About Bo Renshaw

Bo Renshaw is a physical therapist, a small-business owner, a husband, a father, and a neighbor. He has lived, worked, and raised his family in North Little Rock for 25 years.
Bo started his physical therapy practice with a simple idea: that families in central Arkansas deserved better access to care, closer to home, without the runaround of insurance and referrals. Decades later, his practice still serves patients across the region.
Building a small business taught him three things he intends to bring to the State House: meet payroll before you take a paycheck; keep your word with the people in front of you; and the government's job is to make it easier — not harder — for the people doing the work.
"I know what it takes to balance a budget, meet a payroll, and keep your word. That's the work I want to take to Little Rock."
For two and a half decades, Bo has stood on the sidelines of NLRSD, Sylvan Hills, and Mills games — usually with athletic tape, a bag of ice, and a free smile. Hundreds of high school athletes in House District 70 have been treated by Bo at no cost.
He has mentored at-risk kids through Urban Promise of Arkansas, served and worshipped at Park Hill Baptist Church, and traveled on mission trips with his church family. None of it was ever about politics. All of it is why he's running now.
Bo wrote, championed, and passed Senate Bill 77, a law that gives Arkansans direct access to physical therapy and saves both families and Medicaid taxpayers money. The Arkansas Department of Human Services confirmed the savings.
Bo isn't running because he wants to be a politician. He's running because the people of House District 70 — North Little Rock and Sherwood — deserve a representative who shows up, who listens, and who has actually fixed something. Healthcare costs are real. Grocery bills are real. Bo has spent 25 years working on real problems for real people. He'd like to keep doing that, in Little Rock, on your behalf.
Bo and his wife have raised their family in House District 70. They worship locally, shop locally, and have stuck with this community through good times and hard ones. They're not going anywhere.