This priorities page is written in my own words, not by a Washington insider – but a homegrown Wisconsinite who understands what the people of the Third Congressional District need the most. I won’t solve all our problems overnight, but I’ll sure as hell try. We might not see eye to eye on everything, but I’m going to fight for this region’s future.

I believe healthcare is a human right – and the biggest issue that we need to tackle as a nation. All Wisconsinites deserve access to quality, affordable healthcare – but how do we get there? Wisconsin residents need healthcare relief now. We can’t wait for a sweeping bill when people are struggling to have check-ups covered and to pay for monthly prescriptions. As a small business owner who relies on the exchange for my healthcare coverage, I know firsthand the limitations of our current system. Here’s how I think we start to fix it:

  • Expand Medicare to cover vision, dental and hearing – the very things that deteriorate as we age.
  • Address antitrust issues in the healthcare system that put the power in a few major corporations and provide consumers with little choice.
  • Take on prescription drug companies, ensuring Seniors can get the drugs they need at prices negotiated through Medicare and that drug companies can’t inflate their prices based on brand or speciality of the drug.
  • Work to improve the Affordable Care Act and healthcare exchange as it exists by providing more tax credits to lower premiums, creating more options on the exchange and simplifying the process to make obtaining health insurance less confusing.
  • Annually lower the age that Seniors can start receiving Medicare benefits – each year expanding the number of Americans covered by Medicare.

Our communities are struggling to build back our workforce as we continue to emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic. Between affordable housing, childcare options and stagnant wages it’s been tough to jumpstart our economy here in west central Wisconsin. People’s pocketbooks are hurting – we have to reimagine, what do we want our quality of life to look like? I think it starts with:

  • Expansion of federal community block grants that offer dollars for affordable housing projects, particularly in rural communities in west central Wisconsin where current housing is aging out or doesn’t accommodate growing populations.
  • Tax credits to organizations willing to build low-income and mixed-income housing projects throughout the region to address our lack of affordable housing.
  • Help families buy their first home by deferring property tax payments for first-time home buyers for up to five years.
  • A constituent-centered office with case workers on staff that are seasoned in working to address the issues of constituents. It’s also having a Chief of Staff based in the District, putting the needs of CD-3 first.
  • Child care incubators that provide training and dollars to incentivize start-up in our small towns and rural communities.
  • Increasing the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour – which is just the start for creating living wages in our state – with a rolling implementation plan starting with corporate players first, midsize businesses and then small businesses.

I grew up on a farm in Eau Claire that raised registered dairy cattle – Prairie Belle Holsteins. I lived at the fair each summer showing cows in 4-H throughout the region. My family has had a farm in this district for 150 years so when we had to sell our cows because of the price of milk and competition with larger dairies, it wasn’t just losing a job or a business, but a part of our identity and way of life. My family now raises angus beef cattle. Here’s how I intend to protect our livelihood and the heritage of agriculture in this District:

  • Address breakdowns within our supply chain – from the farmer to processors to the retailer.
  • Ensure tax incentives and subsidies are created for small to midsize farms, not just for bigger ag. Our farmers, from dairy to beef to pork producers, are not getting their fair share.
  • Enforce antitrust laws that are impacting the ability for farmers to compete with growing conglomerates. These corporate conglomerates are robbing us of our farming traditions.
  • Restructure the Farm Bill with a greater focus on agriculture and the farming community itself versus the bulky package it has become.
  • Incentivize formation of rural cooperatives that have a proven history of bridging the gap and ensure smaller farmers see a greater share of profit.
  • Work closely and convene quarterly with key partners like UW-Extension, WEDC’s Office of Rural Prosperity, the Wisconsin Farmers Union and the Farm Bureau to remain tapped into the issues affecting the ag community within this region and to inform federal policy making.
  • Provide federal funding to individuals looking to purchase vacant farmsteads to jumpstart our dairy industry and provide new training for folks who didn’t inherit land and skills, but want to learn and earn it.
  • Expand export markets for all commodities.
  • Continue to advocate for funding for important ag pipeline programs like 4-H and FFA within our school districts and counties.

I come from a union family – my brother is a union firefighter in Madison and my sister works for the teacher’s union in Minnesota. I know first hand the issues workers are facing from stagnant wages to stifled organizing efforts. Workers in this state are still feeling the harmful effects of right to work and Act 10 that decimated the power of unions and working class people. Here’s how I intend to work with union leaders to continue restoring power in the labor movement:

  • Work to pass the PRO Act. I will not be an idle advocate for workers rights, but active, and will rally my colleagues to get it passed.
  • Support Davis-Bacon prevailing wage protections and working to ensure that every federally funded project that comes to my District has a project labor agreement attached to it.
  • Eliminate IRAPs that undermine the integrity of Registered Apprenticeship Programs.
  • Build authentic relationships with the labor community that keep an open door policy and offer quarterly, consistent opportunities to meet with me in District to discuss legislation and regional issues the labor community faces.

Last year my mom had a heart attack, quadruple bypass surgery and left the hospital with a six-figure  bill. If it wasn’t for Medicare, there’s no way our family could afford a bill like that. From the cost of critical care to prescription drugs to assisted living we can all agree we want our parents and grandparents to age with dignity. Here’s how I intend to support the people who raised us, our parents, grandparents, church moms and neighbors:

  • Repeal the tax on Social Security for Seniors who are already receiving benefits.
  • Expand Medicare to include vision, dental and hearing coverage.
  • Stand-up to pharmaceutical companies and their outrageous drug prices.
  • Lower the cost-burden of long-term care facilities and predatory beneficiaries.
  • Increase access to long-term care facilities in rural communities and provide tax incentives so Seniors can stay in the communities where their families live and that they’ve called home for decades.

