Supporters of proposed ballot initiatives targeting abortion, education and government transparency are making a final push to collect signatures ahead of Friday’s deadline.
Petitioners are gathering last-minute signatures at community Fourth of July events around the state and at a drive-though event at the Arkansas Capitol from 12 to 6 p.m. today.
Groups must submit 90,704 signatures for constitutional amendments and 72,563 signatures for initiated acts gathered from at least 50 counties to the Secretary of State’s office to qualify for the November ballot.
Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin approved the ballot titles of nine proposals. Secretary of State spokesman Chris Powell said they anticipate receiving seven, and the most they’ve dealt with in recent years is four.
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In preparation for receiving thousands of petitions by 5 p.m. Friday, Powell said the secretary of state’s office is hiring 90 temporary workers to assist with signature verification and are setting up shop in the Capitol.
Sponsors will be given more time to submit additional signatures if the initial submission contains valid signatures from registered voters equal to at least 75% of the overall required number of signatures and 75% of the required number from at least 50 counties, Powell said. Arkansans sign petitions in support of proposed ballot initiatives in Little Rock on July 2, 2024. (Mary Hennigan/Arkansas Advocate)
The 50-county threshold is a new requirement under Act 236 of 2023. Previously, signatures need only be collected from 15 of the state’s 75 counties. A lawsuit filed in Pulaski County Circuit Court last year argues the requirement makes it harder for citizen-led petitions to qualify for the ballot. A judge heard arguments in the case in February, but has not yet issued a ruling.
Canvassers have reported additional challenges this year, including intimidation and threats of arrest. One lawyer was escorted out of an Arkansas Bar Association meeting in handcuffs after people signed her petition. Meanwhile, one group filed a lawsuit for the right to collect signatures at a public park.
Gathering enough valid signatures does not guarantee a spot on the ballot; measures must also survive legal challenges. Since 2014, seven of 13 citizen-led initiatives were struck from the ballot, according to the Arkansas Public Policy Center. Of the six that made it to the ballot, voters approved four — medical marijuana, casino gaming and increasing the minimum wage (twice approved).
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Abortion access
The Arkansas Abortion Amendment would not allow government entities to “prohibit, penalize, delay or restrict abortion services within 18 weeks of fertilization.” The proposal would also permit abortion services in cases of rape, incest, a fatal fetal anomaly or to “protect the pregnant female’s life or physical health,” and it would nullify any of the state’s existing “provisions of the Constitution, statutes and common law” that conflict with it.
Arkansans for Limited Government, the ballot question committee that proposed the amendment, announced via email Wednesday morning that it needed 5,800 more signatures.
Northwest Arkansas residents who’ve signed petitions have expressed hope that it will end up on the ballot, said Destiny Sinclair, a Bentonville resident who has collected signatures for the past three months.
“People always ask me ‘How close are we? How many signatures?’” she said. “I just kind of give them a wink and tell them we need to collect as many signatures as we can.”
Arkansas OB-GYN says proposed abortion-rights amendment could revive standard of care
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Abortion has been illegal in Arkansas, except to save the pregnant person’s life, since June 2022 when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.
Canvassers said they’ve dealt with protests and harassment in public settings from abortion access opponents. Sinclair recalled a group of protesters one weekend at the Bentonville Farmers Market, a regular location for canvassing.
“They had these five-foot signs [with] the most graphic images on them, or quotes about incest or rape,” Sinclair said. “It’s so hard for people to see that.”
Anti-abortion groups Arkansas Right to Life and the Family Council have led a “Decline to Sign” campaign encouraging voters not to sign petitions for the amendment. In June, the Family Council posted on its website a list of 79 people paid by AFLG to collect signatures.
AFLG called the post attempted intimidation; the Family Council has since removed the list from the post but has kept it publicly available on its political action committee website. Acquiring and publishing the list is legal under the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act.
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Additionally, the Arkansas House of Representatives passed a resolution in June expressing disapproval of the abortion amendment. Members of the public called this interference in the direct democracy process.
