Mathew Pitsch


Mathew W. Pitsch, also known as Matt Pitsch, is a businessman in Fort Smith, Arkansas. A Republican, he is a member of the Arkansas State Senate for district 8, since 2019. From 2015 to 2019 he was a member of the Arkansas House of Representatives for district 76 in a portion of Sebastian County in the western portion of his state.
In 2017, Pitsch was named Majority Leader of the Arkansas House. He succeeded fellow Republican Ken Bragg of Sheridan and served in the role for two years.

Background

Pitsch was born in Buffalo in Johnson County in northern Wyoming, to Leland Alexander and Della Ann Skiles Pitsch. He is listed in the Sheridan County Historical Index as a former resident of Sheridan, Wyoming, dates not specified.
He was reared in several Midwestern communities in Nebraska and Kansas, where his father was a teacher and coach of various sports. In 1983, he received an Associate of Arts in Engineering from Hutchinson Community College in Hutchinson, Kansas, at which in 1982 he was the captain of the Hutchinson Blue Dragons football team.
Pitsch is chairman of the Bethel Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod denomination in Fort Smith. His grandmother, Eunice "LeOra" Mathew Pitsch of Sheridan, Wyoming, the wife of his grandfather, Alexander Pitsch, became in 1969 the founding president of the Wyoming District of the Lutheran Women's Missionary League. An active member of Immanuel Lutheran Church in Sheridan, she conducted devotional services at the Sheridan Manor nursing facility for more than 14 years prior to her death.

Career

Pitsch obtained Bachelor of Science and a Master of Science degrees in Electrical engineering from the Missouri University of Science and Technology in Rolla, Missouri. Pitsch also played football for the Missouri S&T Miners and is an inductee of the Athletic Hall of Fame and the Engineering Academy at his alma mater.
In 1987, Pitsch began nearly 15 years of employment with the Whirlpool Corporation. He lived in many locations across the country, having settled in Fort Smith as the chief executive officer and president of McCourt Manufacturing Company. He has lived in more than a dozen cities, including Sherwood, and Paragould, Arkansas; Baltimore, Maryland; Marietta and Kennesaw, and Jasper, Georgia; Beloit and Sylvan Grove, Kansas; and St. Charles, Missouri.
After he sold his interest in the McCourt Company, Pitsch in 2001 joined the faculty and became the dean of the College of Applied Science and Technology at the University of Arkansas – Fort Smith, formerly Westark Community College. In 2007, he became an economic development specialist for the Greater Fort Smith Regional Chamber of Commerce. In 2009, he was invited to direct the Regional Intermodal Transportation Authority of Western Arkansas, which encompasses Fort Smith and Van Buren in Crawford County. Pitsch is also an adjunct professor at the private John Brown University in Siloam Springs in Benton County, Arkansas. He is a member of the boards of the United Way, the Society of Manufacturing Engineers, and the Arkansas/Oklahoma State Fair and Rodeo, held each September at Kay Rodgers Park in Fort Smith.
In 2012, Pitsch ran unsuccessfully for the District 76 seat in the Arkansas House against fellow Republican Denny Altes, a former member of the Arkansas State Senate. Altes prevailed, 1,626 votes to Pitsch's 1,225. Altes did not seek reelection in 2014, and Pitsch ran again, this time against Altes's son, Bobby Altes, also of Fort Smith. Pitsch prevailed, 1,715 votes to Bobby Altes's 1,503. Pitsch ran without Democrat opposition in the general election held on November 4, 2014, when Republicans dominated the state races in Arkansas.
Pitsch was assigned to the House committees on: Joint Advanced Communication Information Technology, Agriculture and Economic Development, and Public Transportation. He was the chairman of the House Small Business and Economic Development Permanent Subcommittee and vice-chairman of the Arkansas Sportsman's Caucus. In February 2015, Pitsch joined dozens of his fellow Republicans and two Democrats in co-sponsoring legislation submitted by Representative Lane Jean of Magnolia, to reduce unemployment compensation benefits. The measure was promptly signed into law by Republican Governor Asa Hutchinson.