Fayetteville's Lindsey to retire from Senate

Uvalde Lindsey
Uvalde Lindsey

FAYETTEVILLE -- State Sen. Uvalde Lindsey, D-Fayetteville, will not seek re-election in 2018, opening up a spot for one of the few Democratic seats in the Senate.

Lindsey and his wife, Jo, "plan to travel, and enjoy our kids, grandkids and great-grandkids," the senator said.

"It has been my high honor and privilege to serve the people of Fayetteville and Washington County since 2009 in the Arkansas General Assembly," Lindsey said. "By the end of my current term, I will have devoted a full decade to public service, so it's fitting and proper for me to retire and devote more time to less demanding pursuits."

Lindsey is one of nine Democrats in the 35-member Senate. He was elected to the House in 2008 and to the Senate in 2012. He represents Senate District 4, which includes Fayetteville, Farmington, Greenland and a part of Washington County.

He has a career in public service extending to the 1970s, and was once the budget director for Gov. Bill Clinton. He was executive director for the Northwest Arkansas Council, a coalition of business and community leaders of the region, in its successful efforts to create the Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport and to build the northern Arkansas portion of Interstate 49.

"Uvalde has served our state well for many years, and it has been a pleasure to work with him," Gov. Asa Hutchinson said. "Even though we are on opposite sides of the political fence, we always worked together to do what's best for Arkansas. I wish him the best in this next chapter."

Hutchinson is a Republican who worked with Lindsey when Hutchinson was U.S. House member for Northwest Arkansas's 3rd District.

Lindsey is well known and prized for this advocacy for children, particularly in education and those with medical needs, said Tyler Clark, chairman of the Washington County Democratic Party. "He's a leader and a statesman" and has been for decades, Clark said. The chairman also described Lindsey as one of the state's foremost experts on state finance, "a brain who knows the budget inside and out."

Lindsey is a member of the powerful Joint Budget Committee, where he is vice chairman of the subcommittees for personnel and rules and regulations. Each subcommittee has a House and a Senate co-chairman. Besides his regular committee assignments, he is co-chairman of the Legislative Autism Task Force.

His public service career began as a city council member in Harrison. He was a small businessman who developed a chain of 18 auto parts stores that he sold in 1982. He is also a veteran of the Army Reserve.

General News on 06/14/2017