Congressman Jody Hice was born in Atlanta and raised in Tucker, Georgia. Representative Hice graduated from Asbury University, earned his Master’s degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, as well as a Doctor of Ministry from Luther Rice College and Seminary. Congressman Hice served as pastor in three Georgia counties for almost 25 years, and went on to launch the Jody Hice Show, a conservative talk radio program. Congressman Hice and his wife of over thirty years, Dee Dee, reside in Oglethorpe County and have two daughters and four grandchildren. Congressman Hice took office in 2015 as the Representative of Georgia’s 10th Congressional District and serves on the House Committee on Oversight and Reform and the House Natural Resources Committee. For the 117th Congress, he serves as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Government Operations for the Committee on Oversight and Reform.
Agriculture is the number one industry in Georgia and contributes nearly $75 billion annually to the state’s economy. From timber to poultry to cotton, Georgia’s 10th Congressional District is home to a wide range of thriving crops and livestock. Congressman Hice is committed to strengthening our agricultural industries and supports responsible federal policies that give our farmers the tools, the continuity, and the freedom that they need without growing federal bureaucracies in the process. Georgia’s 10th District is home to the Athens-based U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory, where scientists are conducting cutting-edge research and working to combat devastating diseases like the highly pathogenic avian influenza. Congressman Hice is proud to support research at our Nation’s premier land-grant universities, including the University of Georgia, which directly supports Georgia agriculture. Additionally, the EPA’s recent Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule is a prime example of federal overreach and has the capacity to immensely undermine farmers’ private property rights by expanding the EPA’s regulatory reach. Congressman Hice strongly opposes irresponsible and overly burdensome federal regulations – like the WOTUS rule – that slow economic growth instead of facilitating it. |