The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lamont picks final leadership posts

- By Mark Pazniokas CTMIRROR.ORG

A former gubernator­ial candidate, a national criminal-justice policy expert and a lawyer with extensive publicand private-sector experience were named Tuesday by the administra­tion of Gov. Ned Lamont to round out the leadership posts in the Office of Policy and Management.

The new hires are Jonathan Harris, who ended his gubernator­ial run with an endorsemen­t of Lamont; Marc Pelka, a former policy aide at the General Assembly who has advised state government­s across the U.S. on criminal justice reforms for the Council of State Government­s; and Natalie Wagner, a lawyer and former OPM undersecre­tary.

Wagner will return to OPM as the deputy to Melissa McCaw, the woman who was the first agency head hired by Lamont. As secretary of OPM, McCaw oversees an agency that is responsibl­e for the state budget, labor relations and advising the governor on key policy areas. Wagner will be her second-in-command.

Harris will be the undersecre­tary of comprehens­ive planning and intergover­nmental policy. Pelka will succeed one of the Malloy administra­tion’s higherprof­ile policy aides, former Rep. Michael P. Lawlor, as the undersecre­tary for criminal justice.

Lamont has pledged to continue and build on the criminal-justice reforms implemente­d by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy. The hiring of Pelka will be seen in national criminal-justice policy circles as affirming that pledge, as was Lamont’s previous choice of Rollin Cook as the correction commission­er.

“I’m so pleased to be joined at the Office of Policy and Management by these strong leaders, thoughtful minds and committed public servants,” McCaw said. “I look forward to working with them as we craft a budget that supports the priorities outlined by Gov.-elect Lamont during the campaign.”

Wagner is currently a lawyer at Shipman & Goodwin, where she represents school districts in general and special education matters. Wagner has extensive experience in state government, most recently as OPM undersecre­tary for legal affairs. Wagner lives in West Hartford with her wife and their four children.

Harris is a former West Hartford mayor, state senator, Democratic Party executive director and consumer affairs commission­er. He lives in West Hartford with his wife, Lucy, and their son.

Until accepting the new post, Pelka was a leader of the CSG Justice Center’s efforts to enact policies aimed at reducing states’ correction costs and lowering recidivism. Pelka has a master’s degree in criminal justice policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He lives in New Haven with his fiancé.

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