Senate Bill 869 proposes 'Maryland Workforce Launch' pilot to attract relocating businesses with community-college training

Economic Matters Committee · March 27, 2026

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Summary

SB 869 would create a pilot in the Department of Commerce to partner with community colleges to provide free pre-hire training to companies relocating to Maryland; sponsor said funding is already budgeted and proponents cited out‑of‑state models like Georgia and Virginia.

Senator Alonzo Washington described SB 869, the Maryland Workforce Launch pilot, as a tool to attract out-of-state businesses by partnering Department of Commerce incentives with community-college training. "This program will partner with 1 or 2 community colleges to provide free training for employees of companies that relocate here in the state of Maryland," he said, and added that the Department would ensure companies meet hiring and salary benchmarks or repay funds.

Supporters compared the proposal to similar state programs. Brad Phillips cited Georgia's Quick Start and Virginia's Talent Accelerator as models that trained large numbers of workers and helped recruit major manufacturers. "We think this would be a strong asset to the state of Maryland," Phillips said, and urged a favorable report.

Committee members asked about scope (attraction vs retention), campus selection and fiscal caps. The sponsor said the bill targets attraction of businesses with no current Maryland physical location, leaves community-college selection to Commerce, and is written as a pilot that could expand. One member expressed concern the pilot cap and half-million-dollar figure might be small for highly skilled training needs.

The hearing closed with discussion but no vote during this session. The sponsor emphasized competitive positioning and accountability metrics as central features.