Education standards
Organizers with For AR Kids, the group behind the Arkansas Educational Rights Amendment of 2024, estimated Wednesday they still need about 25,000 more signatures. Spokesman Bill Kopsky said they’re “in striking distance,” but need a big turnout.
“It’s been done before, so we feel optimistic, but we do need folks to turn out and feel the urgency of the moment,” Kopsky said. “Our lawmakers have failed our kids for generations; we’re not giving Arkansas kids an opportunity to quality education. Our amendment changes that.”
The proposed amendment, which aims to hold private schools that receive state funding to the same standards as public schools, stems from a new voucher program that provides taxpayer money for allowable educational expenses, such as private school tuition.
Created through the LEARNS Act, critics say the Educational Freedom Account program is unfair because private schools receiving state funding don’t have to follow the same requirements as their public counterparts, such as admitting all students, providing transportation and administering certain standardized tests. The LEARNS Act does require private schools to administer state-approved annual exams to EFA students.
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Ann Hudson, Carrie Clay and Marcia Norman sort through thousands of petitions inside the Arkansas Public Policy Panel’s Little Rock office on July 2, 2024. (Mary Hennigan/Arkansas Advocate)
In addition to equal standards, the proposed constitutional amendment would guarantee voluntary universal access to pre-K for 3- and 4-year-olds, after-school and summer programming, quality special education and assistance for children in families within 200% of the Federal Poverty Line ($62,400 for a family of four).
The measure is opposed by ballot question committees Arkansans for Students and Educators and Stronger Arkansas, both of which have close ties to the governor. In its June financial disclosure report, Arkansans for Students and Educators reported receiving $350,000 from two individuals and a total of $986,000 since its formation in April. Stronger Arkansas reported having $375,000 in cash on hand in mid-June.
Additionally, the measure is opposed by Family Council Action Committee 2024, which like Stronger Arkansas, also opposes proposed abortion and medical marijuana amendments.
For AR Kids reported a campaign treasury of $8,217 in June.
Government transparency
The nonpartisan Arkansas Citizens for Transparency (ACT) has been gathering signatures for both a proposed constitutional amendment and a proposed set of changes to the state’s public records law, marketing the two measures as a package deal.
Collecting, counting and organizing signatures with the deadline fast approaching has been “bedlam,” said Nate Bell, a former state legislator and member of ACT’s ballot measure drafting committee.
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“It’s somewhat organized chaos at this point, and ours is doubly complicated because we have two [measures],” he said.
Arkansas Press Association forms committee to support government transparency
The proposed amendment would make government transparency a constitutional right. It would also require two-thirds of both the House and Senate to approve changes to the government transparency law, which would then be sent to voters. In emergency situations, a law would go into effect with 90% approval from both chambers but still be subject to a statewide vote later.
A primary goal of the proposed changes to the Freedom of Information Act is to codify a definition of a “public meeting,” which has long frustrated elected officials and the news media, and broaden the legal definitions of a “governing body” and “communication” among members of government bodies.
The proposal would define a public meeting as “a meeting at which two (2) or more voting or nonvoting members of a governing body communicate for the purpose of exercising the responsibilities, authority, power, or duties delegated to the governing body on any matter on which official action will foreseeably be taken by the governing body.”
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If placed on the ballot and approved by voters, the altered FOIA would also mandate that records concerning the planning or provision of security services to the governor and other state elected officials be considered public and accessible under the FOIA after three months.
ACT formed late last year after Sanders signed a law enacted during a special legislative session in September that shields certain state officials’ security records from public access.
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Supporters of the measures were “not quite there” but “clawing our way” to the required number of signatures by Wednesday afternoon, said Arkansas Press Association executive director Ashley Wimberley, a member of the ACT drafting committee.
ACT designated about 70 local newspapers throughout the state as “petition hubs” to distribute and collect petitions, according to the organization’s website.
