About Jordan Reeves
Millbrook resident. Small business owner. Parent. Community volunteer. Democrat running for City Council, District 4.

Jordan's Story
Jordan Reeves is a Democrat who moved to Millbrook 15 years ago for a job, and stayed because of the people. District 4 — with its mix of longtime families, new arrivals, and the small businesses that hold it all together — is the kind of place worth fighting for.
Jordan runs Reeves Hardware & Supply, the shop on Elm Street that's been patching up homes in this neighborhood for over a decade. Spending that much time behind a counter gives you a real education in what the community needs: reliable roads, safe streets, and a City Hall that doesn't treat small business owners like an afterthought.
As a parent of two kids at Millbrook Elementary, Jordan knows what it means to hope this city gets better — not eventually, but now.
What Drives Jordan
Accountability
Jordan believes elected officials should be reachable, responsive, and honest about what they can and can't deliver. No promises made just to get elected.
Practicality
Real problems need real solutions. Jordan approaches every issue by talking to the people closest to it — residents, workers, and business owners — before proposing anything.
Community First
Every decision should start with one question: does this make Millbrook better for the people who live here? Not developers, not outside interests — the people of District 4.
Community Involvement
Millbrook Budget Advisory Committee
Served two terms reviewing the City's annual budget, identifying waste and advocating for infrastructure investment in underserved neighborhoods.
District 4 Little League
Head coach for seven seasons. Still there every Saturday morning, win or lose.
Millbrook Food Bank
Monthly volunteer since 2017, including coordinating the annual holiday drive that served over 400 families last year.
Neighborhood Watch
Co-founded the District 4 Neighborhood Watch in 2019 and helped expand it to cover 12 blocks.
Endorsements
"Jordan Reeves is the kind of neighbor every block deserves — present, caring, and not afraid to speak up. District 4 needs that voice on the Council."
— Maria Santos, Millbrook PTA President
"As a small business owner myself, I know how hard it is to navigate City Hall. Jordan actually gets it. This is the representation we've been asking for."
— Derrick Powell, Powell's Barbershop
"I've watched Jordan fight for this community for years without any title or spotlight. That's the kind of character you want making decisions for District 4."
— Rev. Carol Hughes, Millbrook First Church