Advertisement
Advertisement

Posts tagged
'Betty Guhman'

Betty Guhman steps down as director of Division of Youth Services, plans to help governor push juvenile justice legislation

The Department of Human Services announced today that Betty Guhman, director of the department's Division of Youth Services, will step down.
IT Arkansas job board

State delays privatizing youth centers

Benji Hardy reports for the Arkansas Nonprofit News Network on a delay of at least a year in the state's intention to turn over youth lockups to private operators for at least a year.
Advertisement

State's jailed youth population declines

But progress lags that of neighbors.

Kids in isolation: locked away in Alexander

Critics raise concerns about confining kids alone at juvenile facilities. Part one of a two-part series.
Advertisement

Youth lockups to go to contractors

After takeover, governor cites improvements in facilities, but wants private companies to run them again.

Former Hutchinson aide made permanent as Youth Services director

Betty Guhman, the former Asa Hutchinson aide who was named interim director of the Youth Services Division in July, will get the job permanently.
Advertisement

Hutchinson administration moves include Betty Guhman to Youth Services

Some moves in the Hutchinson administration while he's away in Cleveland for the Republican National Convention, including senior adviser Betty Guhman to temporary head of Youth Services.

Governor picks current staffer and former D.C. associate, Alison Williams, as chief of staff

Gov. Asa Hutchinson names existing staffer Alison Williams to be his new chief of staff. The name might ring a bell for those who recall when Hutchinson got scrutiny for leaving a Bush administration job for higher pay in a sector related to his government work, with assistance from Williams and another current staffer.
Advertisement

Well, you can’t manufacture “Funky”

There was a letter to the editor a week or so back from a gentleman objecting to the fact that the Northwest Arkansas Times used the word “quirky” in describing Fayetteville, almost expressing a form of buyer’s remorse, in that if he thought Fayetteville were quirky, he’d have never moved here in the first place.
Advertisement
Advertisement