Growing up as the oldest of seven children, I learned early that fairness doesn’t always mean everyone gets the exact same thing. My parents worked incredibly hard, and resources were sometimes tight, but what I never doubted was that they were intentional. Each of us got what we needed to succeed, whether that was school supplies, time, discipline, encouragement, or simply a little extra attention during a hard season.
These are the lessons that stick with you. There’s a difference between equality and equity. Equality is giving everyone the same slice of the pie. Equity is making sure everyone is fed.
That difference matters deeply when we talk about infrastructure in Galveston, especially in District 6.
Infrastructure equity means streets, drainage, lighting, sidewalks, and public spaces are prioritized based on need, safety, and impact, not just tradition, convenience, or political inertia. District 6 is home to neighborhoods, businesses, tourism, and critical coastal assets. Yet we often see uneven attention when it comes to maintenance, repairs, and long-term planning.
I believe District 6 deserves proactive, equitable infrastructure investment, not reactive patchwork after problems become crises.
Here are four ways Galveston can apply equity, not just equality to infrastructure planning and funding:
(1) Target High-Risk Flood and Drainage Areas First
Instead of spreading drainage funds evenly, prioritize areas with repeated flooding, older systems, and high resident impact. Equity means fixing the streets and neighborhoods that need it the most, not just rotating projects by map grid.
(2) Prioritize Lighting and Sidewalks in High-Traffic and Vulnerable Areas
West End corridors, mixed-use areas, and residential pockets with pedestrian traffic deserve lighting and sidewalks that improve safety for families, seniors, and visitors. Equity means investing where safety risks are highest, not just where projects are easiest.
(3) Align Road and Utility Upgrades with Growth Zones
If we want quality businesses and residents on the West End, we must plan for them. That means roads, traffic lights, utilities, and stormwater systems that can handle growth before congestion and failures occur. Equity means preparing District 6 for the future, not leaving it to catch up later.
(4) Use Transparent Data-Driven Prioritization
Infrastructure decisions should be guided by condition assessments, usage data, and risk, not politics. Equity means showing residents why projects are chosen, how funds are allocated, and when their neighborhood is scheduled for improvements.
When I think back to my childhood, I don’t remember feeling deprived. I remember feeling cared for. My parents made sure we had what we needed to learn, grow, and thrive, even when resources were stretched. That mindset shaped me. It taught me that leadership is about stewardship and prioritization, not perfection.
District 6 is a vital part of Galveston’s identity. We contribute enormously to tourism, housing, and the economy. But we also live here. We raise families here. We worship here. We walk our dogs, drive kids to school, and weather every storm here.
Infrastructure equity means recognizing that reality.
It means making sure District 6 isn’t just the postcard for visitors, but a well-maintained, safe, functional community for residents. It means fixing what’s broken, planning for what’s coming, and being honest about where money is going and why.
I’m not interested in spreading resources thin for the sake of appearances. I’m interested in using them wisely, transparently, and fairly, so every neighborhood gets what it truly needs to succeed.
That’s what equity looks like. And that’s how we keep Galveston great for everyone who calls it home.