Chattanooga Times Free Press

Rep. Broadrick resigns from Georgia House

- BY TYLER JETT STAFF WRITER

A North Georgia seat in the capitol is openening up.

State Rep. Bruce Broadrick, R-Dalton, on Friday announced he is resigning after five years in the Legislatur­e. He was elected in 2012 and has served as vice chairman of the House’s Game, Fish and Parks Committee and as vice chairman of the Human Resources Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee.

Broadrick, 65, told the Times Free Press he stepped down because of his health. He did not elaborate, but he also told the Dalton Daily Citizen he suffered a stroke several years ago, cutting off blood flow to the right side of his brain. He said his family feared he could not safely drive back and forth from Dalton to Atlanta to work in the state capitol this winter.

He gave House Speaker David Ralston the news Wednesday and also sent a letter to Gov. Nathan Deal.

“I don’t feel like I can be at the top of my game.” he said. “If I can’t be at the top of my game for my constituen­ts,

it’s not fair for me to sort of hang around. I’ve loved my five years in the House. It’s been the highest honor in my life.”

Broadrick’s term was supposed to run through the end of 2018.

According to his campaign website, Broadrick’s father ran Frank’s Pharmacy in Dalton. Broadrick later took over the business, where he worked for 39 years. He also served as the president of the Georgia Pharmacy Associatio­n and was the chairman of the Whitfield County Board of Health.

Former state Rep. Tom Dickson, R-Cohutta, served on the health board with Broadrick in the 1990s. When they became legislator­s, Dickson said, Broadrick was a champion for health care laws, particular­ly on issues dealing with pharmacist­s. He was a member of the House’s Health and Human Services Committee. Last year, he sat on state Sen. Jeff Mullis’ State Commission on Narcotic Treatment Programs.

Several state lawmakers described Broadrick as a quiet presence under the Gold Dome.

“He was not the gregarious, outspoken, rah-rah-rah person,” Dickson said. “He just did his job, and did it in an effective way.”

Said Roger Williams, who preceded Broadrick as the state House’s District 4 representa­tive: “Bruce wasn’t outspoken on any particular issues. He was more of a listener than a talker. But he was a good man.”

State Sen. Chuck Payne, RDalton, said Broadrick called him Thursday to give him the news. Payne was shocked. Broadrick hadn’t hinted at leaving in their past conversati­ons. Payne said he believes Broadrick’s health issues must be more serious than previously thought; he seemed to love his time in the state capitol.

Payne, who joined the Legislatur­e in January, said he worked with Broadrick to secure state funding for renovation­s at Dalton State. The governor did not initially set aside the $4.1 million the local college administra­tors wanted to update the 50-yearold Sequoya Hall, which houses math and science classes. But Payne worked with the appropriat­ions committee in the Senate while Broadrick lobbied their counterpar­ts in the House to deliver the funding.

Payne said he’s not yet sure how local politician­s can fill Broadrick’s seat. Payne himself was in a similar position last year, when Deal appointed state Sen. Charlie Bethel, R-Dalton, to the Georgia Court of Appeals in November. His vacancy led to a special election, which Payne won in a runoff in January — the week the legislativ­e session began.

No special election has been set yet for Broadrick’s seat. But a couple of Dalton residents said they are ready to run.

Beau Patton actually told his friends three weeks ago that he planned to run against Broadrick next year. Patton, a former recreation director at a local assisted living center, said he wants to go to Atlanta and pass the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act. Former State Sen. Josh McKoon, RColumbus, tried to pass the legislatio­n in 2014 and 2015, though the House never voted on it.

A similar bill passed the legislatur­e in 2016, allowing faith-based organizati­ons to deny services to those who violate their “sincerely held religious belief.” For example, a bakery could decline to sell a wedding cake for a gay couple’s reception. Broadrick voted in support of the bill, but Deal vetoed the measure in April 2016 as companies such as Disney, Time Warner and Apple campaigned against it as a measure that protected discrimina­tion.

“I want to be a voice of the Christian people,” Patton said Friday. “I want to give God the glory.”

Kasey Carpenter, who owns Oakwood Cafe and Cherokee Pizza and Brewing in Dalton, said he also will run for Broadrick’s seat. This will be his second stab at the position. In May 2016, he lost to Broadrick in the Republican primary, gaining 45.6 percent of 4,168 votes.

Carpenter said he would aim to decrease government regulation­s to encourage more businesses to come to Georgia. In particular, he wants to decrease the amount of corporate income taxes that companies have to pay the state. Companies now have to pay at a rate of 6 percent of all federal taxable income. He wants to drop the figure to 2-3 percent.

“Jobs are always going to be the most important issue,” he said.

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Bruce Broadrick

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