Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Little Rock’s mayor president of national group

- RYAN TARINELLI

LITTLE ROCK — Little Rock Mayor Frank Scott Jr. was sworn in Friday as the new president of the African American Mayors Associatio­n.

Scott, who leads the most populous city in Arkansas, said in an interview that he hopes to leverage the position to deepen ties with the White House and the federal government. In the process, the mayor said he aims to draw down more federal dollars and resources to the state’s capital city.

The associatio­n, which represents Black mayors from across the nation, includes mayors from cities such as New York City, Atlanta and Chicago, according to its website.

Scott traveled to Washington, D.C., for the associatio­n’s conference, which is where he was sworn in as its new president.

“It’s about creating a movement,” Scott said during a speech at the conference. “A movement of Black mayors who are unapologet­ically Black, doing all that we can for the greater all but understand­ing that the least of these — those that have been forgotten, those have not been paid attention to — need to be invested in.”

During his speech, Scott touched on the issues shaping cities nationwide: affordable housing, crime, policing, climate change and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“This pandemic has disproport­ionately impacted our race, whether it was health care disparitie­s, financial disparitie­s, or yes, mental health disparitie­s,” he said.

In an interview, Scott said his new role as president of the associatio­n will give him the opportunit­y to shape public policy discussion­s.

Scott reported spending time with U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Marcia Fudge, secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

Government­s at the state and local level can expect expanded and new competitiv­e grant programs under the wide-ranging infrastruc­ture package signed by President Joe Biden last year, according to the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion.

At the conference, Mitch Landrieu, a former New Orleans mayor who is coordinati­ng the implementa­tion of the law, stressed the importance of infrastruc­ture and touted benefits of the package.

“You cannot grow an economy, you can’t create opportunit­y, you can’t create equity if you don’t have just the basic infrastruc­ture,” he said.

Arkansas is expected to secure more than $4 billion in funding for a variety of broad infrastruc­ture sectors over five years under the infrastruc­ture law, according to past White House estimates.

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