APA formed an additional ballot question committee, Arkansans for a Free Press, in early May to work alongside ACT to fundraise and solicit signatures for the two proposed measures.
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APA’s Little Rock office will be open from 10 a.m. to midnight today to collect and notarize signatures, Wimberley said.
Medical marijuana
Though he didn’t share specific figures, Bill Paschall with the Arkansas Cannabis Industry Association said the proposal to expand medical marijuana access is “right on track” to meet its required 90,704 signatures.
Paschall said the Arkansas Medical Cannabis Amendment of 2024 aims to improve patient access, especially for those with lower incomes and people living in rural areas.
Arkansans voted to legalize cannabis for medical use in 2016, though the first products were not sold until 2019. Now five years in, medical marijuana has grown to be a billion-dollar industry in Arkansas.
Paschall said the ballot initiative stemmed from the public’s experience over the last few years and their concerns about difficulties obtaining and keeping a medical marijuana patient card. If the measure meets its requirements and is approved in November, patients would no longer have to pay an application fee to receive a card, and card expiration dates would increase from one year to three years.
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This change would help Arkansans save money and “reduce hassle,” Paschall said. Caitlin Tannehill Oxford collects signatures for several proposed measures during the Northwest Arkansas Pride festival in Fayetteville on June 29, 2024. (Antoinette Grajeda/Arkansas Advocate)
Physician assistants, nurse practitioners and pharmacists would be included as professionals who can certify patients for medical marijuana cards under the initiative, which Paschall said would break down a barrier for those in rural communities.
Health care providers would be able to conduct patient assessment via telemedicine, and providers would be permitted to qualify patients based on medical need, rather than the existing 18 qualifying conditions outlined by the state.
If approved, the ballot initiative would also allow patients and designated caregivers older than 21 to grow up to seven mature marijuana plants and seven young plants.
Paschall said the group garnered hundreds of canvassers over the signature collection period, and he estimated about 100 of those were still out collecting as the deadline looms.
Casino control
Local Voters in Charge is pursuing a ballot initiative to repeal authorization for a casino and casino gaming in Pope County and to require a local option vote for any future potential casino locations.
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Arkansas voters approved casino gaming in 2018, and the courts have twice voided the Pope County license. A lawsuit filed Tuesday challenges the newest license, which was awarded to Cherokee Nation Entertainment last week.
Local Voters in Charge spokesman Hans Stiritz said their amendment respects the rights of local communities.
Lawsuit again filed to challenge Arkansas’ final casino license
“I think that everyone agrees that local communities should have the final say on casinos in their hometown,” he said. “Our amendment fixes a situation that’s happened in Pope County … it restores the final decision on casinos to local voters anywhere in the state that a casino might be proposed in the future.”
Though he said petition numbers wouldn’t be released until Friday, Stiritz said he’s confident in the work of canvassers and is hopeful “they’ll have a shot at getting on the ballot in the fall.”
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Ballot question committee Investing in Arkansas opposes the proposed measure. In a press release issued after the group formed in May, vice chair Natalie Ghidotti said the proposal is antithetical to local choice because it goes against the will of Arkansas voters, and would be an economic loss.
“This attempt to repeal the Pope County casino license is being driven by the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, which controls a competing casino just across the state line near Fort Smith,” Ghidotti said. “Their mission is to keep Arkansas tourism and tax dollars flowing across state lines and into their pockets.”
Local Voters in Charge has received $2.45 million from the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, according to financial disclosure documents. Investing in Arkansas has received $775,000 from Cherokee Nation Businesses.
Absentee voting
The Absentee Voting Amendment of 2024 would declare absentee voting is a privilege, not a right, and limit absentee voting to people who can prove their inability to vote in person.
Specifically, the measure would establish a policy that allows absentee ballots to be distributed within 30 days of election day only to registered voters who are unable to be present at the polls on election day because they are absent from the county where they’re registered to vote, or are hospitalized, incarcerated or in a long-term care facility.
