Susan Paddack | |
State Senate: | Oklahoma |
District: | 13th |
Term Start: | November 17, 2004 |
Term End: | November 22, 2016 |
Preceded: | Dick Wilkerson |
Succeeded: | Greg McCortney |
Party: | Democratic |
Birth Place: | Baytown, Texas, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | Brownfield High School University of Colorado East Central University |
Profession: | Educator |
Spouse: | Gary Paddack |
Residence: | Ada, Oklahoma, U.S. |
Susan Paddack (born in Baytown, Texas) is a Democratic politician and former educator in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. She served in the Oklahoma State Senate representing District 13, which includes Pontotoc and Hughes counties and parts of Garvin and Coal counties, since 2004. As of 2013, she served as Minority Whip and Vice Chair of the Judiciary Committee.
Paddack was a candidate for the role of Oklahoma Superintendent of Public Instruction, but ultimately failed to win the election against her Republican opponent, Janet Barresi.
Prior to her political career, Paddack was a science teacher and adjunct professor.
Susan Paddack was born in Baytown, Texas. Her father was Vice President of the General Telephone Company and her mother was a stay-at-home mom. After graduating from high school in Brownfield, Texas, Paddack went on to earn a bachelor's degree in Education from the University of Colorado after attending Texas Tech University for two years and a master's of education degree from East Central University. Paddack and her husband moved to Ada, Oklahoma in the early 1980s.[1] Paddack was the first person in her family to obtain a college education, let alone a master's degree.
Paddack was Director of Local Education Foundation Outreach for the Oklahoma Foundation for Excellence for over nine years.[2] She was also a science teacher in secondary schools as well as adjunct faculty member in the Education Department at East Central University.[3]
In 2004 Paddack was elected to the Oklahoma State Senate where she currently serves. While campaigning, Paddack commonly told constituents that she was a "Texan by birth but an Oklahoman by choice." Paddack was named "50 Women Making a Difference" in Oklahoma by the Journal Record in 2004 [4] and 2008.[5]
Paddack ran for Oklahoma Superintendent of Public Instruction in the 2010 election, but was defeated by Republican Janet Barresi.