Cares and ARPA Arkansas
Cares and ARPA Arkansas
FOR NOW, LIVE IN FAYETTEVILLE, LYDIA FIELDER, 40/29 NEWS. THERE HAVE BEEN VARIOUS FEDERAL AID PACKAGES APPROVED THROUGHOUT E PANDEMIC – FROM STIMULUS CHECKS – TO CHILD X TA CREDITS – TO TEMPORARY INCREASES TO UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS AND RENTAL ASSISTANCE. BUT THE TWO BIG ONES T HE STATE IS OVERSEEING – THE CARES ACT AND THE AMERIC AN RESCUE PLAN ACT. SCOTT HARDIN WITH STE AT DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION SAYS ARKANSAS RECEIVED 3 BILLION IN CARES ACT MON EY AND 5 BILLION IN ARPA MONEY. HARDIN TELLS ME 150 LLN MI OF THE CARES MONEY IT RECEIVED WENT DIRECTLY TO ARKANSAS CITIES AND COUNTIES. <> “CARES had a really particular objective in that it was giving the federal government, native governments, the instruments that they wanted to deal with the pandemic.” <> “Whether or not that was PPE, whether or not that was tinak care of well being care employees within the space, it was ve ry short-term objectives, let’s get via this factor, let’s give native governments the assets they want.” NOW THE PROCESS IS UNDERY WA IN ALLOCATING ARPA MONEY. HERE’S HARDIN ON THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CARES AND ARPA. <> “The objectives with CARES had been – get the assets to those communities shortly, and that is what occurred.” <> “With the American Rese cu Plan, it is a much-more long- time period aim, and it is actually extra financial.” HARDIN SAYS A TOTAL OF 1.008 BILLION IN ARPA MONEY IS BEING DISTRIBUTED TO ARKANSAS CITIES AND COUNTIES. “We perceive that these cities all have distinctive struggles. Let’s give th em the instruments they want to recuperate over the subsequent few years, that is why you see the aim is long-term, a nd the spending, we undergo 2026.” THE STE ATALSO CREATED AN ARPA STEERING COMMITTEE TO OVERSEE 1.57 BILLI ION MONEY THAT WILL GO DIRECTLY TO SPECIFIC ENTITIES AND PROJECTS. AND SOME MONEY FOR THAT IS ALREADY GONE OUT. FOR INSTANCE… THE STATE HAS ALLOCATED 313 MILLION TO THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE TO EXPAND BROADBAN D. 48 MILLION WENT TO SOCIAL PROGRAMS SUCH AS BOYS D AN GIRLS CLUBS AND THE COALTION AGAINST DOMESTIC VIOLENCE. 121 MILLION WAS DEDICAD TO HELP HOSPITAL SYSTEMS THROUGHOUT THE STATE DURING SPIKES COFOVID-1 9. APPROXIMATELY 245 MILLION ADDRESSED OTHER COVID-RELATED COSTS SU AS TESTING AND DISPOSING BIOHAZARDOUS WASTE. ROUNDING OUT THE STATE’S ARPA EXPENDITURES DTOATE IS PARKS, REC AND TOURISM – WHICH GOT 2.4 MILLION. WE ALSO KNOW THAT U- A-M-S WAS ALLOCATED 12 MILLION IN AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN MONEY. WE ARE FOLLOWING HOW CITIES AND COUNTIES THROUGHOUT NORTHWEST ARKANSAS AND THE RIVER VALLEY A
Cares and ARPA Arkansas
Data Skrive
Harold Fannin and the Bowling Green Falcons and the Arkansas State Red Wolves play in the 68 Ventures Bowl. The bowl matchup is December 26, 2024, starting at 9 p.m. ET, airing on ESPN.
Interested in watching the matchup featuring the Falcons and Red Wolves? You can find it on ESPN.
Keep up with college football all season on FOX Sports.
Alexi Lalas and David Mosse broke down the United States Men’s National Team’s goal-filled weekend, where Weston McKennie, Malik Tillman, Johnny Cardoso, and Brenden Aaronson scored for their respective clubs. The guys are excited, as the USMNT players continue to stack strong performances one after another in Europe.
