Protecting Nevada’s Land, Water, and Future
Our land is our legacy, and water is our lifeline.
Nevada’s land tells our story, from ranches and reservations to mines, farms, and mountains. Our communities depend on these resources for food, jobs, and a way of life. We can grow our economy, sustain our farms and ranches, and protect our environment at the same time if we do it with responsibility and respect.
Clean water is essential for ranchers, farmers, families, and tribal communities. I will fight to hold corporations accountable when they pollute or take more than their share. Mining and development are vital parts of our economy, but they must operate with integrity and transparency. That means listening to and partnering with Nevada’s tribal communities, who have cared for this land long before we called it home.
Land is where we work, where we gather, and where we connect to something larger than ourselves. Our neighborhood fields, open landscapes, and public hunting grounds are the heart of our communities. Stewardship is not a slogan — it is our duty to protect what sustains us so that our children inherit land that still provides, water that still flows, and skies that remain clear.
I’ve spent my life listening in classrooms and community meetings across rural Nevada, and I know that local decisions about land and water affect family budgets, student futures, and community resilience. Public money, public resources, and public trust deserve leaders who treat them accordingly.