Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott has tapped his longtime adviser and campaign manager Marvin James to serve as interim chief of staff, a quietly powerful position that is generally tasked with managing the mayorβs relationships with the City Council and state lawmakers, according to an internal memo reviewed by The Baltimore Banner.
The memo, written by City Administrator Faith Leach, also announced Thursday afternoon that Bryan Doherty will serve as the mayorβs director of communications. Both James and Doherty will fill roles that opened on Monday, when the first term Democrat asked former Chief of Staff Chezia Cager and former communications head Cirilo Manego to resign from their positions.
James is among the mayorβs most trusted advisers. He led a campaign that saw Scott eke out a narrow win in 2020β²s crowded Democratic mayoral primary and officially joined City Hall as a senior advisor in the Mayorβs Office of Neighborhoods.

His appointment stands in contrast to those of Cager and Manego, who were comparatively less connected to City Hall politics than James. Though Cager was a member of the cityβs 41st District Democratic Central Committee, Manego is a newcomer to Baltimore, having moved to the city from Washington, D.C., last year. Prior to joining City Hall, he ran his own consulting firm, which is still in operation, and worked at the progressive nonprofit The Hub Project.
Doherty most recently served as the national press secretary of United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. He served as a communications adviser to Scottβs 2020 campaign and is also known to Marylandβs political class as a communications head for Ben Jealousβ 2018 gubernatorial campaign. According to the memo, he is a Baltimore County native. He also worked as communications director for New Jersey Congresswoman Mikie Sherrill and on Sen. Elizabeth Warrenβs 2020 presidential campaign.
Leachβs memo also named Blair Adams as the mayorβs deputy communications director. She has served several stints as a spokeswoman in different city agencies, most recently the Department of Public Works and the fire department.
Caron Watkins will join Leachβs office as as director of policy and strategy. Watkins is no stranger to City Hall: She most recently served as deputy chief equity officer in the Mayorβs Office of Equity and Civil Rights, and also worked for former Mayor Stephanie Rawlings Blake as communications director. Watkins has also served as an assistant stateβs attorney and the chief of staff to the former Baltimore City Stateβs Attorney Marilyn Mosby from 2015 to 2018.
The mayorβs office announced the personnel changes in a news release after The Banner reported this story. In a statement, Scott said he looks forward to working with the new roster of officials.
βMy administration has made record progress including increasing investment in our schools, reducing unemployment, and expanding partnerships between community and police to reduce violent crime,β Scott said. βOur success is due in part to the talented professionals who are willing and able to serve the citizens of Baltimore.β
Mondayβs departures were the latest β and among the most significant β in a pattern of turnover that has come to define the Scott administration and led council members to lament that they learn of personnel changes from the media.
The communications department in particular has served as a revolving door: Doherty will be the mayorβs fourth communications director. Manego joined City Hall in February and held the role for only three months. He was preceded by Monica Lewis, who held the job for about 10 months before leaving for City Council President Nick Mosbyβs office. Cal Harris held the role for under a year before the mayor asked him to resign. Two acting directors, Stefanie Mavronis and James Bentley, now work for the Mayorβs Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement and Baltimore City Stateβs Attorney Ivan Bates, respectively.
Cager joined City Hall in November and departed after half a year on the job. She replaced Michael Huber, who left his position as Scottβs first chief of staff last September after joining Johns Hopkins Universityβs lobbying team.
Their departures came after the administration hired Beth Blauer, the current associate vice provost for public sector innovation at Johns Hopkins University, and Travis Tazelaar, a political consultant and former executive director of the Maryland Democratic Party, to consult on operations and staff performance. In his recent State of the City address, Scott noted that Blauer will work in close partnership with Leach.

Leach is the second ever city administrator. She was handpicked by Scott for the role after a stint as deputy mayor of equity, health and human services, where she was the face of the mayorβs squeegee task force, an initiative that connected young people squeegeeing for tips at busy intersections to jobs and social services and led to a 73% reduction in squeegee-related calls.



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