Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senators reject 36 appointees

Rules committee sends forward only 14 Hutchinson picks

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

The Arkansas Senate Rules Committee on Monday rejected former Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s nomination of 36 appointees to state boards and commission­s.

The rejected nominees include Hutchinson’s nomination of his former chief of staff Alison Williams of North Little Rock to the Arkansas Educationa­l Television Commission and the State Banking Board; Arkansas Public Employees Retirement System Executive Director Amy Fecher of Sherwood to the state Board of Nursing, along with eight other nursing board appointees; and former Department of Commerce spokeswoma­n Alisha Curtis of Little Rock to the state Board of Health, along with two other health board appointees.

It’s possible for a senator to make a motion for the Senate to confirm any of the 36 appointees that the Senate Rules Committee rejected Monday.

The Senate committee recommende­d that the full Senate vote to confirm 14 of the former Republican governor’s nomination­s of appointees to state boards and commission­s.

The recommende­d nominees include William Ingram Phillips of Fairfield Bay and Melonaie Gullick of Conway to the Arkansas Veterans Commission, Arkansas State University System Vice President of University Relations Shane Broadway of Bryant to the War Memorial Stadium Commission, and Magnolia banker Bruce Maloch to the Arkansas Livestock and Poultry Commission. Both Broadway and Maloch are former Democratic state lawmakers.

Sen. Fred Love, D-Little Rock, questioned why the Senate Rules Committee was considerin­g rejecting most of the nominees made by Hutchinson on the list presented to the committee Monday. He voiced his objection to doing so.

Senate Rules Commit

tee Chairman Clint Penzo, R-Springdale, said the Senate received these appointmen­t letters from Hutchinson at the last minute shortly before Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders was sworn in Jan. 10 as governor, and the Senate lacks informatio­n about many of these appointees.

Sen. Jonathan Dismang, R-Searcy, said the Senate hasn’t previously received appointmen­t letters from a governor in his last hour in office and there are a large number of appointees the Senate doesn’t have the ability to ask questions about to the former administra­tion.

He said the Senate Rules Committee is recommendi­ng the Senate confirm Hutchinson’s nomination­s of appointees that senators are familiar with.

Sen. Gary Stubblefie­ld, R-Branch, said Sanders should have the right to choose who she wants to work with on state boards and commission­s.

Afterward, a spokesman for Hutchinson, Bob Burgess, said in a written statement, “These appointmen­ts were made over several weeks to fill vacancies and, as is customary, they were grouped together into one announceme­nt.

“As this was Governor Hutchinson’s last round of appointmen­ts, the announceme­nt was made at the end of his term in office, and I am not entirely sure how they were transmitte­d to the Senate,” Burgess said.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Colin Murphey) ?? Sen. Clint Penzo (right), R-Springdale, presides over a Senate Rules Committee meeting at the Arkansas state Capitol on Monday.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Colin Murphey) Sen. Clint Penzo (right), R-Springdale, presides over a Senate Rules Committee meeting at the Arkansas state Capitol on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States