Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Unpaved road work OK’d in watershed

- JOSEPH FLAHERTY

Members of the governor’s Buffalo River Conservati­on Committee voted Thursday to approve funding for improvemen­ts to two unpaved roads in the watershed.

Approximat­ely 3,493 feet of the Cane Branch road in Searcy County and 2 miles of the Cave Mountain Road to Hawksbill Crag in Newton County are slated for improvemen­ts under the proposal.

Officials on the committee estimated the total cost to the state at $570,979, with an additional $110,263 supplied by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s nonpoint source management program.

Unpaved roads can degrade water quality because of erosion and sedimentar­y runoff.

The Buffalo River Conservati­on Committee was created by Gov. Asa Hutchinson in September 2019 to protect and enhance the quality of the watershed, a popular tourist draw in northern Arkansas that is home to the country’s first national river.

The genesis of the committee followed years of controvers­y over C&H Hog Farms, an industrial hog farm located in the watershed which finally closed in January under a deal with the state.

The work on Cave Mountain Road is intended to widen the road, create culverts and drainage, put in packed clay and gravel, and apply the surface treatment known as chipseal, according to Tony Ramick, Agricultur­e Department division manager for nonpoint source management and unpaved road programs.

Guardrails also will be placed at some of the curves on the road, Ramick said.

Ramick said the U.S. National Park Service had agreed to do the assessment work for the road improvemen­ts, “contingent on a commitment of funding” from the Buffalo River Conservati­on Committee. The assessment­s are estimated to take nine months to a year, he said.

The funding decisions of the committee, including the money allocated for road improvemen­ts, are expected to be presented Wednesday at a joint meeting of the Arkansas House and Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committees.

Other sites under considerat­ion for road improvemen­ts included Lone Beach Church Road and County Road 6450, both in Newton County, along with Richland Road in Searcy County, according to Ramick.

Arkansas Department of Agricultur­e Secretary Wes Ward, chair of the Buffalo River Conservati­on Committee, referred to the the list of potential unpaved road sites and encouraged members to keep “identifyin­g the need, [and] documentin­g the need” even if funding is not available at the moment.

That work will be especially helpful as the committee prepares to create an annual report at the end of the year to submit to Hutchinson and the Legislatur­e, Ward said.

The report will allow members to “show what we’ve done with the funding that we have, but also demonstrat­e and show what we’ve identified that additional funding could be used for,” Ward said during the meeting.

Broader conservati­on goals for the Buffalo River experience­d a setback recently when the Arkansas Legislatur­e in June voted down a proposal from state environmen­tal regulators to permanentl­y ban medium and large hog farms from operating in the watershed.

The governor, along with conservati­on groups like the Ozark Society and the Buffalo River Watershed Alliance, had supported the proposed permanent moratorium. Arkansas Farm Bureau opposed the measure.

At the time, legislator­s expressed concerns about the potential impact on agricultur­e around the state.

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