
I am proud of the work that has been accomplished in Ward 7 over the last two years, but there's still work left to be done. I want to build upon the progress we've made over the last two years so that we can continue to deliver solutions for the residents of Ward 7.

Create a transparent, responsive city government that listens, acts, and plans for Nashua’s future while honoring our community’s values.

As an Alderwoman, Shoshanna Kelly has proudly supported public education, started Nashua’s Pride Festival, assisted small businesses, and fought the climate crisis at the local level.

Bringing hands-on leadership, deep community roots, and a results-driven approach to City Hall—focused on housing for all, public safety, and making city hall work better for us.

For me, the kids always come first. I want every child to have an opportunity to be successful in the Nashua school system.

Every Nashuan deserves a strong foundation for health, safety, and opportunity—safe streets, thriving schools, and engaged neighborhoods that make our community stronger.

Every child deserves to attend safe schools, with robust academics, individualized supports, diverse classes, and a variety of extracurricular activities and sports.

Education gave me everything. As a father, small business owner, and long-time community volunteer, I’ve seen what great public schools can do. That’s why I’m stepping up! Let’s protect what makes our public schools great—while making them even better.

A life-long Nashua resident, proud Nashua school graduate, and a parent of students in Nashua’s school system.

Infrastructure is important to everyone in a city. We share our roads, our parks, our water and all the services that keep the city functioning. I love helping the City run.

I have lived in ward 7 on South Main Street for 41 years. Some of you may know me from Sunset Heights where I was an active member of the PTO as the president, yearbook editor, and newsletter writer. For the last 20 years, I have served as president of the Friends of the Nashua Public library and helped raise $600K for programs that taxpayers did not have to fund.