May 21, 2026

North Little Rock School District Honors Bo Renshaw for 25 Years of Service to Student Athletes

NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The North Little Rock School District formally recognized Bo Renshaw and Harris & Renshaw Physical Therapy at its May 21, 2026 school board meeting, honoring the company's 25 years of volunteer service to student athletes across the district.

In remarks delivered before the full school board, district leadership praised Harris & Renshaw for providing free athletic training services, free sports physicals, physical therapy services, Saturday morning clinics, and much more — at no cost to the district or its families.

"For the past twenty-five years, Harris and Renshaw has provided volunteer athletic training, physical therapy, and occupational therapy in our community," said a district representative. "They have been essential to our athletic program. Owner and founder, Bo Renshaw, is a trusted partner and advocate for our student athletes."

Beyond direct care for athletes, Harris & Renshaw also partnered with NLRSD to establish a sports medicine curriculum within the district's career pathway program. Students who have completed the course have gone on to pursue careers in athletic training and physical therapy.

Bo Renshaw, who is running for Arkansas State Representative in House District 70, called the recognition humbling and a testament to the people who make up the district's athletic programs.

"When we started showing up on those sidelines 25 years ago, we weren't thinking about recognition — we were thinking about kids. North Little Rock has given my family everything. The least we can do is make sure every student athlete who walks off that field gets the care they need to walk back on it. I'm proud of our team, grateful to the school district, and I'll keep showing up as long as they'll have us." — Bo Renshaw

The recognition underscores a central theme of Renshaw's campaign for State Representative: that he has been showing up for House District 70 long before he asked for a single vote. Running against incumbent Alex Holladay in the November 3, 2026 general election, Renshaw has built his campaign on a record of community service, small business leadership, and delivered results — including the passage of Act 103 of 2025, a law giving Arkansans direct access to physical therapy services.

Renshaw is endorsed by the NLR and Sherwood Fraternal Order of Police, North Little Rock Firefighters Union, Mayors Hartwick and Heye-Townsell, Speaker Matthew Evans, and a broad coalition of legislative, education, and community leaders across House District 70.

About Bo Renshaw — Bo is the Republican candidate for Arkansas House District 70, covering North Little Rock and Sherwood. Bo supports cutting the income tax so families keep more of what they earn, eliminating government waste that drives up the cost of living, and making healthcare accessible without the red tape that stands between Arkansans and the care they need. Election Day is November 3, 2026. For more information, visit borenshaw.com.

May 7, 2026

Arkansas Legislature Puts More Money Back in Your Pocket

NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The 2026 Arkansas fiscal session wrapped up this week, and the headline is simple: Arkansas is giving more money back to the people who earned it.

The legislature passed a budget that increases the homestead property tax credit from $600 to $675 — immediate relief for every homeowner in North Little Rock and Sherwood starting this year. They also structured the Revenue Stabilization Act to make room for the income tax rate cut that Arkansas families have been promised and deserve. That budget framework puts Arkansas on a path to keep more money in your wallet — not in Little Rock.

In a special session this week, the legislature also passed a cut to both the top personal income tax rate and the corporate tax rate — putting an additional $180 million back into the hands of Arkansas taxpayers. Bo supported the cut. His opponent, Alex Holladay, voted no — arguing the money was better kept as "state revenue." That contrast tells you everything you need to know: Bo believes your tax dollars are yours. Holladay believes they belong to the government first.

"When you're running a household or a small business, every dollar counts. Government should be getting out of your way — not finding new ways to take more," said Renshaw. "That's not a talking point for me. It's how I've lived for 25 years building a business right here in this community."

Bo believes the best thing the state can do right now — when families are stretched thin by inflation and rising costs — is to stop squeezing them and start trusting them to make their own decisions.