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Restore Election Integrity Arkansas, the ballot question committee supporting the measure, also proposed a separate measure to require Arkansas elections be conducted with hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots, but it was rejected by the attorney general.
The Arkansas Supreme Court in May dismissed a lawsuit that asked the high court to independently certify the legal sufficiency of the measures’ ballot titles and popular names and order them placed on the ballot.
Tampon tax
Led by the Arkansas Period Poverty Project, a ballot initiative to exempt feminine hygiene products and diapers from the state sales tax will likely come up short for its required minimum of 72,563 signatures.
If it does meet the requirements and is approved by voters in November, the amendment would exempt from sales tax children and adult diapers and feminine hygiene products, which it would define as “tampons, panty liners, menstrual cups, sanitary napkins, and other similar tangible personal property designed for feminine hygiene in connection with the human menstrual cycle.”
Shannie Jackson, leader of the Arkansas Period Poverty Project and chair of the initiative’s ballot question committee, said having access to more affordable products means residents can continue to be contributing members of society without racking up bills by using products they shouldn’t be.
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“We believe that this would be the first step,” Jackson said. “We believe that they should be free because they’re a medical necessity.
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Jackson said she’s hopeful for additional time to collect signatures and will not stop after Friday’s deadline. Beyond the ballot initiative she’s leading, Jackson also expressed support for the process of getting measures to the public for a vote.
“It doesn’t matter whether you agree or you don’t agree with my petition or any of the others,” Jackson said. “What we’re all so passionate about is the point that we should be able to help make decisions in Arkansas. …This is democracy, let the people vote on this, not let our officials decide things for us.”
Antique cars
An initiated act to lower the age requirement from 45 years to 25 years for antique vehicle tags will not make its signature goal by Friday, said Dave Dinwiddie, a Pine Bluff resident who led the proposal.
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A lack of funding was a challenge for Dinwiddie who said he “didn’t realize how much money you need to bankroll a ballot initiative.”
Aside from $19 he donated to his own online fundraiser, Dinwiddie didn’t raise any money toward his efforts.
In total, Dinwiddie estimated that he collected fewer than 100 signatures of the required 72,563. He said he plans to raise money over the next few years and try again to lower the age requirement for antique tags in 2026. One positive from the experience is knowing that he now has an attorney general-approved initiative for his next attempt, Dinwiddie said.
In the race to build data centers across Arkansas, the Google campus at West Memphis has taken the lead. Google is already hiring electrical engineers and facilities technicians.
I spent several days in West Memphis last summer to report on the amazing economic developments in Crittenden County. Those developments include the explosive growth of Southland Casino, a future Buc-ee’s location adjacent to Interstate 40, and a future water park and hotel complex known as Epic Resort. But even though an official announcement had not been made, city and county officials couldn’t help talking off the record about Google.
That announcement came in October when Google officials confirmed that they will spend $4 billion through the end of 2027. At the time, it was the largest private investment announcement in Arkansas history. The biggest previous capital investment was $3 billion spent on the recently completed Big River Steel II plant in south Mississippi County.
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West Memphis Mayor Marco McClendon believes the total investment by Google could wind up being $7 billion to $10 billion. McClendon said the first phase of the campus will employ about 300 people, with thousands working at the site at the peak of construction.
McClendon said property taxes on the site will produce millions of dollars per year for the West Memphis School District.
The project is being built on an 1,100-acre tract and is expected to take between 18 and 24 months to complete. The campus will include data center structures, office buildings, a power substation, and other infrastructure. In partnership with Entergy Corp., Google will cover the costs associated with powering the facilty. Laura Landreaux, president and CEO of Entergy Arkansas, said the project will “stimulate economic growth in northeast Arkansas and across the state.”
“This project is more than just jobs, buildings and technology,” McClendon said. “It’s about the future of our city, opportunity, investment and education.”
Laurel Brown, regional head of data center public affairs at Google, said: “We’re also working together to bring solar energy and battery storage resources online. We’ll integrate innovative load flexibility into our power contract to reduce our usage during times when the grid is constrained.”