Learn more about the Bowling Green Falcons and the Arkansas State Red Wolves.
Date | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|
8/29/2024 | vs. Fordham | W 41-17 |
9/7/2024 | at Penn State | L 34-27 |
9/21/2024 | at Texas A&M | L 26-20 |
9/28/2024 | vs. Old Dominion | L 30-27 |
10/5/2024 | at Akron | W 27-20 |
10/12/2024 | vs. Northern Illinois | L 17-7 |
10/19/2024 | vs. Kent State | W 27-6 |
10/26/2024 | at Toledo | W 41-26 |
11/5/2024 | at Central Michigan | W 23-13 |
11/12/2024 | vs. Western Michigan | W 31-13 |
11/23/2024 | at Ball State | W 38-13 |
11/29/2024 | vs. Miami (OH) | L 28-12 |
12/26/2024 | vs. Arkansas State | – |
Name | Position | Stats |
---|---|---|
Harold Fannin | TE | 100 REC / 1,337 YDS / 9 TD / 111.4 YPG |
Connor Bazelak | QB | 2,654 YDS (67.1%) / 15 TD / 5 INT -79 RUSH YDS / 2 RUSH TD / -6.6 RUSH YPG |
Terion Stewart | RB | 895 YDS / 6 TD / 81.4 YPG / 5.6 YPC |
Jaison Patterson | RB | 411 YDS / 5 TD / 34.3 YPG / 4.4 YPC 10 REC / 93 REC YDS / 0 REC TD / 10.3 REC YPG |
Joseph Sipp Jr. | LB | 67 TKL / 9 TFL / 6 SACK |
Charles Rosser | LB | 51 TKL / 5 TFL / 4.5 SACK |
Brock Horne | LB | 62 TKL / 2 TFL / 1 SACK |
C.J. Brown | DB | 61 TKL / 2 TFL / 1 INT / 1 PD |
Date | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|
8/31/2024 | vs. Central Arkansas | W 34-31 |
9/7/2024 | vs. Tulsa | W 28-24 |
9/14/2024 | at Michigan | L 28-18 |
9/21/2024 | at Iowa State | L 52-7 |
10/5/2024 | vs. South Alabama | W 18-16 |
10/12/2024 | at Texas State | L 41-9 |
10/19/2024 | at Southern Miss | W 44-28 |
10/26/2024 | vs. Troy | W 34-31 |
11/9/2024 | at Louisiana | L 55-19 |
11/16/2024 | at Georgia State | W 27-20 |
11/23/2024 | vs. Louisiana-Monroe | W 28-21 |
11/30/2024 | vs. Old Dominion | L 40-32 |
12/26/2024 | vs. Bowling Green | – |
Name | Position | Stats |
---|---|---|
Jaylen Raynor | QB | 2,562 YDS (61.8%) / 14 TD / 9 INT 392 RUSH YDS / 2 RUSH TD / 32.7 RUSH YPG |
Zak Wallace | RB | 622 YDS / 10 TD / 51.8 YPG / 4.5 YPC |
Corey Rucker | WR | 65 REC / 946 YDS / 5 TD / 78.8 YPG |
Ja’Quez Cross | RB | 600 YDS / 2 TD / 50 YPG / 5.6 YPC 30 REC / 198 REC YDS / 1 REC TD / 16.5 REC YPG |
Marvin Ham II | LB | 76 TKL / 7 TFL / 1.5 SACK |
Trevian Thomas | DB | 60 TKL / 0 TFL / 5 INT / 5 PD |
Justin Parks | DB | 69 TKL / 3 TFL / 2 INT / 2 PD |
Charles Willekes | LB | 64 TKL / 3 TFL / 1 SACK / 1 INT |
FOX Sports created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
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Pine Bluff native and Missouri transfer wide receiver Courtney Crutchfield signed with Arkansas on Wednesday.
The former four-star recruit announced his intentions to enter the transfer portal last Thursday and he officially entered last Friday. Crutchfield redshirted this season for the Tigers.
A 6-foot-2, 188-pound pass catcher, Crutchfield recorded 42 receptions for 930 yards and 13 touchdowns his senior season at Pine Bluff. He was committed to Arkansas for nearly seven months before eventually signing with Missouri.
