keeping your voice front and center. re-elect Megan!
Megan and her family enjoying the Kennedy Space Center.
The Issues That drive mE.
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Your voice matters, and it belongs at the center of our local government, not pushed to the side or silenced.
Titusville is full of innovative, thoughtful, and engaged residents. We have boards made up of highly skilled, dedicated volunteers who give their time to serve our city. Yet too often, instead of truly listening to our own people, we lean on outside consultants and make it harder for residents to be heard.
I believe that is backwards.
We should be listening to the voices of our residents, not limiting them. Every time the Council has voted to shorten or remove public comment, I have been the voice fighting back, reminding everyone that residents are not “stopping the business of the city.” The people ARE the business of the city.
Going forward, I will continue to stand up for open public comment, genuine community input, and better use of the talent we already have right here in Titusville. Our city is strongest when we listen to the people who call it home.
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If the floods of October 2025 taught us anything, it is that our current infrastructure is not keeping up with the realities we are facing as a community. When there has been an issue at the water treatment facility, I have gone there in person, documenting what happened and making sure every spill or accident was recorded and reported to the proper agencies.
We must start truly prioritizing investments in our roads, drainage systems, and the regular maintenance that keeps them working. It is not enough to order studies and then let them sit on a shelf. We have to see projects through, fix the problems we already know about, and listen to residents when they tell us there is an issue in their neighborhood.
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Since being on City Council, I have actively supported Low Impact Development and the protection of Titusville’s natural assets, including the Indian River Lagoon. It is critical that we face our water quality challenges honestly and take real steps to address them.
We cannot keep rezoning wetlands or approving development in areas that are meant to recharge our aquifer. Those lands play a vital role in filtering and storing the water we depend on. We also have to be forward-thinking about our water supply, planning now to ensure that it can reliably serve our community in the years ahead.
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Our police officers, firefighters, and first responders are the backbone of our community, and they deserve strong, consistent support. It is essential that they have the resources they need to protect and serve, while also being able to provide for their own families with security and dignity.
At the same time, when concerns arise in the community, we have a responsibility to acknowledge them openly and work through them together. We should always be working to build bridges between residents, city leadership, and our public safety agencies. Transparency is key to that trust, and I am committed to making sure people can see how decisions are made, how issues are addressed, and how we move forward as one community.
I'm running for Re-election because every voice deserves to be heard.
I got involved in local government the same way a lot of neighbors do—with a problem on my own street. I saw how hard it was for regular people to get answers, to be heard, or to even know what was happening with city decisions. That experience pushed me to step up, get informed, and fight for a different kind of local government.
I’m running for re-election with a simple promise: keeping your voice front and center. I believe City Hall should work for the people who live here not special interests, not developers, and not distant political agendas. To me, that means listening first, being honest about what’s going on, and making it easier for residents to be seen and heard before decisions are made.
I’m a strong advocate for transparency, accountability, and clean, responsible growth. I support opening the books when necessary—including forensic audits—so taxpayers can see where their money is going and how decisions are made. I believe public records, meetings, and information should be more accessible and not hidden.
I am also quite comfortable voting alone when that’s what my conscience and my community call for—I’ve done that often. I do not take money from developers, PACs, or special interests, and that is not just something I say; I proved that in the last election and I continue to live by it.
For me, every vote comes back to one question: “Does this benefit the people of Titusville and protect our future?” I will always vote to:
Give residents a real voice in growth and development
Protect our right to clean water and a healthy environment
Make government information easier to access and understand
Ensure public dollars are spent responsibly and openly
I’m not interested in the “same old” crowd—I’m running once again to change it. If you want a council member who listens, explains, and stands up for your right to be seen and heard—who keeps your voice front and center—I’m asking for your vote on November 3rd.
Join the team.
Sign up to volunteer or to ask any questions you may have about Megan’s campaign and her plans for a Titusville that feels like home.