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Google plans to invest $25 million to implement energy efficiency initiatives in this part of the Arkansas Delta. McClendon promises that there will be more announcements regarding what he calls a “community development agreement” between Google and the city. The energy efficiency program will focus on home weatherization, efficiency technology, and energy workforce development.
Google also announced that the University of Arkansas and Arkansas State University will be among the first cohort of what’s known as Google AI for Education Accelerators. Students, faculty and staff will be given access at no cost to Google career certificates and AI training classes.
The West Memphis project, however, didn’t stay atop the list of largest announced capital investments for long.
We learned in January that AVAIO Digital Partners of Connecticut will build a $6 billion facility just south of Little Rock. The 760-acre tract is north of 145th Street and west of Wrightsville. AVAIO officials said the cost could grow to more than $21 billion (think of the tax revenue a project that size could bring) if all elements are added. AVAIO officials said the user of the site will hire more than 500 employees during the next five years.
Sydney Sasser wrote in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: “The center will be designed to host the computing, networking and data storage technologies (and the power infrastructure) that underpin cloud computing and artificial intelligence applications. … AVAIO plans to lease space in the data center to other data companies.”
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“It’s our intention that this extraordinary site in the Little Rock area will be both a major pole of data center capacity and an engine of sustained economic and technological momentum for Arkansas,” said Mark McComiskey, the AVAIO CEO.
As is the case in West Memphis, Entergy will supply power for the AVAIO campus.
Just two days after the AVAIO announcement, the Democrat-Gazette reported that Google is the company developing a data center at the nearby Port of Little Rock. Google had yet to announce its involvement in the project. Google is also expected to construct a data center at Conway.
A document that was later submitted by Google to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said the campus at the Port of Little Rock will consist of five industrial buildings totaling 1.43 million square feet, two office buildings and an electrical substation.
“Google’s center will also contain transmission lines, a sewer lift station and a parking lot,” Lucas Dufalla wrote in the Democrat-Gazette. “Construction will involve filling about 16.8 acres of wetlands. Google plans to purchase wetland mitigation credits as an offset, according to the application.”
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A revised public notice posted by the Corps said the data center at the port will “likely draw more than 100 megawatts of power.”
So we know Google will have at least three data center campuses in Arkansas–at West Memphis, Little Rock, and Conway. What we don’t know is how many billions of dollars Google eventually will invest in the state.
“Google is investing in the next generation of AI innovation in Arkansas and across the country,” said Ruth Porat, the company’s president and chief investment officer. “We see AI and the energy powering it to be the innovations that will define this century. The upside of AI cannot be unlocked without the energy it requires. That’s why Google is building energy capacity that protects affordability for ratepayers and creates jobs that will drive the AI-powered economy.”
Entergy’s Landreaux described the partnership between Google and Entergy as “a turning point for our state.”
In Clarksville, meanwhile, Serverfarm, a data center developer based in Los Angeles, has plans for a 135-acre campus. The project, located north of Interstate 40, could cost $8 billion with six buildings covering 2.16 million square feet. The land was acquired last October. It was then rezoned from rural to industrial use. The project is expected to be built in three phases. It’s not clear how much the first phase will cost.
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Serverfarm is building data center projects around the world. It’s owned by Manulife, the largest insurance company in Canada and one of the 30 largest fund managers in the world.
In southwest Arkansas, the Economic Development Corp. of Clark County voted last month to sell the 991-acre Southwest Arkansas Mega Site south of Arkadelphia to an unnamed buyer for a data center campus. Members of the board were told that the buyer would make a minimum investment of $1 billion.
Shelley Short, CEO of the Arkadelphia Regional Economic Development Alliance, said: “I’m incredibly excited, but we’ll have to be patient.”
The deal, however, quickly fell through. The Southwest Arkansas Mega Site is back on the market.
