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Governor signs Senate Bill 182 into law, enacting 2024 budget for Jefferson County

Governor signs Senate Bill 182 into law, enacting 2024 budget for Jefferson County
Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders leads off a news conference announcing a Senate bill to enact the previous year's budget if a county Quorum Court cannot agree on a budget for the present year Monday, Feb. 3, 2025. Pictured in the background, from left: State Reps. Glenn Barnes, D-Pine Bluff; Fred Allen, D-Little Rock; and Mike Holcomb, R-Pine Bluff. (Pine Bluff Commercial/I.C. Murrell)

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders has signed a bill forcing Jefferson County to operate from its previous budget from 2024 until one for 2025 is passed.

The bill on Monday moved from the state House of Representatives floor to Sanders’ desk for her signature and went into law immediately with an emergency clause. The House voted 92-0, with three marked present, to advance Senate Bill 182, which now allows hundreds of Jefferson County employees to be paid and the county to address bills and other expenses despite a budget stalemate between a majority of justices of the peace and County Judge Gerald Robinson. Employees have not yet been paid in 2025, although many have remained on the job for critical services.

The bill, which Sanders championed, applies to all 75 counties. The employees have missed both January paychecks.

First-year state Rep. Glenn Barnes, D-Pine Bluff, was the lead House sponsor on the bill, authored by state Sen. Ben Gilmore, R-Crossett. State Reps. Mike Holcomb, R-Pine Bluff, and Ken Ferguson, D-Pine Bluff, joined Barnes in the well before the House to discuss the bill, which also declares an emergency.

“The reason for this bill is that in Jefferson County, as of right now, we have some 300 people who have gone a month and almost two weeks without pay,” Barnes said. “They are now losing their insurance. They are now struggling to pay water, light, gas, house notes and rent, and they’re in dire need of some legislation to act quickly.”

The bill allows for the unpaid county employees to be paid retroactively to the first of the year.

Barnes read a document that stated: “Legislation is necessary to establish order, justice and fairness within a society by creating laws that protect the rights of citizens, regulate behavior and set standards for business and organizations. Without legislation and laws, chaos and conflicts will arise.”

Quorum Court meetings in Jefferson County have been nothing short of conflict and chaos, Barnes told the House.

“They’re looking to you and I to do something about it,” he said.

Robinson postponed a Quorum Court meeting scheduled for Tuesday due to an illness in his family. District 1 Justice of the Peace Alfred Carroll suggested via email state law allows the Quorum Court to conduct business in his absence.