Skip navigation menu
Hero background image

You’re Probably Wondering…

If you’ve got questions about growth, representation, taxes, or whether I’m “too progressive,” you’re not alone. Here are straightforward answers—no spin, no drama.

  • Are you “too progressive” for Forsyth County? I'm progressive. I believe in living wages, affordable housing, protecting green space, and a government that doesn't serve whoever wrote the biggest check. If that's too progressive for you, I understand. But I'd ask you to look at what 16 years of "not too progressive" has actually produced here—an ethics censure, a development-driven budget, and a commission that doesn't reflect the county it governs.

  • What does “inclusion” mean in practice? It means county services are applied equally regardless of who you are, where you're from, or what you look like. It means hiring practices that reflect the community. It means a commissioner who doesn't look away when residents are treated as problems to be managed. That's it. It's not complicated—it's just not been the priority.

  • Will you raise taxes? I don't know yet—and anyone who tells you they know for certain before looking at the books isn't being straight with you. What I can tell you is that I will not cut services that working families depend on to protect a tax rate that mostly benefits people who don't need the break. Responsible budgeting means spending the right money on the right things. That's what I've done professionally for 15 years.

  • How will your finance background help the County? I know how to read a budget and find what someone buried. I know the difference between a sound infrastructure investment and a sweetheart deal dressed up as one. Forsyth County has a sitting commissioner who was censured for ethics violations and still controls votes on developer contracts. My finance background means I know exactly where to look—and I will look.

  • Why does representation matter in local government? Representation builds trust. When leadership reflects the full community, it broadens perspective and strengthens decision-making. Every family deserves to feel that their local government sees them and works for them.

  • Are you running to change the “culture” of Forsyth County? I'm running to change who this government serves. Right now, it serves developers and donors. I want it to serve residents. If that's a culture change, then yes.