Growing up, I went to school in the St. Anthony – New Brighton School district. Here is where I originally met my future wife, Keturah (and we had our first class together in 4th grade). When I was recruited to play Division one football in college, I chose to attend Hamline University in St. Paul, MN so that I could balance my scientific studies, athletics, and extracurricular activities all while staying close to the community that I love.
Initially, I thought that I was going to follow in my parents’ footsteps and major in both education and biology, combining two of my passions. Along the way, I was able to shadow a physician, and doing so changed my career trajectory. I realized that pursuing a medical degree could combine both my interest in science and my love for teaching.
At Hamline, I majored in biochemistry, was a four-year starter on the football team as a quarterback, was voted as a captain by my teammates for my junior and senior seasons, a three-time all-conference selection, and was fortunate to set multiple school records. I also had to work hard in order to pay for college – I worked as an undergraduate researcher, a statistician, and with ACR Homes as a Primary Care Assistant to adults with mental and physical disabilities. Despite working these three jobs, I still needed to take out loans due to the expensive and rising cost of college. When it came time to apply to medical schools, I knew that my top choice was the University of Minnesota.
Before starting medical school, Keturah and I were married in Taylors Falls in July of 2019. We loved the area we both grew up in and knew we wanted to stay in the community that had given us so much. Together, we decided to buy our first house in Columbia Heights right before the pandemic swept the globe, and now we are raising our two children here in the district where we were raised. In 2022, I felt called to serve Columbia Heights, running and winning a seat on the Columbia Heights City Council. During my term on the City Council, I am proud of the investments we have made in critical infrastructure, how we have advanced the public health of the city (including passing one of the most aggressive tobacco ordinances in the state), modernized our city, and also continue to celebrate and support the vast diversity of our city while they are under attack.
As a physician, it is always important to advocate for patients. I did not always intend to run for political office, but I felt called to be involved in public policy when I saw how many laws and regulations directly affect my patients’ well-being and quality of life. And this is not limited to just healthcare insurance and coverage – things like affordable housing, the ability to earn a livable wage, climate change, public safety, gun policy, education funding, and infrastructure all play critical roles in one’s health and ability to thrive. After benefiting for a decade of having a democratic doctor elected at the State Capitol, there are no physicians slated to be in the legislature at the start of the 2027 session. Now more than ever is important to have legislators with knowledge of medicine and public health because everything we do must be done through the lens of how it will affect both the short and long-term health of our communities – especially with the current assault on Medicaid and public health coming from Washington DC and affecting Minnesotans. The German physician and anthropologist Rudolf Virchow famously stated that “Medicine is a social science and politics is nothing else but medicine on a large scale.”
I believe in Minnesota, and I believe that we can work together to solve today’s problems.
We can build a better Minnesota that works for everyone, but we have to fight for it.
Join us!