Contact

Reaching the right resource saves time — which is why this page exists. It covers how to get in touch, what response timelines look like, which subjects fall within the scope of this site, and where to find additional Arkansas reference material when a question points somewhere more specific.

Response expectations

The practical reality of running a reference site covering all 75 Arkansas counties, dozens of municipalities, and the full sweep of Arkansas state governance is that inquiry volume varies — sometimes considerably. Messages submitted through the contact form are typically reviewed within 3 business days. More complex inquiries involving specific county data, legislative questions, or requests to correct published information may take 5 to 7 business days to receive a substantive response.

A few things to keep in mind when sending a message:

  1. Be specific about the subject. A message that names a county, city, or topic area — say, Pulaski County property records or Benton County demographics — moves through the process faster than a general inquiry.
  2. Link or describe the page in question. If something reads incorrectly or needs updating, pointing directly to the page saves back-and-forth.
  3. Distinguish between factual corrections and opinion. Factual errors are corrected. Disagreements about framing or editorial choices are noted but do not always result in changes.
  4. Source citations help. If a correction requires changing a specific figure or attribution, a link to the authoritative source — an Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration document, a U.S. Census Bureau table, a legislative act — moves things along.

What does not get a response: solicitation, link exchange proposals, and requests to publish unverified content. Those messages reach a destination, just not a useful one.

Additional contact options

For questions about Arkansas state government operations, agency structures, legislative functions, or executive branch offices — the kind of thing that goes deeper than county profiles and city overviews — the Arkansas Government Authority covers that ground in detail. It treats Arkansas's governmental architecture as a serious subject: how agencies are organized, how the General Assembly functions, how appropriations flow. It is a substantive companion resource, not a directory.

The Arkansas Secretary of State's office (sos.arkansas.gov) handles official public records requests, business entity filings, and election administration — distinct functions that fall outside the editorial scope here. The Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (dfa.arkansas.gov) is the relevant contact point for tax, revenue, and fiscal questions. Both are named public agencies with defined statutory responsibilities and their own contact infrastructure.

How to reach this office

The contact form on this site is the primary channel. It routes to editorial staff who handle the Arkansas State Authority content network directly. There is no general phone line — a deliberate choice, not an oversight. Reference sites of this type generate more useful exchanges in writing, where questions can be specific and responses can include links, citations, and structured information.

When submitting a message:

Editorial decisions, including what content gets added or revised, are made by the team that maintains this site. External contributors are not accepted on an open basis.

Service area covered

This site covers Arkansas — specifically, the state as a geographic, civic, and governmental subject. That means all 75 counties, the state's incorporated municipalities, and the structural elements of Arkansas governance that shape daily life in the state.

The coverage runs from the largest jurisdictions — Little Rock, the state capital, with a population that U.S. Census Bureau estimates placed above 202,000 in 2020, and Fayetteville in the northwest — down to smaller county seats and rural communities that rarely get dedicated reference treatment. Places like Woodruff County or Fulton County are not afterthoughts here; they get the same structural coverage as more prominent jurisdictions.

What falls outside scope: federal agency operations (except where they intersect with Arkansas-specific programs), neighboring state comparisons, and private business listings. Arkansas's bordering states — Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma — appear only when they provide meaningful geographic or civic context for something happening inside Arkansas's boundaries.

The Arkansas Counties Overview page is a good starting point for understanding how the state's 75-county structure is organized, and the frequently asked questions section covers the most common reference questions about the state in one place.

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