For generations my family has fought to protect our country and uphold democracy. Our democracy is fragile, and should not be taken for granted. Protecting the rights and freedoms promised in our constitution is more urgently needed now than ever in recent history.

No voter should have to worry if their ballot will be counted or not on Election Day, or if they’ll be able to easily access the polls. Obstructionists have worked for decades putting barriers up to make it harder for people to vote, including curtailing same day voter registration, limiting approved forms of voter identification, and reducing drop boxes for absentee ballots.

We need to be making it easier, not harder, for eligible voters to participate in our democratic process by exercising their right to vote. I will always be a staunch defender of voting rights. In Congress, I will proudly support and work to pass the following:

  • Finally enacting the Freedom to Vote Act and the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act which would restore key provisions of the Voting Rights Act, make voting more accessible, end partisan gerrymandering, bolster ethics rules for Members of Congress and eliminate dark money in politics.
  • End Citizens United and crack down on the prevalence of corporate dark money in our elections. Working class people like me face barriers running for office and it’s left our country to be run by the ultra rich.
  • Banning members of Congress from trading stocks while in office.

From roundtables in rural corners of this district to downtown discussions in Eau Claire, La Crosse or Point – it’s clear that climate change and the environment are top of mind for constituents – what kind of legacy are we leaving for our children and grandchildren? In Congress I will:

  • Draw federal funds for investment in green energy projects that harness our natural resources like wind, solar and hydro energy. Ensure that as we build new clean infrastructure, we’re relying on union workers to build our future.
  • Work with regional stakeholders and policy makers to rapidly address the PFAS issue in our water – including more testing, remediation and research.
  • Forge relationships and build coalitions with Wisconsin farmers to address issues with run-off that directly impacts water ways creating issues with nitrates and algae blooms.
  • Invest in mass transit – like the elusive high-speed rail we’ve been working to connect west central Wisconsin to bigger marketplaces – increasing tourism and lowering emissions from commutes.
  • Regulate our biggest corporate polluters. Each one of us individually can do our part, but we’ve got to crack down on blighted areas starting in this District and beyond.

As an entrepreneur, I know what it’s like to put it all on the line and start a small business with personal savings and elbow grease. We know that the shops, restaurants and small businesses that flank our Main Streets are the lifeblood of communities throughout west central Wisconsin. To keep our commerce centers bustling, here’s what I’ll do:

  • Build coalitions of small business owners that I meet with on a quarterly basis to keep an open dialog on pandemic recovery and cultivating a vibrant start-up scene.
  • Create a regional fund that seeds dollars for second stage growth – investing more deeply in start-ups that are ready to grow, create more jobs and manufacture in Wisconsin.
  • Enforce antitrust laws on larger corporate players who don’t play by the same rules as main street and enjoy tax loopholes.

I am a proud product of Eau Claire public schools – a Sherman Star, DeLong Knight and North High Huskie. The pandemic weighed heavy in the classroom – from the challenges of virtual learning to mental health issues that impacted both students and teachers. We’re seeing greater teacher shortages and the ongoing burden of student debt. In rural communities, funding issues are only exacerbated further –  with less funding in the classroom and teachers starting and leaving at alarming rates.

Here’s what I’m looking to accomplish:

  • Increase funding to early childhood education like Head Start and preschool.
  • Address our teacher shortage crisis by offering pay increases and signing bonuses. Work with state legislators to advocate for removing the cost of living pay increases, but having salary commensurate with experience in the classroom and increased each year by industry standard set by unions, not 1-2% annually.
  • Treat student loans like mortgage rates, offering the opportunity to refinance when interest rates decline.
  • Advocate for change with funding formulas at the state level to redistribute funding where it needs to be (i.e. poorest districts currently get the least, should get the most).
  • Expand resources to support the mental health of students and teachers in schools.
  • Double the value of Pell Grants for low to moderate income families.
  • Create a work study pipeline that is rooted in community and connection with employers – not just to the university, in order to offer real world experiences for students.

The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the gaps that exist in broadband access across the state of Wisconsin, with kids doing homework in Culvers parking lots, small businesses missing out on large online marketplaces and folks unable to access telehealth appointments. We need to treat broadband like rural electrification – and get it done. Here’s how we do that:

  • Expand grants and support to rural electric cooperatives who go the last mile to bring broadband to the last house on the road, because they’re doing the right thing for their members – not the corporate bottom line.
  • Explore new technologies – like satellites – to places where running fiber is too difficult to reach.
  • Build a federal-state partnership to work with the state legislature to ensure that agencies aren’t working in silos and dollars are going to projects that need the most support.
  • Target funds to communities that need it the most – not just the most affluent but to everyday folks living in rural and urban Wisconsin.

As a college student, I relied on organizations like Planned Parenthood as my healthcare option for annual exams. I am a firm believer that every person should have the right to make the best decision for themselves about if, when, and how to start or grow a family, free from political or governmental interference. In Congress, I will always protect reproductive healthcare and the personal freedoms of all Wisconsinites. You can count on me to:

  • Make decisions based on scientific evidence rather than politics.
  • Unabashedly support the upholding of Roe vs. Wade.
  • Ensure our two regional Planned Parenthoods in western Wisconsin remain open, federally funded and that Planned Parenthood locations nationwide remain federally supported.
  • Advocate for ending the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits abortion coverage for individuals on Medicaid or Medicare.
  • Support federal programs that improve and increase access to family planning services.
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