-10 win this season (Louisiana). 
  • The Razorbacks rank fifth nationally in top-25 (RPI) victories (12).  
  • The Hogs have played the fifth-most games nationally vs. opponents inside the RPI top-50.  

Rylin’s Big Bat    

  • Redshirt junior Rylin Hedgecock has quickly blossomed into a star.  
  • Hedgecock sits second in the conference and ties for fourth nationally in home runs with 20. 
  • Hedgecock slugged a career high three home runs vs. Kentucky in game two last on April 22. She also matched her career high in RBI with seven. 
  • Delivered a two-run home run in the series finale vs. Tennessee, helping Arkansas clinch a 2-0 rubber match win. 
  • Hedgecock homered in each of her first three plate appearances vs. Kentucky in game two.  
  • Hedgecock has three multi-home run games this season, including two vs. ranked SEC opponents (Florida & Kentucky). 
  • Her 57 RBI this season sits second in the conference and eighth nationally.  
  • She paces Arkansas in home runs (20), RBI (57), total bases (116), slugging percentage (.829) and on-base percentage (.466). 

Leading Things Off         

  • Freshman center fielder Reagan Johnson was named a top-25 finalist for Tucci/NFCA National Freshman of the Year on April 28. Johnson is one of four SEC freshmen selected to the prestigious list. 
  • Johnson ranks second in the SEC in hits with 72. Johnson paces all SEC freshmen in base knocks as well.  
  • On a national scale, Johnson’s 72 hits lead all freshmen and stand eighth overall.  
  • The Karnes City, Texas, native has been dynamic for the Razorbacks so far this season. Johnson was named SEC Freshman of the Week on April 25 after leading Arkansas to a 4-1 week that included a road series win at No. 20 Kentucky. 
  • Electrifying at the leadoff position, Johnson sports a team-leading .377 batting average and paces the Hogs in hits (72), runs scored (41), stolen bases (17) and triples (4). Johnson also boasts a .412 on-base percentage with 20 RBI. 
  • Helping Arkansas capture a doubleheader sweep for a series win vs. Kentucky to earn SEC Freshman of the Week, Johnson went 7-for-9 with three runs scored and two RBI. Johnson recorded a base hit in six straight plate appearances before lining out to short in game two. 
  • Johnson has the sixth-most single-season hits in program history.  
  • Johnson leads Arkansas with 22 multi-hit outings this season. She’s the first Razorback freshman to be named an NFCA Freshman of the Year finalist since Mary Haff in 2018. With four triples this season, Johnson is one triple shy from tying the program’s single-season record of five. 

For schedule updates and other news, go to ArkansasRazorbacks.com, or follow @RazorbackSB on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. 

– ArkansasRazorbacks.com || On Twitter @ArkRazorbacks || Facebook.com/ArkansasRazorbacks – 

Note to Our Readers: Portions of this story were sourced directly from the University of Arkansas Office of Communications, Grace Tafolla.

Salt Dough Pottery

One day when I was in middle school the art teacher was trying to get everyone to take home their projects. She handed me one with the initials “MH” that wasn’t mine, but when I told her that she said I don’t have anyone else with those initials. Those were my initials, and she said it had been in her classroom a long time and was probably mine and I forgot. But it was a much better piece of pottery than I had or would ever be able to make. It truly was a work of art. I know what I’m capable of making and it wasn’t that. Mine always look like a monkey made them. Middle school Madison didn’t have much interest in pottery I guess.

I put it in my locker and went on. Sometime later my locker shelf collapsed on it. And of course once it was broken to oblivion the rightful owner came to ask me about it, the real MH of this piece. He was very grace giving when I told him what happened, but I still think about that incident sometimes.

Now you’re gonna wonder why I told you such a random story. I am giving a recipe for salt dough to make ring holders, or foot print/hand prints, or whatever else you might make out of clay. Mostly I just wanted to share that story because even with it having been over 10 years ago it still pops into my head. 

Anyway, salt dough is fun! It’s drying, so not the best to play with. I have play dough recipes for that, and highly recommend sticking with them over salt dough if you want to let your kids create. Salt dough is ideal for ornaments, and trinkets. I read after I made ours that it won’t last just indefinitely, but I’m okay with that. It will give our recipients an easy end. Did I mention these are our Mother’s Day presents? You didn’t read that mom and mom in law.

