Arkansas
Proposed Arkansas legislation would increase taxpayers' standard deduction • Arkansas Advocate
Rep. David Ray, R-Maumelle, filed two tax-related bills Thursday that would increase individual taxpayers’ standard deduction and remove a cap on its annual adjustment.
House Bill 1066 would increase Arkansas’ standard deduction to $4,400 per taxpayer in 2026. The state’s current standard deduction is $2,340, well below the federal standard deduction of $14,600 for individuals or married taxpayers filing separately.
HB 1065, also known as the Inflation Reduction Act of 2025, would eliminate the 3% cap on adjusting the standard deduction in future years. The annual adjustment is tied to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics defines as the “average change over time in prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of goods and services.”
Instead of using the CPI for All Urban Consumers to calculate the annual adjustment, the bill calls for referring to the CPI for West South Central division of the South Region published by the U.S. Department of Labor, which includes Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas.
Increasing the standard deduction is “a solid move to make” in light of recent inflation and “a really broad-based way to deliver income tax relief to hardworking Arkansas families,” Ray said in an interview Friday.
The federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, passed during President Donald Trump’s first term, included a doubling of the standard deduction, which Ray said was “extremely popular.”
Ray said “one of the biggest lessons” from November’s presidential election, in which Trump won a second term, was that Americans want their elected leaders to reduce the impact of inflation.
“As one state representative out of 100, there’s very little I can do about the wasteful spending we see in Washington D.C. that drives a lot of the inflation, but the one thing I can do is file a bill that makes us adjust our tax brackets to truly account for inflation,” Ray said.
Arkansas governor signs tax, appropriation bills after special legislative session ends
He also said the legislation will have “literally zero cost” if inflation rates are manageable in 2025, and it “would provide some really robust protections for taxpayers for the next time we get a nasty bout of inflation.”
Tax cuts have been a focus for Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who signed legislation to lower taxes for Arkansans three times over 15 months.
The Legislature approved more than $100 million in tax cuts in April 2023, reducing the top individual tax rate from 4.9% to 4.7% and the top corporate tax rate from 5.3% to 5.1%. During a special session in September 2023, legislators lowered the top individual and top corporate income tax rates to 4.4% and 4.8%, respectively.
The most recent cuts came during June’s special session during which lawmakers approved a bill to lower the top corporate income tax rate from 4.8% to 4.3% and the top individual income tax rate from 4.4% to 3.9%, retroactive to Jan. 1, 2024.
Ray co-sponsored all of those tax-cut bills. In addition to filing HB 1065 and 1066 for the 2025 legislative session that begins on Jan. 13, Ray has also filed HCR1002, a resolution urging the Congress to permanently extend the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.
The law made several changes to the individual income tax, including an expanded tax deduction and child tax credit. The individual income tax changes are set to expire at the end of 2025. If made permanent, the income tax provisions would reduce federal revenue by $115 billion to $165 billion annually, according to the Tax Foundation.
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Arkansas
6 die in South Arkansas car wrecks –
Separate vehicle crashes in South Arkansas in the days before Christmas claimed the lives of six people.
Information was compiled from preliminary fatal crash summaries posted by Arkansas State Police.
On Saturday, Dec. 20, a Texarkana pedestrian was struck and killed on Arkansas Highway 82. A report says 47-year-old Christopher Lamin was walking in the roadway near its intersection with Vanderbilt Road when an eastbound 2010 Toyota struck and killed him. Weather and road conditions were clear when the collision occurred at 8 p.m.
On Sunday, Dec. 21, a Nashville woman died in a crash at the Nevada County town of Emmet. Marshauntie T. Sanders, 30, was traveling on US Highway 67 when the 2015 Ford Edge she was driving left the roadway and struck an embankment. The weather and roads were clear when the crash happened at 1:16 a.m.
A second crash early Sunday morning on US Highway 79 left a Magnolia man dead and a Waldo woman injured. Therran R. Moreno, 19, was driving a 2013 Chevy Tahoe north when the vehicle left the roadway and struck an embankment, overturning the vehicle and ejecting Moreno. His passenger, Summer Murphy, also 19, was transported to Magnolia Regional Center for treatment to unlisted injuries. The weather was clear and the roads were dry at the time of the crash, at 3:07 a.m.
A third car accident Sunday morning killed two Star City residents in the Desha County city of Dumas. James Dale Wilcox Jr., 63, was driving a 2023 Chevy Trailblazer north on US Highway 165 when he veered left of center, drove off the highway and collided with an embankment at Dan Gill Drive. Both Wilcox and his wife, Brenda, 59, were killed in the crash. Roads and weather conditions were clear at the time of the crash, 9:48 a.m.
A one-vehicle wreck on Arkansas Highway 51 in Hot Spring County left one person dead Monday, Dec. 22. Matthew Joseph Buffington, 40, of Malvern, was driving a 2021 Jeep Compass when he drove up an embankment, sending the vehicle airborne and striking two trees. Weather and road conditions were clear and dry at the time of the crash, 12:20 a.m.
