Senator Heath needs a portable escape ladder

Last week Senator Bill Heath made a critical bad turn while dodging WSB reporter Lori Geary. The Senator ducked into the Senate Clerk’s Office, and later sent the Senate Press Secretary out to tell Geary the Senator needed to get to a committee meeting. If you watch WSB’s coverage, it looks like Heath missed that meeting.

It occurred to me that Senator Heath could have used a portable fire escape ladder to rope ladderextricate himself from the Clerk’s Office. While a little bulky, this ladder could easily be tucked under one arm and carried to meetings and hearing rooms for quick escapes from reporters and constituents.

This particular ladder is sold by Home Depot, a Georgia based company. Sales would boost much needed state and local tax revenues while supporting a Georgia owned business.

It is ironic that this ladder will cost about $35.00, which is the same amount of a Georgia Public Broadcasting membership, where Senator Heath’s former colleague Chip Rogers is now working for $150K per year (quick math: Rogers’ salary is equivalent to 4,286 GPB memberships. GPB says Rogers’ salary is covered by taxpayer dollars, not GPB membership funds, as if that provides us with any relief).

Budget watchers might be wise to look for “improvements” to the Capitol like more fire escapes or underground tunnels. It seems if the need is there, the money can be found, unlike Senator Heath last week.

 

 

One thought on “Senator Heath needs a portable escape ladder”

  1. Senator Heath sent me the most insulting email I have ever received from a Georgia legislator. It was about my petition to him (courtesy of Better Georgia) about Chip Rogers’ cronyistic cushy job at Georgia Public Broadcasting. Senator Heath basically told me that I was too dumb to think for myself and obviously had been brainwashed by the folks at Better Georgia. I called up his office and asked to speak to him. He declined. I expressed my displeasure to the staff worker. I think I was one of dozens who had telephoned his office that day. No wonder he was hiding behind a desk when the reporters came calling. I feel sorry for his staff, I could tell from the young woman’s voice that she had been bombarded with outraged telephone calls all day.

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