Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sanders to reappoint Ward

Governor-elect praises Department of Agricultur­e head

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

Arkansas Gov.-elect Sarah Huckabee Sanders plans to reappoint Arkansas Department of Agricultur­e Secretary Wes Ward, Sanders announced Monday.

Ward, 40, has served as the Department of Agricultur­e’s secretary since March 2015 when Gov. Asa Hutchinson named Ward as his preference for the post, passing over the Agricultur­e Board’s nominee, retired Arkansas National Guard Gen. Ronald Chastain.

The Arkansas Department of Agricultur­e includes the Forestry Division, Livestock and Poultry Division, Natural Resources Division, and Plant Industries Division.

Sanders is scheduled to be sworn in as Arkansas’ first female governor Jan. 10. She will succeed Hutchinson, who has served as the state’s chief executive since 2015. Sanders and Hutchinson are Republican­s.

Sanders said Monday that Ward has done an excellent job growing the state’s largest industry and developing relationsh­ips with the men and women who work in agricultur­e, as the state’s agricultur­e secretary, and “I am excited that he will continue in this critical role for our state.

“He’s also done this work over the last seven years while continuing to serve our nation in uniform, giving credence to his character and dedication,” she said.

“Agricultur­e is the backbone of Arkansas’ economy, and I am proud that our hardworkin­g Arkansas farmers, ranchers, growers, and foresters help feed and supply the state, nation, and world,” Sanders said in her news release. “As governor, we will work together to ensure that we remain a global leader.”

Ward said he looks forward to continuing to invest in the state’s strong, dynamic agricultur­e industry as the secretary of the Department of Agricultur­e.

“Governor-elect Sanders shares my deep appreciati­on for how important agricultur­e is to our state, and we will work together to continue to see it grow to new heights,” he said in the news release.

Ward has served in the

U.S. Marine Corps for more than 22 years and has completed deployment­s and exercises in Afghanista­n, Jordan and Japan, according to the Department of Agricultur­e’s website.

He is currently serving in the Marine Corps Reserves as a detachment commander with the 1 st Civil Affairs Group in Camp Pendleton, Calif.

He is from Lake City in northeast Arkansas and is a graduate of Riverside High School, according to the department’s website. He earned a bachelor of science degree in agricultur­al business with an emphasis in agricultur­al finance from Arkansas State University, and earned a law degree, a master of laws degree in agricultur­al and food law, and a master of science degree in agricultur­al economics from the University of Arkansas.

Ward’s salary as agricultur­e secretary will be determined later, said Sanders spokesman Judd Deere. Ward’s current salary in the post is $152,336 a year, according to the Arkansas Transparen­cy website.

Sanders’ announceme­nt of her intent to reappoint Ward as the agricultur­e secretary is the third secretary appointmen­t she has said she plans to make.

Last week, she announced her intent to nominate Arkansas State Police Captain Mike Hagar as secretary of the state Department of Public Safety and as director of the Arkansas State Police, and her intent to appoint Mike Mills as secretary of the state Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism.

Sanders also said last week that current Department of Public Safety Secretary A.J. Gary has agreed to continue as director of the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management. Gary currently serves in both roles. Arkansas State Police Director Col. Bill Bryant plans to retire Dec. 31, according to a department spokesman.

Mills is the founder and owner of Buffalo Outdoor Center in Ponca, which was Arkansas’ first log cabin resort. From 1982 to 1986 he served as Arkansas’ director of tourism, where he started Partners in Tourism, and he was inducted into the Arkansas Tourism Hall of Fame in 2018. The departing state Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism secretary is Stacy Hurst.

State government’s executive branch currently includes 15 state department­s headed by secretarie­s, under Hutchinson’s consolidat­ion of 42 state agencies into 15 department­s, which went into effect in July 2019.

Ward’s reappointm­ent as agricultur­e secretary by Sanders was widely expected in legislativ­e circles.

State Sen. Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs, who will formally become Senate president pro tempore Jan. 9, said Monday in a text message to the Democrat-Gazette that “Wes Ward has worked diligently with the Legislatur­e.

“Members have a lot of Trust in Mr. Ward and I am pleased to see Governor Elect Sanders intends to reappoint him,” Hester said.

House Speaker Matthew Shepherd, R- El Dorado, who serves on the House Agricultur­e, Forestry and Economic Developmen­t Committee, said Monday that Ward has consistent­ly worked well with legislator­s.

“He has been responsive to communicat­ion from members on behalf of their constituen­ts,” he said in a written statement. “As agricultur­e is our state’s largest industry, this is an important appointmen­t.”

Shepherd said Gov-elect Sanders “made a great choice and I look forward to continuing to work with Secretary Ward in the years head.”

Rich Hillman, president of the Arkansas Farm Bureau, said Monday that, “We are encouraged by Governor-elect Sanders’ decision to reappoint Wes Ward as secretary of agricultur­e.

“We have developed a meaningful and beneficial relationsh­ip with Sec. Ward over the past seven years, and we believe his reappointm­ent is in the best interest of Arkansas agricultur­e, our state’s largest industry sector,” Hillman said in a written statement.

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