Editor’s Note: Preliminary Arkansas State Police fatality reports sometimes contain information that turns out to be inaccurate. Typical errors include spelling errors in names, or incorrect ages; outdated hometown information; vehicle direction of travel; and incident times. The ASP sometimes corrects these errors in updated reports. ASP reports omit names of passengers or drivers who are not injured, even in instances when uninjured drivers may appear to be at fault. The reports also omit names of juveniles who were injured or killed, although we report those names when obtained through other sources.
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Arkansas
Chronic wasting disease spreads to new counties in Arkansas, alarming game officials
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KATV) — Three cases of Chronic-Wasting Disease have been detected in parts of Arkansas where they never have been before. Now the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is urging hunters to be on the lookout for this disease, which affects white-tailed deer and elk.
Chronic-Wasting Disease (CWD), also known as zombie deer disease, has been prevalent in portions of North Central and South Arkansas since 2016. But now for the first time, the disease is in Grant and Sevier counties, which is concerning to Arkansas Game and Fish.
In Grant County, one deer was taken southwest of Sheridan, and the other was killed by a hunter near Grapevine. Just 4 miles from the Oklahoma-Arkansas border in Sevier County at the De Queen Lake Wildlife Management Area, the third deer was harvested by a hunter.
The previous nearest-known case of CWB in Arkansas to these areas was 80 miles away.
“It’s difficult to tell where it came from, how it got there, if it came from another state, it’s just basically impossible to tell that,” says Keith Stephens, the commission’s chief of communications.
CWD has been in the United States since 1967, affecting deer, elk, moose, antelope, and caribou populations.
The disease is caused by abnormal prion proteins, which are found in the central and peripheral nervous systems. It can cause a damaging chain reaction, spreading to the brain, which can lead to neurodegeneration.
The disease takes nearly 2 years to present symptoms, but once they begin to show, those symptoms are easy to spot.
“They just don’t act normal. If they are just standing there, they typically stand like a tripod, their legs are spread apart real wide. They salivate, excessively,” explains Stephens.
He continues, “they drink excessively, they use the bathroom excessively, walk in circles.”
Stephens also says that these deer no longer have a fear of humans, and they do not run away if a person approaches one.
This disease is deadly for these creatures.
“Eventually it does kill the deer. They get very sick. They have some really erratic behavior, and as the name implies, they just basically waste away,” Stephens says.
There is one question experts are still trying to answer: can humans contract this disease?
“There’s been a lot of testing done around the country, and so far, we haven’t found the link,” states Stephens.
Though there has not been a case where a human has contracted CWD, the American Academy of Neurology reported that in 2022, there were two hunters who died after developing Creutzfeldt Jakob disease, a central nervous system disorder caused by misfolded prion proteins, after eating CWD-infected venison.
Stephens urges Arkansans to report deer with this disease to the Game and Fish Commission.
“We always tell people if their deer does test positive for CWD not to eat it. Let us know, and we’ll come get it.”
The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission has freezers in every county in the state where anyone can drop off their deer so it can be tested for CWD. The entire list of locations is here.
Arkansas
Arkansas governor defends Christmas proclamation amid church-state separation outcry
WASHINGTON (TNND) — Republican Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders doubled down on her decision to issue a proclamation shuttering state government offices on Friday, December 26, in celebration of Christmas after receiving a complaint from a legal group which advocates for the separation of church and state.
About a week ago, Sanders issued a notice alerting the public of her decision to close government offices the day after Christmas. In her proclamation, Sanders shared the story of Jesus, “the Son of God” who was born in a manger in the city of Bethlehem.
“We give thanks for the arrival of Christ the Savior, who will come again in glory and whose kingdom will have no end, by celebrating His birth each year on Christmas Day,” Sanders wrote, according to a copy obtained by Fox News Digital.
Freedom from Religion Foundation wrote a letter rebuking Sanders of her proclamation, claiming that the governor used her “official capacity” to “advance a specific religious viewpoint, in violation of the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause.” The group claimed Sanders’ proclamation was therefore unconstitutional.
But in a letter penned to Freedom from Religion Foundation’s legal counsel Christopher Line, Sanders pushed back, saying it would be “impossible” for her to keep religion out of an acknowledgement of Christmas.
“You say that my communications as Governor must be neutral on matters of religion,” Sanders wrote.
“I say that, even if I wanted to do that, it would be impossible. Christmas is not simply an ‘end-of-the-year holiday’ with ‘broadly observed secular cultural aspects,’ as your letter states. It’s not gifts, trees, and stockings that make this holiday special. Christmas is the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ, and if we are to honor Him properly, we should tell His miraculous, world-changing story properly, too.”
Sanders wrote that she found it ironic that she received the foundation’s letter which claimed that she was “alienating” non-Christian constituents as she left a Menorah lighting celebration with people from all across Arkansas.
“I doubt they would say that my administration alienates non-Christians,” Sanders wrote. “In fact, many would say the opposite: that only by voicing our own faith and celebrating other faiths can we make our state’s diverse religious communities feel seen and heard.”
Sanders ended the letter by saying her proclamation wasn’t about pushing Christian doctrine on people but to celebrate the humble beginnings of Jesus Christ.
“Though you may enter this season with bitterness, know that Christ is with you, that He loves you, and that He died for your sins just the same as He did for mine and everyone else’s,” the letter concluded.
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