
Director Lorie Tudor on 100 Years of ArDOT
Tudor was named the first woman director of the Arkansas Department of Transportation in March 2020. read more >
Tudor was named the first woman director of the Arkansas Department of Transportation in March 2020. read more >
Harrod served on the commission from 1983-1993, ending is tenure as chair of the commission. read more >
Arkansas Supreme Court justices reversed a lower court's ruling that had blocked the state from using the funds for the $1 billion overhaul of the I-30 corridor. read more >
Between the 2021 Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act and the state's efforts to allot more funding for roads and highways, ArDOT's funding for its projects is increasing by about $500 million per year. read more >
The council's work will “lay the foundation for Arkansas leadership in the transportation industry for decades to come," the governor said. read more >
Last year’s gas and grid shortcomings echoed this month: Instruments froze, output plunged, and burn-offs spewed greenhouse gases into the sky. read more >
The goal is to avoid an electrical grid crisis like the one that crippled Texas last winter. read more >
The Arkansas Supreme Court may have handed the Arkansas Department of Transportation a loss in October, but the agency isn’t licking any wounds. read more >
Lorie Harris Tudor, the first woman to head the Arkansas Transportation Department, began work there 39 years ago as an entry-level clerk typist. read more >
The state’s Highway Commission has named Lorie Harris Tudor as Scott Bennett's replacement. She will be the first woman director of the ArDOT. read more >
Lorie Tudor, Emanuel Banks, Tony Sullivan, Kevin Thornton and Joe Sartini were promoted with the Arkansas Highway & Transportation Department at its central office in Little Rock. read more >