Senate committee advances majority of gubernatorial nominees in voice vote; individual testimonials highlight agency priorities

Maryland Senate Executive Nominations Committee · February 23, 2026

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Summary

The Executive Nominations Committee heard dozens of gubernatorial nominees across state boards and commissions, favorably reporting most by voice vote while several nominees used the hearing to highlight priorities for their prospective posts.

The Maryland Senate Executive Nominations Committee advanced most nominees on Tuesday by voice vote after a long public hearing that included dozens of testimonies spanning juvenile services, higher education, criminal justice boards and economic development.

Chair Sen. Ben Brooks called the hearing to order and asked presenters to keep remarks brief because of heavy snow. Several nominees described priorities tied to the agencies they would join: Betsy Polentino, Gov. Moore’s nominee for secretary of juvenile services, emphasized rebuilding relationships across law enforcement, courts and community providers, strengthening facilities and workforce training, and said the department launched a public-facing dashboard in early 2026 to increase transparency.

Other nominees who spoke and summarized their qualifications included Tisha Edwards for the University System of Maryland Board of Regents; Dr. Jean Bailey for the Maryland Commission on African American History and Culture; and Russell M. Clark for the Maryland Venture Fund Authority. Nominees generally described professional backgrounds and expressed willingness to work with stakeholders; most faced limited or no substantive questioning.

Committee business concluded with a motion from Sen. Bridal to give a favorable recommendation to nominees listed on the agenda (S1–S28 and L1–L23) except for nominees numbered 5 and 2. The committee took a voice vote and members signified "aye." The record does not show a roll-call tally for individual senators.

Notable testimony and details: - Betsy Polentino (Department of Juvenile Services) said a staffing review identified staffing shortfalls at facilities and that population rose roughly 22% in recent years; she described operational reforms including returning positions to facilities and reducing overtime. - Several nominees emphasized collaboration with local partners: Polentino discussed a juvenile justice reform council subcommittee to improve coordination with school systems; other nominees highlighted partnerships with community organizations and universities.

What’s next: The committee will reconvene March 9; senators asked for follow-up briefings on a small number of nominees and for written materials on certain regional projects before advancing held nominations.