Salt dough can air dry which makes it ideal for at home use! We used dried flowers to decorate, but beads, sequins, paint, etc. could be used!

Ingredients

-2 cups flour (plus more for flouting surface)

-1 cup salt

-1 cup water

Combine ingredients in a bowl and mix. Once combined flip onto a floured surface and continue working. Add flour as needed to get rid of stickiness. We ended up needing about 2.5 cups of flour.

Roll out salt dough and use cutters to make shapes or wing it! 

Mansfield Unfazed Going Into The 2A State Tournament

There’s a feeling when everything is going well. It’s like a beam of joy and happiness as if nothing could go wrong. Ah yes, the perfect life. But then one day after months of greatness you stump your toe on the door and…..THAT’S IT, life is officially horrible! Now of course we all know that although a stumped toe can be painful, it’s not the end of the world. That’s the mindset that the Mansfield Tigers baseball team took after falling to the Greenland Pirates in the 2A West Regional Championship game. The loss was painful, but there’s a whole 2A State Tournament ahead of the Tigers and they’re eager for some more opportunities to play some good ol’ baseball.

Braxton “Bugga” Byers stretches it out to get an out at first base.
Photo courtesy of Joey Bolin

The Tigers ran a gauntlet schedule leading up to the 2A State Tournament. They were rained out of multiple games, traveled long distances to play, and took on larger teams through their diamond campaign. That didn’t damper their moods for the game nor their ability to play…..and win. Mansfield racked up a 20-5 overall record while clinching the 2A-4 Conference Championship, the 2A-4 District Championship, went undefeated in conference play, and closed out the 2A West Regional Tournament as the 2A West Regional Runner-Ups which earned the Tigers the 2Seed in the 2A State Playoffs. Again, the toe may be sore from a loss, but the players can still hit bombs and run the bases en route to a possible State Championship.

Fisher Willsey sends a solo shot going…going…..GONE!
Photo courtesy of Joey Bolin

As the bracket goes, Mansfield isn’t alone in the great teams who have dropped one or two games in the season. In fact, only two teams have a better overall record than the Tigers. The Woodlawn Bears (27-3) and the Greenland Pirates (22-4) sit atop the 2A while the Riverside Rebels are only a loss back from Mansfield. Then there’s a slew of teams that are getting hot at the right time heading into the State Tournament. That means Mansfield could face some stiff competition in the State Tournament, but the Tigers won’t let the records detour them. Records are from the past, the games are played now.

Tyler Turnipseed snags a quick throw and go to first base for an out.
Photo courtesy of Joey Bolin

“We’ve had a great season so far,” said Head Coach Layton Robinson. “The tough non-conference schedule we started the season with prepared us for the postseason play we’re about to go into. There are going to be some tough teams in this tournament but we have a great depth of talent. We honestly believe that we can hang with just about anyone out there”. Coach Robinson isn’t stretching the truth on the Tigers depth either. Mansfield has leaned on that depth heavily due to star pitcher Drew Elmore being out for the majority of the season.

Cole Kindle slides into position anticipating a line drive in his direction.
Photo courtesy of Joey Bolin

To fill the void, pitchers Trey Vaughan and Cole Kindle have stepped up to the mound to tack on a dictionary of strikeouts in the books. Catcher, Fisher Willsey, not only calls the pitches and is solid behind the plate, but he’s also one of the best hitters on the team. Braxton “Bugga” Byers is a home run threat any time he is at the plate to bat. Defensively, Peyton Martin and Tyler Turnipseed are two of the best infielders that Coach Robinson says he’s seen all year. Then the Tigers have skills in the youth department as Winston “Mr. Utility” Allison can play anywhere the coaches need him and play those positions without flaw while Cooper Edwards is what Coach Robinson calls a “highly competitive and hardnosed gritty Freshman as an outfielder and when he’s up to bat”. If that’s not enough to concern the Tigers upcoming opponents, Drew Elmore will be back on the mound for the State Tournament.

