Candidate Forum

California State Assembly - District 23
District 23 — California State Assembly
Get the facts on the California candidates running for election to the District 23 — California State Assembly
Find out their top 3 priorities, their experience, and who supports them.
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- Protecting and strengthening our democracy. I wrote...
- We must do more to combat climate change. I authored...
- Help more students succeed. I worked with higher education...
- Regulatory Relief for Business - By eliminating excessive...
- Budgetary Restraint - We have benefited from budget...
- Address Environmental and Climate Risks - We need...
My Top 3 Priorities
- Protecting and strengthening our democracy. I wrote the law to make California a permanent vote-by-mail state, as well as laws to limit misinformation and disinformation in our elections and increase access to the ballot for California's voters.
- We must do more to combat climate change. I authored landmark legislation to ban the sale of new gas-powered equipment like leaf blowers and lawnmowers, starting in 2024, to protect the health of our communities, our workers, and the planet.
- Help more students succeed. I worked with higher education leaders to write the Student Transfer Achievement Reform Act of 2021, which breaks down barriers and makes it easier for community college students to transfer to four-year colleges.
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My Top 3 Priorities
- Regulatory Relief for Business - By eliminating excessive regulation, we can revive suffering businesses, ease the cost of building affordable homes, and stem the loss of jobs to other states.
- Budgetary Restraint - We have benefited from budget surpluses for the last two years. That doesn’t mean we should lock ourselves into expanding existing programs or new long-term programs.
- Address Environmental and Climate Risks - We need to enhance our state and national forest management and push for environmentally effective and economically responsible market-based climate policies.
Experience
Experience
Education
Biography
I grew up in Oregon and moved to the San Francisco Bay Area after getting a degree in electrical engineering at Oregon State. I’ve lived in the Bay Area all of my working life and in Mountain View since 2002 and I absolutely love what California and our special region in the bay have to offer. After a successful 30 year career in technology, most recently with Apple, I realized that my passion was not in technology, but in helping my coworkers fix problems and teaching them how to do it themselves. With that insight, I decided to take the risky and unusual leap to step away from my job and find a better way to pursue my passion. Apple retail had the most successful model for my passion and I spent the next year fixing customers' problems and training them on the many amazing hardware and software products Apple had to offer. During that time it became clear that this new generation of phones, tablets, and computers had become key to staying connected to others and engaged in the world. That led me to start a technology coaching business where I focused on empowering seniors with their personal digital devices. Outside of my business, I volunteer as a technology tutor at Little House Senior Center in Menlo Park.
My love of the outdoors and concern for preserving our environment led me to volunteer for the non-partisan Citizens’ Climate Lobby (CCL), advocating for market-based solutions to address climate risk. I am currently part of CCL’s Conservative Caucus executive team and the Idaho state coordinator. My years of working on climate solutions demonstrated that we need a truly bipartisan approach for the many issues we face here in California.
Getting more involved politically in my community, I joined the South Peninsula Area Republican Coalition (SPARC GOP), became a board member, and am currently their Treasurer. After becoming a delegate to the California GOP, I felt that the party needed more moderate conservative voices in the state capitol. My passion for finding common ground, regardless of politics, is the vision that launched my 2022 Assembly District 23 campaign.
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Questions & Answers
Questions from League of Women Voters of California (4)
We need to expedite the additional water storage projects funded in 2014 by a $7.5 Billion State Bond initiative. None have been completed. Top of the list is the Site's reservoir project for capturing excess water during rainy periods for storage. We must incentivize agriculture to adopt more water conservation practices and encourage a shift to less water-intensive crops. Desalinization plants, though energy-intensive, also should continue to be explored and deployed to support coastal urban water needs. The state should continue incentivizing the shift to native and drought-tolerant landscaping for all residential, commercial, and government buildings.
We can retain our neighborhoods' existing character and provide additional affordable housing in California if we choose innovative options to expand. We should continue to support the building of ADUs (Accessory Dwelling Units) alongside the existing homes in suburban communities. We should streamline permitting of high-density housing near mass transit hubs utilizing walkable services in the area to minimize traffic congestion. Above all, cities and townships must retain local control of planning to best consider all impacts of new developments.
The disparities in the quality of education delivered from across the income spectrum must be addressed to keep low-income school students from falling behind. Parents of low-income students often cannot support their children with their studies due to work obligations. Schools should provide more after-school resources to provide tutoring and other support to keep them successful and on track. Poorer still get the least qualified teachers and though progress has been made, we need to provide more financial incentives to get more qualified (credentialed) teachers into low-income districts.
I applaud the extension of the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant closure and believe it should be extended beyond 2030 if we can continue to maintain operational safety. The high-speed rail project should be abandoned and those funds used for more effective purposes such as electrification of bus lines and expansion of the state's EV charging infrastructure. I support offshore wind and the expansion of solar, but we need additional storage to stabilize the grid. Geothermal in the form of Advanced Geothermal Systems (AGS) and Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) provides the potential for geothermal electricity anyway and base load energy.
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Political Beliefs
Political Philosophy
As we work to resolve critical issues, we must reject the toxic political tone that has become increasingly harsh in this state and the nation. Californians are fed-up with the constant finger-pointing and labeling that has become the norm. We need to focus on problem-solving, not posturing.
In politics today, each party stakes out its issues and frames them as either/or, all or none. For example, progressives talk DEI (diversity equity and inclusion), voting rights, and immigration reform. Conservatives talk CRT (critical race theory), voting integrity, and secure borders. But both parties need to acknowledge that these issues aren’t binary. They live on a spectrum. Conservatives should support more authentic instruction around our racial history in the US while trying to assure no group is demonized. Progressives should discuss the need for secure borders while looking for sensible ways to address our large undocumented immigrant population. Both parties talk past each other on their ‘winning’ issues without acknowledging the valid points (slivers of truth) of the opposing arguments. We must work together with mutual respect towards sensible solutions.