During last year’s legislative session, lawmakers changed the definition of data center projects that qualify for tax breaks. Act 548 added to the definition of a “qualified investment” to include a “qualified large data center” that can be but isn’t limited to “nonadjacent physical locations that are connected to each other by fiber and associated equipment.”
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Rex Nelson is a senior editor at the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
Rex Nelson
rnelson@adgnewsroom.com
Rex Nelson has been senior editor and columnist at the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette since 2017, and he has a biweekly podcast called “Southern Fried.”
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After graduating from Ouachita Baptist University in 1981, he was a sportswriter for the Arkansas Democrat for a year before becoming editor of Arkadelphia’s Daily Siftings Herald. He was the youngest editor of a daily in Arkansas at age 23. Rex was then news and sports director at KVRC-KDEL from 1983-1985.
He returned to the Democrat as assistant sports editor in 1985. From 1986-1989, he was its Washington correspondent. He left to be Jackson T. Stephens’ consultant.
Rex became the Democrat-Gazette’s first political editor in 1992, but left in 1996 to join then-Gov. Mike Huckabee’s office. He also served from 2005-09 in the administration of President George W. Bush.
From 2009-2018, he worked stints at the Communications Group, Arkansas’ Independent Colleges and Universities, and Simmons First National Corp.
Oklahoma put their best foot forward in the second game of their three-game series against No. 17 Arkansas. A great effort was undone by a late eighth inning collapse.
After getting run ruled in the first game on Friday, OU responded with gritty play but fell 12-8 in a loss to Arkansas, dropping the series. The No. 24 Sooners gave their best effort from the mound and the plate, but couldn’t overcome mistakes.
Cameron Johnson had a day he’d like to forget. Only 2.1 innings of play with three strike outs and four runs off two hits. Despite the lackadaisical play from the mound, OU was able to rebound with hitting and pitching from the bullpen.
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Deiten LaChance got things rolling with a single shot in the first inning with two outs. The momentum was short lived as the Razorbacks came to life at the plate.
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Oklahoma catcher Deiten Lachance connects for a double against Vanderbilt during the second inning at Hawkins Field in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, April 9, 2026. | ANDREW NELLES / THE TENNESSEAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
A single home run and a two-run home run took the lead back for the home team in the second inning. Johnson lost a bit of control from the mound and Arkansas took advantage.
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Oklahoma was able to regain control in the third when Camden Johnson grounded out with one out, but Connor Larkin was able to score to cut the Razorback lead at 3-2. OU would have a runner at third but Jaxon Willits flied out to center field to end the Sooners’ chances at tying the game.
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Oklahoma continued to fight despite Arkansas taking advantage of Sooner mistakes.
A fielder’s choice in the third inning increased the Razorback lead to 4-2 — but OU would answer in the fourth.
Dasan Harris hit a solo home run in the fourth with nobody on and two outs, the second time the Sooners were able to salvage a situation with a run. The inning ended shortly thereafter, denying OU the chance to tie.
Another fielder’s choice resulted in a Razorback run to round out the fourth inning. At 5-3, it seemed like anything Oklahoma would do, Arkansas would answer right back.
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Oklahoma outfielder Dasan Harris reaches second base on a double under Vanderbilt shortstop Ryker Waite (51) during the ninth inning at Hawkins Field in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, April 9, 2026. | ANDREW NELLES / THE TENNESSEAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
OU was able to navigate out of a sticky situation in the fifth with runners in scoring position. Xander Mercurius and Kadyn Leon were able to strike out two Razorback betters to keep the score at 5-3.
But just when it seemed like things were going the way of the home team, Kyle Branch — one of the more clutch player in the lineup — hit a two-run homer in the sixth, scoring Harris to tie the game at five a piece.
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It was LaChance again in the seventh inning, this time a double into right center — Johnson and Jason Walk scored to put the Sooners ahead for good. At 7-5, OU had the wind at their backs.