The Tigers make it look easy as 1, 2, 3 as they walk off the field with another three-n-out.
Photo courtesy of Joey Bolin

The Tigers will face their first test of the 2A State Tournament on Thursday, May 11th as they take on the Sloan-Hendrix Greyhounds at 12:30pm in Prairie Grove. The Greyhounds will not be a walkover team by any means as they finished 2nd in the 2A-2 conference with a 14-9 overall record. The catch will be that Mansfield will finally have a fresh healthy roster in the Tigers dugout for their Round1 game. If the Tigers come out with a win, they’ll head back to Greenland and go toe to toe with the winner of Thursday’s Woodlawn versus Buffalo Island game on Friday, May 12th at 3:00pm. So throw on some steel-toed boots because the 2A State Tournament is ready to play ball. Are you?

Lady Tigers Epic Streak Continues Into The 2A State Tournament

When a team starts out with a 4-3 record, it’s easy to think that they could have a really long season ahead of them. The Lady Tigers faced that exact situation after starting off with a 3-0 winning streak before dropping back-to-back games to Atkins and Quitman. Mansfield rebounded to shock the Ft Smith Northside Lady Grizzlies with a 2-1 win but were slaughtered 10-0 by Mena the very next day. The early inconsistency could have led to Mansfield’s players turning on each other, but instead, the losses brought an extreme focus of togetherness to the Lady Tigers squad.

SR catcher, Brooklyn Adams, secures a strike pitch at the 2A West Regional Championship game.
Photo courtesy of Jeannie Keomoungkhoune

Mansfield’s last loss on the softball diamond came on March 14th. Since that time, the Lady Tigers have gone on to win 18 straight games, gone undefeated in conference play, and have tacked on a 2A-4 Conference Championship, a 2A-4 District Championship, a 2A West Regional Championship and earned a spot in the Arkansas 2A State Softball Tournament as the 1Seed. How’s that for focus? Led by JR pitcher, Alyson Edwards, Mansfield’s immaculate defensive game has held their past 18 opponents to a mere 24 combined points. That’s an average of only 1.3 runs allowed per game. Then there’s the sluggers at the plate. The Lady Tigers outscored their opponents 222-24 in their 18 game win streak. If you do the math, that means the heavy hitting Lady Tigers have averaged an astounding 12 runs per game. The Lady Tigers hot streak has set them up with a 25-3 overall record to this point which is the state’s best record currently in 2A softball.

JR Alyson Edwards slides into home for another score against Lavaca in the 2A West Regional Championship game.
Photo courtesy of Jeannie Keomoungkhoune

With all of the record setting numbers and on field dominance the Lady Tigers have recently had, it’d be simple for the team to look well beyond their competition in the upcoming 2A State Tournament. If they do that though, they’ll surely fall short of their State Championship goal, and they know it. The Lady Tigers are fully aware that they are in the mix with the likes of Woodlawn (20-8), McCrory (21-4), East Poinsett County (28-6), Mt Vernon-Enola (18-5) and a Quitman team that gave Mansfield one of their only three losses earlier in the season. All it would take is one poor performance and Mansfield would be out of the running for a state title. A poor performance though is something that the Lady Tigers aren’t going to let happen. With the unmatched focus and constant practice Mansfield has going into the State Tournament, they will not go down without at least putting up one heck of a fight.

JR Kynslee Ward gets to third base & eyes the home plate at the 2A West Regional Tournament against Lavaca.
Photo courtesy of Jeannie Keomoungkhoune

“When outsiders look at our team, they try to find out the key players” said Head Coach Donnie Eveld. “They look at Alyson Edwards, Brooklyn Adams, Kynslee Ward, Cole Smith, Natalie Allison, and Skylynn Harris. All are great athletes, but really, it’s our team as a whole who has been the key to our success so far this season. We’ll have to take the State Tournament game by game and not look too far ahead of ourselves. Every game will be a new challenge, but I think our team is ready to take on any challenge thrown at them in the tournament.”

Coach Eveld has a word with Mansfield pitcher Alyson Edwards and catcher Brooklyn Adams.
Photo courtesy of Jeannie Keomoungkhoune

Mansfield will play their Round1 game in the 2A State Tournament against the Bigelow Lady Panthers (8-12) in Greenland on Thursday, May 11th at 10:00am. Although the Lady Panthers have an 8-12 overall record, Mansfield will not take them lightly. Bigelow finished fourth in the 2A-5 Conference which is nothing to shake a stick at. If Mansfield makes it past their Round1 opponents, they’ll face the winner of Thursday’s Spring Hill versus McCrory game in Round2 on Friday, May 12th at 10:00am in Greenland.

