Latest Posts

Let’s Be Clear on Homelessness

Most people can feel when something isn’t working—but it’s easier to look away than to demand better.

The hard part isn’t recognizing the problem. It’s refusing to normalize it.
Because once we accept “this is just how it is,” nothing changes.

This is about raising the standard—for what we expect, for what we build, and for how we show up for each other.

Let’s Be Clear on LGBTQIA+

Respect shouldn’t be a debate.
The rights people are asking for aren’t new—and they aren’t special treatment. They’re the same basic freedoms this country is built on.

When people feel safe being who they are, everyone benefits. Our communities are stronger. Our workplaces are better. Our future is more honest.

This isn’t complicated—and it isn’t about sides. It’s about whether we actually mean it when we talk about equality.

I decided To Run

Most people don’t step up because they think they’re not “the one.”

Not experienced enough. Not connected enough. Not the right time.
But that thinking keeps good people on the sidelines—and nothing changes from there.

At some point, it stops being about having the perfect qualifications and starts being about making a decision.
To show up. To take responsibility. To do something.

Government Impact

People feel the impact of government every day—they just don’t always see where it starts.

The more we connect the dots between decisions in Washington and what’s happening in our neighborhoods, the harder it becomes to ignore what needs to change.

This isn’t about politics feeling bigger—it’s about it feeling closer, clearer, and something people can actually be part of.

Schools

We talk a lot about test scores and outcomes, but not enough about what’s happening inside schools.

When teachers are constantly cycling out, you don’t just lose staff—you lose stability, mentorship, and trust.
That shows up in ways you can’t measure on a chart.

Money In Politics

Here’s the question no one asks out loud,
Who is your representative really working for?

When access is bought, everyday voices get pushed out. That’s how decisions stop reflecting the people they’re supposed to serve.

My campaign is built to answer to something different—our communities, our priorities, our future.

There’s work to do. Let’s get to it.