With a Sept. 30 deadline to avert a federal government shutdown, U.S. Rep. Steve Womack is urging Congress to pass a new government funding bill for the coming fiscal year. Republican leaders, however, have been backing a stopgap spending bill, which is what ultimately passed in the House.
Speaking with me on Arkansas Week, which aired Sept. 19 on Arkansas PBS, Womack (R-District 3), expressed frustration with the short-term fix which would only extend funding through mid-November. He’s a senior member of the House Appropriations Committee which in the previous week passed the 12 bills needed for a new funding plan. He had called on the full House to consider the bills
“I’m a bit at odds with my own leadership team on this subject because continuing resolutions are not the answer to America’s fiscal problems,” Womack said. “And once again, here we are at the very end, right on a cliff of a potential lapse in government funding and we don’t have a plan for how we’re going to fund today’s urgent priorities.”
The legislation moved to the Senate, but with Republicans and Democrats locked in a standoff and neither side showing a willingness to compromise, a government shutdown now looks likely. Republicans hold only a small margin in their majority and will need the support of at least a few Democrats to get the bill passed.
During the interview, Womack also spoke about the need for the federal government to help farmers facing their worst financial situation in decades. It’s estimated that about one-third of all farmers won’t survive to plant another crop next season. U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins visited Womack’s district earlier in the week, saying direct financial assistance was in the works and would soon be presented to Congress, though Womack said he didn’t know details of what was being planned. We also talked about legislation he sponsored to ensure veterans get continued access to telemedicine, which was passed last week by the House and now advances to the Senate.
In the second segment of the program, I was joined by Shannon Newton, president of the Arkansas Trucking Association. The industry — which is one of the largest in the state, employing about 100,000 people — is in the third year of a freight recession. Trucking companies had expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic to address problems with the nation’s supply chain, but as life returned to normal, they needed to scale back their operations.

Veteran news reporter, editor and manager spanning more than 30 years at newspapers, radio and television stations. I’m also a photographer, historian and author, having written the 2017 book Rock Island Railroad in Arkansas and hosting a podcast of the same name.
