Campaign Phone Number
702-517-9550
Endorsements
Recent previous campaigns earned endorsements and recommendations from VoteVets, Democrats Serve, Vote Common Good, LGBTQ Victory Fund, Run For Something, Vote Pro Choice, Democracy For America, Nevada NOW, Nevada Veterans Association, Nevada Veterans Council, Las Vegas Sun, Nevada Conservation League, Las Vegas Spectrum Magazine, Clark County Black Caucus, Veterans In Politics, 2025 Moms Demand Action, Armed Forces Chamber, F.A.M.E., 2026 Moms Demand Action, along with dozens of local leaders and influencers. I was also endorsed by actor, producer, and author Eriq La Salle. This time, I’m not focused on endorsements—I’m focused on earning votes.
AI should be built into the curriculum, not treated like some side topic. It’s already changing how people learn and how jobs work.
Every student should graduate knowing how to use AI as a tool and not blindly trust it. At the same time, we still have to teach the basics. You can’t use AI well if you don’t understand the subject first.
This also means updating classes faster. If AI is changing an industry, the curriculum should reflect that in real time, not five years later. And just as important, students should understand the ethics, what’s okay, what’s not, and where the line is.
At the end of the day, AI isn’t replacing education. It’s changing how it works, and we need to make sure students are ready for that reality.
AI is going to change jobs, not just eliminate them. Some entry-level roles will shrink, but new ones will be created for people who know how to use and work with AI.
The problem is speed. Education is behind, and if we don’t adjust, students will graduate trained for jobs that don’t exist the same way anymore.
In Nevada, this impacts everything—hospitality, healthcare, tech. So students need real, adaptable skills and exposure to AI now, not later.
AI isn’t taking opportunity away—it’s shifting it. Our job is to make sure students are ready for where it’s going.
The Board shouldn’t just react, it should plan ahead. Federal research funding goes up and down, so we can’t build research programs that only survive when that money is there.
First, diversify funding. We need stronger partnerships so research isn’t dependent on one source. If a lab or program can connect to real-world application, there should be multiple ways to fund it.
Second, accountability. We should have an annual “success index” for research that tracks real outcomes—grants secured, projects completed, partnerships, student involvement, and actual impact. Rank them, make it public, and use it. If federal funding drops, we protect the research that’s producing results and bringing value to Nevada.
To me, this isn’t about buzzwords, it’s about making sure every student and qualified candidate has a real shot. I support Diversity, I support Equity, and I support Inclusion, especially if it means we’re not shutting people out or stacking the system against them.
Selection should still be based on merit, but we also have to recognize not everyone starts in the same place. If we ignore that, we lose talent.
To borrow a line from Star Trek, I believe in “infinite diversity in infinite combinations.” That’s not just a slogan, it’s how you build stronger campuses and better outcomes.
At the end of the day, it’s about fairness and making sure the system works for everyone.
I support tying loan repayment or forgiveness to real work, especially public service. If someone is teaching, working in healthcare, serving in their community, or filling high-need jobs in Nevada, there should be a clear path to reduce or eliminate their student debt.
But it has to be simple and upfront. Students should know before they enroll, “do this job for this many years, and this amount is forgiven.” No confusion, no surprises, and forgiveness begins on day one.
At the same time, we can’t rely on forgiveness alone. We should be lowering the need for debt in the first place through better cost control, paid internships, and stronger pathways from school to a job.
Campaign Phone Number
702-702-4335
I believe that the purpose of artificial intelligence in the future of education should be limited, with the academic use of solely AI-written works remaining banned. I recognize that AI could hold some merit if used as part of a disability treatment, and am open to the use of AI in very specific circumstances where it could act as a bridge to a better education.
The rapid growth of the AI-focused industry is something that should not go without both federal and local regulations. AI labor is an existential threat to the American workforce. We must prioritize human advancement over artificial intelligence.
We need to be more outspoken about our needs and grievances. There is currently a culture of acceptance that has tolerated endless tuition hikes that result in the benefit of a few rather than the greater student population. While this is a nonpartisan position, it still affects the lives of everyone in Nevada. It is time for us to utilize our local communities to advocate for our needs publicly.
I am pro-DEI. I believe that investing in the advancement of a diverse community is a pillar that should be codified into American law. One of the core principles I am running on is providing more power to internal student organizations and campus-related coalitions. The goal is to preserve federally cut DEI support networks with a community-driven foundation.
The landmark proposal of my campaign is a sliding scale tuition model that would create a progressive income bracket system that collects directly based on the financial circumstances of the student's household. Education should be available to all regardless of financial status. Additionally, this bracket system would be a tool to preserve our higher education system's former DEI and other educational programs cut by the federal government.
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Campaign Phone Number
7024610223
Endorsements
3.14 Action, Nevada State Education Association (NSEA)
Artificial Intelligence is evolving quickly and is here to stay. As a Math professor, I compare this to how we have debated for years about the use of calculators/ graphing calculators on exams. We have adapted to all technologies and found ways to teach students how to use these devices while still assessing how well our students learn. For AI, we will all have to find ways to adapt and include this in our curriculums. I’m a proponent of having more faculty embracing and working with AI. After spending a few hours playing with various systems, like ChatGPT, you quickly learn it’s not an omniscient being and there are definitely limitations. It’s quickly improving, but we have time to use it as an aid for student learning.
Sadly, AI will make it tough for many seeking careers. Contrary to popular opinion, it will affect both hands-on and the traditionally higher skilled positions. My recommendation for all students and graduates is to be as well rounded and open to careers now. Be ready to pivot to new positions that probably do not even exist today. It’s very likely their final career jobs will be created in the next few years, so they need to be ready to jump to those spots. The well-rounded individuals with varied experience will be the ideal future candidates for any positions.
Knowing how tough NSHE has it with State funding, there really needs to be a serious plan to deal with a potential federal research funding decline. The past few years have seen major cuts, but also reinstatements of federal funding after some delays. All institutions need to put more grant proposals out there. The more applications filed, the higher probability of gaining more funding. We need partnerships with different private companies and organizations in Nevada. Our colleges offer specialized programs for outside businesses. There should be some sort of reciprocation from those groups like scholarships, donations, internships, etc. Both sides win, and this could really help relieve other cutbacks in funding.
I have been part of many interviews for various hirings. I have found that more interviewees is never a bad thing. I am 100% in favor of adding more people to the interview pool that help institutions increase certain demographics. My simple solution follows a clean ranking system. Should there been a need to bring in a candidate to an interview to add some diversity, let’s do it, but we bring in every other candidate who was ranked above. Interview as many as needed and then find the best candidate. I’ve seen it firsthand with me as a candidate and others that more interviews equal higher chances each subsequent time. The dial will be moved, and it will be done in a non-artificial manner.
I love this idea. This is a way to tackle multiple state/ local problems at once. One example is the pool of teaching candidates for CCSD. I would love to help create a plan where students would get discounted for free tuition if you commit to an appropriate amount of time teaching in a state school district. It would help shore up the shortage of teachers and give students in need a legitimate chance of getting a quality education. All sides win. This can be emulated for state positions or any other public need.