Crutchfield will have four years of eligibility remaining. He was rated by Rivals as the No. 2 overall recruit and No. 1 wide receiver in the state of Arkansas in the 2024 recruiting class.
WASHINGTON — U.S. officials are moving to phase out the leading decongestant found in hundreds of over-the-counter medicines, concluding that it doesn’t actually relieve nasal congestion.
Phenylephrine is used in popular versions of Sudafed, Dayquil and other medications, but experts have long questioned its effectiveness. Last month, the Food and Drug Administration formally proposed revoking its use in pills and liquid solutions, kicking off a process that’s likely to force drugmakers to remove or reformulate products.
It’s a win for skeptical academics, including researchers at the University of Florida who petitioned the FDA to revisit the drug’s use in 2007 and again in 2015. For consumers, it will likely mean switching to alternatives, including an older decongestant that was moved behind the pharmacy counter nearly 20 years ago.
Doctors say Americans will be better off without phenylephrine, which is often combined with other medicines to treat cold, flu, fever and allergies.
“People walk into the drugstore today and see 55,000 medicines on the shelf, and they pick one that is definitely not going to work,” said Dr. Brian Schroer of the Cleveland Clinic. “You take away that option, and it will be easier for them to self-direct toward products that really will help them.”
The FDA decision was expected after federal advisers last year voted unanimously that oral phenylephrine medications haven’t been shown to relieve congestion.
Experts reviewed several recent, large studies indicating that phenylephrine was no better than a placebo at clearing nasal passageways. They also revisited studies from the 1960s and 1970s that supported the drug’s initial use, finding numerous flaws and questionable data.
The panel’s opinion only applied to phenylephrine in oral medications, which account for roughly $1.8 billion in annual U.S. sales. The drug is still considered effective in nasal sprays, though those are much less popular.
Phenylephrine wasn’t always the top choice for cold and allergy products. Many were originally formulated with a different drug, pseudoephedrine.
But a 2006 law required pharmacies to move pseudoephedrine products behind the counter, citing their potential to be processed into methamphetamine. Companies such as Johnson & Johnson and Bayer decided to reformulate their products to keep them readily available on store shelves — and labeled many of them as “PE” versions of familiar brand names.
PHARMACY NEEDED
Consumers who still want to take pills or syrups for relief will probably need to head to the pharmacy counter — where the pseudoephedrine-containing versions of Sudafed, Claritin D and other products remain available without a prescription. Purchasers need to provide a photo ID.
Beyond those products, most of the other options are over-the-counter nasal sprays or solutions.
Saline drops and rinses are a quick way to clear mucus from the nose. For long-term relief from seasonal stuffiness, itching and sneezing, many doctors recommend nasal steroids, sold as Flonase, Nasacort and Rhinocort.
“These medicines are by far the most effective daily treatment for nasal congestion and stuffiness,” Schroer said. “The biggest issue is they’re not great when used on an as-needed basis.”
Nasal steroids generally have to be used daily to be highly effective. For short-term relief, patients can try antihistamine sprays, such as Astepro, which are faster acting.
Phenylephrine-based sprays will also remain on pharmacy shelves.
SWALLOWING STIFLES AID
The experts who challenged the drug’s effectiveness say it’s quickly broken down and rendered ineffective when it hits the stomach.
“This is a good drug, but not when it’s swallowed,” said Leslie Hendeles, professor emeritus at the University of Florida’s College of Pharmacy, where he co-authored several papers on the ingredient. “It’s inactivated in the gut and doesn’t get into the bloodstream, so it can’t get to the nose.”
When Hendeles and his colleagues first petitioned the FDA on phenylephrine, they suggested a higher dose might be effective. But subsequent studies showed that even doses 400% higher than those currently recommended don’t treat stuffiness.
The FDA and other researchers concluded that pushing the dosage even higher might carry safety risks.
“If you’re using very high doses, the risk is raising blood pressure so high that it could be hazardous to patients,” said Randy Hatton, a University of Florida professor who co-led the research on phenylephrine.
Because of its cardiovascular effects, the drug is sometimes used to treat dangerously low blood pressure during surgery, Hatton noted.
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