Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Washington news in brief

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

Congressma­n pays visit to West Point

WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark., traveled to the U.S. Military Academy last week ahead of Saturday’s graduation ceremonies.

Several members of the class of 2020 are from the 3rd Congressio­nal District, which Womack represents.

They are David Nichols of Bentonvill­e; Robert Bobby Norwood of Siloam Springs; Andrew Roberts of Bentonvill­e; and Joseph Sultemeier of Rogers, Womack’s office said.

President Donald Trump spoke Saturday to the graduating cadets. Womack, a former Rogers mayor, is chairman of the school’s board of visitors.

Located on the Hudson River about 50 miles north of New York City, West Point is “the oldest continuous­ly occupied military post in America,” officials say.

Womack served 30 years in the Arkansas Army National Guard, retiring as a colonel in 2009. He is also former executive director of the University of Arkansas’

Army ROTC program.

His brother, Jim, is a 1977 West Point graduate.

Cotton addresses racial bias, police

U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., unveiled a nonbinding resolution Tuesday lamenting the death of George Floyd while also highlighti­ng the importance of adequate funding for law enforcemen­t.

Twenty-eight Republican­s were co-sponsors. No Democrats were listed as backers.

Tuesday was the day of the funeral for Floyd, a black man who died after a white Minneapoli­s police officer knelt on his neck.

Cotton’s resolution declared that “the killing of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, at the hands of law enforcemen­t was a horrific act that violated the public trust and was inconsiste­nt with the values and conduct expected of law enforcemen­t officers.”

It stated that “the United States has a troubled history of racism that includes slavery, the terror of lynch mobs, segregatio­n, and Jim Crow,” adding that there is “important work to accomplish” on that front.

In addition, it portrayed cuts to law enforcemen­t budgets as dangerous, warning that “defunding the police would leave police department­s understaff­ed and undertrain­ed, while also increasing the risk of violent crime to the communitie­s of the United States, especially vulnerable communitie­s.”

As proposed, the resolution “(1) calls for justice for George Floyd; and (2) opposes efforts to defund the police.”

Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., blocked the resolution, saying it was time for “real action, not rhetoric.”

Hill honors staff at Cabot school

U.S. Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., highlighte­d workers at a Cabot grade school in Thursday’s Congressio­nal Record.

Staff members and teachers at Stagecoach Elementary School are “meeting the academic needs of their students, but they are also finding creative ways to maintain relationsh­ips with students, their families, and the community,” the lawmaker from Little Rock stated.

“The teachers and staff have gone above and beyond by delivering groceries to families in need, continuing to offer breakfast and lunch for their students, providing supplies like laptops to families who may not have the necessary equipment for athome learning, and conducting parades throughout the student’s neighborho­ods to lift spirits, and bring the community together,” Hill said.

“This initiative has shined a light on how adapting to the situation at hand and responding with positivity can unite a community even amidst a public health crisis,” he said.

In Monday’s Congressio­nal Record, Hill paid tribute to Amber Harbin, the Little Rock School District’s 2020 Teacher of the Year.

Harbin, who works at Forest Heights Stem Academy, has been a science teacher for 13 years.

Hill thanked Harbin “and all of the dedicated educators throughout Arkansas, for service and leadership in these trying times for central Arkansas’s communitie­s.” Planning to visit the nation’s capital? Know something happening in Washington, D.C.? Please contact Frank Lockwood at (202) 662-7690 or flockwood@arkansason­line.com. Want the latest from the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette’s

Washington bureau? It’s available on Twitter, @LockwoodFr­ank.

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