Waldron School Board Meets in Regular Session

The regular monthly meeting of the Waldron School Board was held in the Central Office Building Monday, May 8, 2023, at 6:30 p.m. Board members present were Tammye Sherrill, Angela Hunsucker Clay Woodall, Konnor McKay and Mac Davis. Others present were Superintendent Daniel Fielding, Misty Owens, Chris Lipham, Darla Jeffery, Zack Taylor, Kim Solomon, Kristi Sigman, Jim Almon, Tonya Cluck, Josh Atchley, Keith Brigance, Randi Hickman, Ryan Walker, Toni Dozier and Cheyenne Smith.

President Woodall called the meeting to order at 6:29 p.m. and welcomed everyone to the meeting.

Mr. Konnor McKay began the meeting with a word of prayer.

Angela Hunsucker led the Pledge of Allegiance.

A motion was made by Mac Davis and seconded by Konnor McKay to approve the Consent Agenda items: A) Approval of the April 11th Minutes; B) Approve Financial Reports and Expenditures; C) Approve Purchase Orders for Curriculum Associates; D) Approve Invoice for Weatherproofing Technologies, Inc.; E) Approve Invoices for Plumb Construction; F) Approve Policy with Health Special Risk, Inc. for Student Insurance for the 2023/24 School Year; G) Approve ADE Special Education Local School District Application for Part B Funds, Statement of Intent. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Tammye Sherrill and seconded by Mac Davis to approve Policy 2.4L-Superintendent’s Responsibilities for District Security and Resolution. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Angela Hunsucker and seconded by Konnor McKay to approve the Emergency Response Team one-time equipment stipend. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Tammye Sherrill and seconded by Angela Hunsucker to approve the 2 out-going and 1 in-coming School Choice Applications. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Tammye Sherrill and seconded by Mac Davis to add Item D) Approve Petition of Transfer. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Tammye Sherrill and seconded by Konnor McKay to approve the Petition of Transfer for an in-coming student. Motion carried 5-0.

Adjourned to executive session. Time dismissed: 6:42 Time returned: 7:44

A motion was made by Tammye Sherrill and seconded by Angela Hunsucker to accept the resignation of Sharon Earls as Food Service Cook as of the end of 2022/23 SY. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Konnor McKay and seconded by Angela Hunsucker to accept the resignations of: Mark Brigance as Coach and HS Teacher as of the end of the 2022/23 SY;

Wayne Douglas Powell as HS Teacher as of the end of the 2022/23 SY; and Elisabeth Maxwell as MS Math Teacher as of the end of the 2022/23 SY. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Tammye Sherrill and seconded by Mac Davis to approve the Salary Schedules for the 2023/24 SY. Motion carried 5-0.

A motion was made by Konnor McKay and seconded by Tammye Sherrill to adjourn. Meeting adjourned at 7:46 p.m.

United Way Gifts $15,000 to River Valley Regional Food Bank for Feeding Programs

The River Valley Regional Food Bank would like to thank the United Way of Fort Smith for the recent $15,000 grant award the food bank recently received through United Way’s annual community impact campaign.

The food bank is a proud member of United Way of Fort Smith and provides support to more than 150 nonprofit member agencies across eight counties in Arkansas. The food bank feeds nearly 100,000 people a month.

Each dollar contributed to the food bank provides 10 meals to a family in need. While this grant funding will provide 150,000 meals to families in the River Valley facing food insecurity, due to the rising costs of food and transportation expenses, it will only provide just about eight percent of the funding we need to purchase one truckload of food and about one percent of the funding we will need to feed our neighbors in need.

Spring is a critical time for fundraising. The food bank receives no federal or state funding and relies on donations throughout the year – especially as the summer months near as children get out of school — to ensure access to nutritious foods for our neighbors facing hunger. Continued community support through donations will help the food bank offset costs related to food purchase, as well as freight costs and transportation expenses, and fund necessary improvements to equipment and our facility.

Community members looking to learn more about how to support the River Valley Regional Food Bank’s mission may visit rvrfoodbank.org, or find the RVRFB on social media. The food bank can also be reached by phone at (479) 785-0582