性视界传媒

Cabinet Posts: Two Schar School Grads Picked to Lead Maryland Environment, Natural Resources Agencies

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A woman in a black top and silver necklace smiles at the camera.
Environment Secretary Serena Coleman McIlwain

Maryland鈥檚 new governor has chosen two graduates to serve in his cabinet. Governor Wes Moore (D) has named 性视界传媒 graduates Serena McIlwain (nee Coleman) as Secretary of Environment and Josh Kurtz as Secretary of Natural Resources. Both have been confirmed by the Maryland senate.

鈥淲ith each announcement, we continue to build a cabinet that reflects the state we are humbled to serve,鈥澛said Moore in a statement about his cabinet appointments. 鈥淭hese leaders bring with them great knowledge and deep expertise. This is going to be Maryland鈥檚 decade, and our team will lead with service in their hearts.鈥

The agencies to be led by the Mason graduates work closely together to maintain and improve Maryland鈥檚 air, land, and water.

As Secretary of Natural Resources, Kurtz, a 2012 graduate of the program, takes the helm of the agency with 1,352 employees and a $578 million budget. Previously, Kurtz was Maryland executive director of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and government relations director of the Nature Conservancy.

鈥淩egardless of the issue at hand, one challenge we will continually face is solving complex problems with diverse stakeholders who share different views and ultimate interests,鈥 Kurtz said in an email. 鈥淚 believe, however, that we can all agree with the department鈥檚 mission: Securing a sustainable future for our environment, society, and economy by preserving, protecting, restoring, and enhancing Maryland's natural resources.鈥

The Schar School MPP degree, he said, helped prepare him for the new leadership position. (At the time of both Kurtz鈥檚 and McIlwain鈥檚 degree programs, the school was called the School of Public Policy.)

鈥淢y time at [Mason] equipped me with some of the tools I think I will need to be successful in bringing people together toward our goals,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s an example, at [Mason] there was a strong focus on the upfront work of learning about the intricacies of the issues and blending the data and the human component.

A man in a gray jacket, blue tie, and blue shirt smiles at the camera.
Secretary of Natural Resources Josh Kurtz

鈥淭his was best illustrated to me while working on a group project focused on building policy and programmatic solutions to reducing traumatic brain injuries in our service members.聽We developed a project that was based on medical research, statistics, and anecdotal evidence about the impacts of specific injuries. We presented our draft to our professor and he asked us: How does this impact the families of those dealing with the injuries? How about their communities?

鈥淚t really crystallized for me the need to evaluate the issue within the broader context, while finding solutions for the people who are immediately impacted.鈥

McIlwain, a 2003 graduate of the program, will take charge of the agency that implements and enforces environmental protection laws and programs.

Before joining Moore鈥檚 administration, McIlwain served as Undersecretary of the California Environmental Protection Agency in Governor Gavin Newsom鈥檚 (D) administration beginning in 2019. She supervised the agency鈥檚 day-to-day operations and managed a budget of $22 million, providing leadership and support to all of the boards, departments, and offices under CalEPA and CalEPA鈥檚 total budget of $4.6 billion.

鈥淸Gov. Moore] is a person who considers Maryland home, and I can just feel his love for this state and mine, too,鈥 McIlwain told the Washington Post. 鈥淎nd it just really made me want to be back here to do all of the things that I was doing in California.鈥

She said she read through the Maryland Climate Solutions Now Act, and聽I couldn鈥檛 believe that some of those goals in that act were more aggressive than California. And I thought, 鈥榃ow, I need to be there to see if we could make that happen.鈥欌