LIsten.
Protect.
Lead.
My Cambridge Story
Some of my earliest memories are in Cambridge.
My childhood reads like a love letter to this community. Eyeing the pies at People's Cafe. Sunday afternoons after church at Q Mandarin. Reading away whole afternoons at the Cambridge Library. Shopping at Leader, where my sister worked. Exploring the woods along the Rum at City Park. A Tootsie Roll handed over the counter when we picked up the dry cleaning. Birthday party with pizza at the Cambridge Station. A fresh roll from Herman's Bakery that never quite made it home.
Some of those places are still here. Many aren't. New shops, new restaurants, and new neighbors have taken their place, and that's the story of every living community. Cambridge has always been a town that welcomes change while holding onto what matters. And when it came time to choose where to build my own life, where to raise my own kids, Cambridge was the answer. This is the community I want my family to grow up proud of.
My Family
My wife Becca and I have been married for nearly 15 years, and together we're raising five kids right here in the heart of Cambridge. Family is the center of everything for us. Whether it's loading up the bikes for a ride together, gathering around the dinner table, the moments that matter most are the ones we share with each other. Those rides especially have become a tradition we look forward to, a chance to slow down, get outside, and just be together as a family.
Raising five kids in this town has shaped how I see Cambridge. I see it through the eyes of the parent dropping off at school, the family looking for a safe park, the household balancing a budget at the kitchen table, and the kid who deserves a future worth staying for. That's not an abstract idea to me. That's our life.
Business Owner and Public Servant
I've been a Financial Advisor for over a decade. For more than ten years, families across our community have trusted me with their hard-earned money, their retirement plans, and their hopes for the next generation. That work has taught me how to listen carefully, plan for the long view, and never spend what isn't there. It's also taught me that behind every budget is a family making real sacrifices. I'll bring that same discipline and that same respect for every dollar to City Hall.
I've served on the Isanti County Planning Commission, where I've spent years in the weeds of the decisions that shape our region: zoning, development, infrastructure, and the careful balance between growing and staying who we are. I've sat through the public hearings. I've read the staff reports. I've listened to neighbors on every side of an issue. That county-level perspective gives me a clear view of how Cambridge fits into the bigger picture, and where we can do better.
I'm also a proud member of the Cambridge Rotary Club, where I've served as Past President and held multiple positions on the board over the years. Rotary's motto is Service Above Self, and that's not just a slogan to me. It's a way of life I've tried to live out, alongside neighbors who share a simple belief: a community is only as strong as the people willing to show up for it. Whether it's a fundraiser, a scholarship, a service project, or just lending a hand where one is needed, Rotary has reminded me again and again that the best of Cambridge isn't found at City Hall. It's found in the people who quietly make this town work.
Why I'm Running
Cambridge is changing. We've grown from a town of around 8,000 to over 11,000 in just over a decade. That growth brings real opportunity, but it's also created real tension. New neighbors are putting down roots and trying to find their place. Longtime families are watching the town they built change around them. And somewhere in the middle, a gap has opened up between residents and the leaders who are supposed to represent them.
I'm running for Mayor to close that gap.
I'm running for the family that just moved here and is still figuring out where they belong. For the neighbor whose roots go back generations and feels like decisions are being made about them instead of with them. For the small business owner on or off Main Street, the parent at the playground, the senior watching their tax bill, and the kid who deserves to grow up here and have the option to stay.
We don't all have to agree on everything. But we do have to talk to each other again. Really talk. Set the differences aside long enough to have the deep, honest conversations that move us forward.
That's the Cambridge I'm fighting for.
A Safer, Stronger Cambridge for Every Generation.