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Susan
Paddack received a Bachelor of Science in Education from the University
of Colorado and a Master of Education Degree in Secondary Education
from East Central University. She earned a Certificate of Excellence
in Nonprofit Leadership and Management from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Susan was elected in November 2004 as the State
Senator for District 13, which includes Pontotoc, Hughes, portions
of Garvin and Coal Counties. She serves as a Democratic Caucus Co-Chair.
In addition, she serves on the full Appropriations Committee, Appropriations
Subcommittee on Education, Education Committee, Energy Committee
and Transportation Committee. She represents Oklahoma as a board
member on the Southern Regional Education Board. She has served
as a member of the Annual Meeting Committee for the Council of State
Governments, a board member of the Oklahoma Educational Technology
Trust, a board member on the Healthcare Workforce Resources Center
Board, and on the Governor’s Elimination of Health Disparities
Task Force, the Task Force on Achieving Classroom Excellence, the
State Coverage Initiative to reform healthcare in Oklahoma, and
the Governor’s Catastrophic Health Emergency Planning Task
Force. In the past, she has served as Chair and Vice-Chair of Education,
Co-chair of Education Appropriations, and Vice-Chair of the Judiciary
Committee.
With a passion to promote both education and healthcare
in Oklahoma, Senator Paddack has successfully authored numerous
pieces of landmark legislation in these areas, resulting in multiple
honors for her efforts. Susan was the principal author of the 2005
legislation, Rx Oklahoma, which expands the Prescription Assistance
Program to make it available statewide. That same year, she also
authored legislation creating a physician assistant scholarship
program aimed at helping ensure rural communities have greater access
to medical care. She was also instrumental in passing legislation
to create the Health Care Workforce Resource Center to help identify
shortages in nursing and allied health as well as developing strategies
to address those gaps. In addition, she authored laws to ensure
that schools provide information about meningococcal meningitis
to parents of students in the sixth through twelfth grades and to
require vision screenings for elementary students. She also authored
a bill which gives lawsuit protection to healthcare providers who
provide charitable medical services to medically indigent persons
in a free medical clinic setting.
Susan’s honors for her legislation include
being named the 2005 Oklahoma Academy of Family Physicians Patient
Advocate of the Year as well as 2006 Legislator of the Year for
the Rural Health Association of Oklahoma. She was also named the
Legislative Newcomer award recipient in 2005 by the Higher Education
Alumni Council of Oklahoma. In 2006, Susan was awarded the Oklahoma
Nurses Association Friend of Nursing award and the Legislative award
from the Oklahoma State School Boards Association. In 2007, she
was awarded the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine Alumni
Association “Amicus Medicinae” Award, and the Higher
Education Alumni Council of Oklahoma Friend of Higher Education
Award. Also in 2007, she received the Metropolitan Environmental
Trust Legislator of the Year and the Oklahoma Professional Economic
Development Council Legislative Advocate of the Year. In 2008, she
received the Oklahoma Academy Exceptional Commitment Award and was
inducted into the Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy’s
Child Advocate Hall of Fame. The Oklahoma Academy of Family Physicians
awarded her the 2008 Legislator of the Year. She also received the
2008 Distinguished Service Award from the Oklahoma Association of
Career and Technology Education, 2008 Legislator of the Year from
the Oklahoma State Troopers Association-District 13. In 2009 she
received the Outstanding Member of a State Legislature, Dr. Nathan
Davis Award, from the American Medical Association and the Partners
in Conservation Award from the U.S. Department of the Interior.
She also received the Oklahoma District Attorneys Association’s
Legislative Award of Appreciation and the Friend of Retired Educators
from the Oklahoma Retired Educators Association. In 2010, she was
presented the Don J. Blair Friend of Medicine Award from the Oklahoma
State Medical Association.
Prior to her election to the Senate, the Oklahoma
Foundation for Excellence employed Susan for nine years as their
Director of Local Education Foundation Outreach. She traveled the
state working with LEF boards and tailored presentations and workshops
based on each foundation’s specific need. During this tenure,
the number of local education foundations grew by 31% and over $22
million was awarded to schools by their LEFs since their formation
in the early 1980s. She also consulted with LEFs in states such
as Missouri, Indiana, and Arkansas. She was employed as a secondary
science teacher in middle and junior high schools in Texas, Colorado,
and Oklahoma. She also served as an adjunct faculty member for East
Central University’s Education Department.
Susan serves in various capacities in local, state,
and national volunteer organizations. She served as the 2000-2001
president of the American Medical Association Alliance, and traveled
to 32 states as a part of their Speakers’ Bureau. Susan served
as a representative from the AMAA to the Commission for the Prevention
of Youth Violence, which was a call to action from medicine, nursing,
and public health to address the epidemic of youth violence in the
nation. On the state level, she is a board member for the Jasmine
Moran Children’s Museum, a board member for the Oklahoma Academy,
a board member for the Oklahoma Foundation for Excellence where
she was presented with an Honorary Circle of Excellence Award in
2003, and a board member of the Oklahoma Arts Institute. Susan was
a member of the Leadership Oklahoma Class XVI. She was named among
the 2004 and 2008 honorees for The Journal Record’s 50 Women
Making a Difference/Woman of the Year. She also was a board member
of the Oklahoma Institute of Child Advocacy, was a board member
of the Center for Nonprofit Management and was on the advisory board
of governors for the Communities Foundation of Oklahoma. Susan served
as the 1991-92 president of the Oklahoma State Medical Association
Alliance.
On the local level, Susan served on the board of the Ada City Schools
Foundation where she was previously president, vice-president, and
was grant review chair for ten years. She has also served as: president
for the Pontotoc County Medical Alliance, board member for the City
of Ada’s Board of Adjustments, board member of the Kiwanis
Club of Ada and chairman of Young Children - Priority One, parent
representative on the Ada City Schools Professional Staff Development
Committee, vice-president for the Ada Arts and Humanities Council,
the 1992 United Way fund drive chair and board president in 1993,
a member of the Mayor’s Advisory Task Force and steering committee
on Economic Development, and a member of the 1991 Leadership Ada
class. She was named the Ada Education Association’s 1992
Friend of Education. Susan is an elder of First Presbyterian Church
of Ada.

Committee Membership

Office Information
Capitol
Address |
District
Address |
Senator Susan
Paddack
2300 N. Lincoln Blvd., Rm. 533A
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
(405) 521-5541
paddack@oksenate.gov
Executive Assistant: Toni Doake |
500 S.E. County
Rd.
Ada, OK 74820
)580) 332-7607 |

District Information: District 13

Counties Represented

Press Releases
Archives: 2010 |
2009 | 2008
| 2007 | 2006
| 2005

Podcasts
Archives: 2010 |
2009 | 2008 | 2007
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