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Harris had it going once againt to give the Sooners insurance in the eighth. Heading to the plate to lead off, Harris hammered a solo shot into right field to increase the lead to 8-5 in favor of Oklahoma. From there, OU went 1-2-3, but the damage was done.
Oklahoma coach Skip Johnson talks with officials before a Bedlam baseball game between the Oklahoma State Cowboys and the Oklahoma Sooners at ONEOK Field in Tulsa, Okla., Tuesday, April 14, 2026. | BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
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Kuhio Aloy was able to cut into the Sooner lead in the bottom of the eighth with an error on Willits, scoring a Razorback runner.
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Arkansas wasn’t done. Two back-to-back RBIs tied the game at eight a piece. Seven hits, six runs in total in the eighth doomed Oklahoma.
Oklahoma and Arkansas will meet for the third game tomorrow at 1:00 p.m.
CONWAY, Ark. – Three months after Friends of Arkansas PBS formed to try to preserve PBS programming in the Natural State, it now looks like a legitimate possibility. After a whirlwind few months, Carlton Wing, CEO & Executive Director of Arkansas TV, is ready for any outcome.
Wing, since taking over the role around six months ago, has spearheaded a rebrand and the disaffiliation from PBS, which was set to take place at the end of June.
The dues cost Arkansas TV $2.5 million a year, and with that cost, they felt they couldn’t stay afloat after federal funding cuts, while retaining PBS programming.
In turn, they became the first state to say they’d end the partnership.
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“Whatever politics happened, happened way above us in Washington D.C., we have to deal with the financial realities of how we keep public television alive,” Wing said.
He said they immediately entered into emergency budgeting, attempting to get the network out of the red. A grim financial outlook at the time from his perspective.
“The financial realities are there, and we have to deal with that financial reality regardless of one of our providers of public television content,” Wing said.
When the announcement gained traction, a group, spearheaded by former first ladies of Arkansas Barbara Pryor and Gay White, formed to try and keep PBS alive.
“We recognize that there’s a lot of emotions tied to anything that we like,” Wing said.
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Friends of Arkansas PBS gained enough eyeballs to bring top PBS executives, including CEO Paula Kerger, to the state.
“Well, you have to understand what they’re doing when they come is they’re trying to protect that paycheck that has come from Arkansas for decades now,” Wing said.
The momentum was enough to get the Arkansas Public Television Commission to vote to pause the disaffiliation until their next quarterly meeting, creating a window for funds to be raised in the meantime.
Since a pledge of $1 million a year for the next three years coming from an anonymous donor, along with the Arkansas TV Foundation creating a separate dues fund, that’s allowed them to commit to $1.5 million a year as well over the next three.
While Wing has helped the station plan to increase local programming from 5% to 30%, that won’t change, but things may have to be arranged now that they’re closing in on the funds needed to retain PBS.
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“People recognized this is a very real situation and stepped up to be able to make that happen. We’re not quite there yet, but everything is heading in the right direction. There’s still money that needs to be raised,” Wing said.
He has maintained his stance throughout, while conversations may be political above him, this decision is strictly fiscal on his and the station’s end.
“I have said many times that people have tried to make this a red vs blue issue. It’s all about green and about whether you operate in the black or red,” Wing said.
Wing has said that despite being painted as his opposition, his relationship with Pryor and White is far from that.
“My wife and I went and had lunch with them just a couple of weeks ago, and they’re so excited to be involved with a cause,” Wing said.
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He was also adamant that he doesn’t have some form of vendetta against PBS; in fact, it’s played a pivotal role in helping his own daughter, who’s set to graduate with an MBA from the University of Chicago soon.
“PBS played a very vital role in her enthusiastically learning how to read. Yes we absolutely want that, we just have to be able to afford it because I can’t jeopardize the whole network to be able to pay for one provider of public television,” Wing said.
Still, the commission would need to vote to approve resuming the partnership, a vote that would be held at the next quarterly meeting on June 4th.
“I’m hesitant to predict because I don’t know what’s going to happen between now and that meeting,” Wing said on the vote.