© 2024 KASU
Your Connection to Music, News, Arts and Views for 65 Years
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Several cities receiving state development grants

(Courtesy of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission.)

The Arkansas Economic Development Commission (AEDC) has awarded $1,395,002 in Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) to eight Arkansas communities. The grants are awarded under the General Assistance and Innovative Projects line item, designed to provide communities the opportunity to apply for grants not covered under other funding categories.

All Arkansas cities and counties are eligible for the grant program with the exception of 14 entitlement cities that receive CDBG funds directly from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). To be eligible, more than half the population benefiting from the grants must be of low to moderate income.

The eight projects include the following cities:

  • Tuckerman: $216,000 to expand a building housing the city’s food pantry
  • Beedeville: $216,000 for street repairs
  • Brinkley: $162,100 for drainage improvements
  • Evening Shade: $92,922 to purchase and install a generator at a community shelter
  • Pocahontas: $202,250 for drainage improvements
  • Wilmot: $200,300 for drainage improvements

And the following counties:

  • Saline County: $89,430 to install a kitchen at the ICAN! Arts and Resource Center
  • White County: $216,000 for a children’s safety center for abused children

For more information on the CDBG program, contact the Grants Management Division at 501-682-1121 or visit www.ArkansasEDC.com.

Johnathan Reaves is the News Director for KASU Public Radio. As part of an Air Force Family, he moved to Arkansas from Minot, North Dakota in 1986. He was first bitten by the radio bug after he graduated from Gosnell High School in 1992. While working on his undergraduate degree, he worked at KOSE, a small 1,000 watt AM commercial station in Osceola, Arkansas. Upon graduation from Arkansas State University in 1996 with a degree in Radio-Television Broadcast News, he decided that he wanted to stay in radio news. He moved to Stuttgart, Arkansas and worked for East Arkansas Broadcasters as news director and was there for 16 years.