The Baltimore County Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to reelect Councilman Julian Jones as chair for the third year in a row.
Republican Councilman David Marks nominated the Woodstock Democrat for reelection, saying that Jones has βset an exampleβ of bipartisanship.
βWe have some very tough issues to tackle this year,β like public safety and sustainability, Marks said during the meeting. He added Jones has fostered a βcollegialβ dynamic on the council, where Democrats outnumber Republicans 4-3.
Heβs also led bipartisan efforts, Marks said β particularly in approving new controversial councilmanic district boundaries last year. Local civil rights groups sued the council over the first greenlighted map because it didnβt create a second majority-Black district in addition to Jonesβ, which they said violates federal voting laws by weakening the countyβs Black voting bloc. The map was ultimately approved unanimously without the additional majority-Black district.
Democrat Izzy Patoka seconded Marksβ motion, and Jones was elected 7-0.
First elected in 2018 to represent the western 4th District, which includes Randallstown and Owings Mills, this will be Jonesβ fourth year at the head of the seven-member council. The councilβs chair sets its meeting agendas and whips votes for legislation proposed by the county executiveβs office.
The County Council elects a new chair at its first meeting each calendar year, per the county charter.
Jones became the first African American council chairman in 2019, and is the only representative to hold the honorific for three consecutive years, according to the councilβs office. Former Councilwoman Cathy Bevins was elected chairwoman in 2014 and the following year. Before that, former Councilman John Olszewski Sr. presided over his colleagues in 2010 and 2011.
βI donβt take your support lightly,β Jones told Marks after his nomination. βItβs very important to me. The fact that you trust me and put this trust in me to elect me as chair ... means an awful lot.β
Jones added that heβs βextremely proudβ of the councilβs work.
βWe all comes from different places with different ideas,β he said. βBut at the end of the day, I can say each and every one of us here, as well as the former members, work very hard to advance good government, and good governance.β
Jonesβ reelection comes shortly after he was subject to two investigations by Baltimore County Inspector General Kelly Madigan, whom heβs criticized over the last two years.
In November, Madigan concluded in a report that Department of Public Works officials, at Jonesβ behest, spent nearly $70,000 from a program intended for homeowners to instead help a businessperson quickly repave a Towson alley next to their business β far removed from Jonesβ district. Jones told The Banner he was merely advocating for a county resident; the county administratorβs office said the bylaws that established the paving program donβt prohibit the money from being used by business owners.
And in April, the inspector general reported that Jones broke the countyβs electronic communications policy by including a link to donate to his campaign committee in at least 40 emails from his government email address. Jones said the link was mistakenly included and went unnoticed for months.





Comments
Welcome to The Banner's subscriber-only commenting community. Please review our community guidelines.