Voter Statement

✨ Big news, Duvall! ✨

Voter statements for the 2025 General Election are available online today!

I cannot tell you how difficult it was to capture both my love for our community and my vision for its future in just 150 words—but I did my best to share what drives me every day.

For me, it all comes down to believing the best is yet to come for Duvall. And with the support of neighbors like you, I know we can continue building a future rooted in connection, care, and a deep love for this community we call home.

Thank you for walking alongside me on this journey—it means more than words can say. Ballots get mailed about 3 weeks before the election, so watch your mail and remember to vote by November 4th – for the LOVE of DUVall!

Small-Town Businesses

Our small-town businesses are the heart of Duvall 💙 From coffee shops to family-run restaurants, they’re where we gather, where our kids get their first jobs, and where so many of our traditions are rooted.

As a small business owner myself, I know how important it is for the city to support—not hinder—local businesses. When they thrive, our whole community thrives. 🌟 I’d love to hear from you: 👉 What can Duvall be doing better to support our local businesses?

Check out the video here: https://www.facebook.com/share/r/14JB752prna/

A Little Bit About Me

You might have guessed from reading my posts—or if you’ve seen it in blog form on my website—that I love to write. It’s been a lifelong habit. As a kid, I wrote and illustrated more than 80 comic episodes for my sister, and filled notebooks with stories and mini books. One even won a regional award long ago.

Over time, I’ve learned something essential about the creative process, and it’s advice I now share with my own kids when they get stuck: give yourself permission to make it messy.

I mean it. Write the clunkiest first draft of an essay you can imagine. Sketch a tree that looks nothing like a tree. Say out loud: This might not be perfect—and that’s okay. Because once you get started, you realize it wasn’t a lack of ideas holding you back—it was fear. Fear that it wouldn’t be perfect, fear that others might reject it. But that rough version? That’s the seed. You come back, improve it, reshape it—and that’s how something meaningful begins to grow.

I’ve seen this same truth in action over the years working with my fellow councilmembers. Good policy rarely comes from one person working in isolation. The best outcomes come when we open up a first draft—yes, even a rough one—for discussion. We gather input from our community, staff, administration, and together we make it better.

Sometimes, an idea sounds perfect on paper. But then we hear from the people who will implement it or be affected by it, and we learn what needs to change. Occasionally, a policy with the best of intentions just doesn’t work in practice—or worse, has unintended consequences. That’s why it’s so important to stay open to feedback, to revisit and revise, and to treat policy the way I treat writing: start with something, even if it’s rough. Then commit to making it better.

Because the goal isn’t perfection from the start—it’s progress through collaboration.

Ideas – Public Art

I’ve been getting asked what my ideas are for Duvall—and I do have them. Plenty. But here’s what I believe: the best ideas for our city don’t come from one person. They come from listening, asking good questions, and working together—with our community, City Council, and city staff. One idea I’d love to explore with you is how public art can shape the way our city feels. As you’ll see in this reel, there are so many creative possibilities—from murals and sculptures to mosaics, lighting and more. Many of these examples are right here in Duvall—we’re lucky to already have an incredible -and growing- selection of public art! So I want to ask you: What’s your favorite kind of public art? If Duvall could add one piece tomorrow, what would you want it to be? Your voice matters—let me know what you think.

My Vision

A vision for Duvall isn’t about one person dictating the plan- it’s about setting a clear direction and creating space for community voices to shape the “how.”

I’m committed to safer streets, a thriving small-town economy, and infrastructure that keeps pace with growth- built together, not from the top down.

What’s one thing you’d like to see in Duvall’s future?