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President Trump Appoints Arkansas State Senator To Southern Energy Position

State Sen. Eddie Joe Williams (R-Cabot). 2016 file photo.
Jacob Kauffman
/
KUAR
State Sen. Eddie Joe Williams (R-Cabot). 2016 file photo.

KUAR's Jacob Kauffman reports on state Senator Eddie Joe Williams (R-Cabot) getting appointed by President Donald Trump to the Southern States Energy Board.

State Sen. Eddie Joe Williams (R-Cabot). 2016 file photo.
Credit Jacob Kauffman / KUAR
/
KUAR
State Senator Eddie Joe Williams (R-Cabot). File photo.

President Donald Trump has appointed an Arkansas state Senator as the federal representative on the Southern States Energy Board. Eddie Joe Williams says he’ll be sworn into the new post in 30 to 45 days, and in the meantime he’ll resign as state Senator.

He’s held an elected office of kind or another in the Cabot area since the early 2000’s. He was elected to the Senate in 2010. A special election will have to be called to fill out the remainder of his term.

Williams says his first priority is to his put his mind to the collapse of the energy grids in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands after hurricane damage. The Southern States Energy Board comprises 16 states and the two U.S. aforementioned territories. It’s broadly charged with figuring out ideas to promote economic development and quality of life through energy innovations and programs. Williams will be a full-time, paid non-voting member of the board.

The President’s appointment of Williams drew praise from Arkansas’s junior U.S. Senator Tom Cotton. Who said in a statement that Williams “understands protecting the environment and developing American energy aren’t mutually exclusive.” Like Senator Cotton, Williams’s electoral campaigns drew support from Koch Industries and various chambers of commerce opposed to many Obama-era energy and environmental policies.

As state Senator, Williams helped usher in a process for the Legislature to review state agency carbon emission and electricity generation plans required by the Environmental Protection Agency. He also unsuccessfully opposed a 2015 act establishing net-metering rates for solar power producers who contributed excess energy back into the grid. 

Copyright 2017 KUAR

Jacob Kauffman is a reporter and anchor for KUAR. He primarily covers the state legislature and politics beat while juggling anchoring Morning Edition Monday through Friday.