Inaugural Executive Exchange Expo: Aisha Braveboy Hosts Residents for Direct Dialogue
County Executive Aisha Braveboy hosted the inaugural Executive Exchange Expo so residents could speak directly with county leadership and learn how county services affect their daily lives.

County Executive Aisha Braveboy held the inaugural Executive Exchange Expo on Tuesday, January 27, bringing county leadership into closer contact with Prince George's County residents. The three-hour event, posted by the Office of the County Executive, ran from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and was billed as a county-led engagement initiative designed to facilitate direct dialogue.
Organizers presented the expo as a forum where residents could raise concerns, ask questions, and connect with county staff about services that touch everyday life in PG County. By creating a single event dedicated to direct engagement, the administration aimed to reduce friction between constituents and government offices and to make county operations more accessible and transparent.
For residents, the immediate value was practical: a chance to cut through phone trees and appointment wait times, and to find the right office for issues ranging from permits and public works to social services and community safety. For civic groups and neighborhood leaders, the expo offered a visible opportunity to relay localized priorities and to hear procedural explanations from agency representatives in person.
The inaugural nature of the event carries governance implications. Instituting a recurring Executive Exchange would signal a shift toward more systematic public input in county decision-making and could influence how priorities are set across budgeting, service delivery, and strategic planning. Such engagement also matters for accountability; direct exchanges allow constituents to seek commitments, clarify timelines, and follow up with named staff members.

The format aligns with broader trends in municipal government that emphasize responsiveness and one-on-one outreach. For Prince George's County, where neighborhoods range from long-established communities to rapidly developing corridors, in-person access to county leadership helps bridge gaps in service knowledge and builds trust between residents and officials.
What comes next for readers is practical: watch for announcements from the Office of the County Executive about similar outreach opportunities, and use those sessions to bring specific documents, case numbers, or detailed questions so staff can respond effectively. The Executive Exchange Expo set a baseline for how residents can expect to interact with county government going forward, and it offers a template for more direct, accountable local governance in Prince George's County.
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