Gov. Larry Hogan announced Monday Richard P. Henry has been appointed as Maryland's first inspector general of education.

Henry currently is the executive director of the Maryland State Department of Education's Office of Compliance and Monitoring and has over 30 years of law enforcement experience at the federal level, according to Hogan.

"For five years, our administration has been working hard to root out corruption, wrongdoing, and the mismanagement of state tax dollars by local school systems," Hogan said in a released statement. "With the appointment of the first Inspector General for Education in state history, we are reaffirming our commitment to providing more accountability for parents, teachers, and taxpayers and better results for our children. Henry has the experience and the passion to serve as a tough but fair watchdog in this new role."

After working to establish this post, Hogan said the inspector general is appointed to a five-year term by himself, the state treasurer and the attorney general. 

To further accountability in Maryland school systems, Hogan said he introduced the Community and Local Accountability for Struggling Schools Act, or CLASS Act. 

The proposed legislation is based on a model developed by the governor of Massachusetts to empower local communities to enact changes in leadership and curriculum in failing schools. 

"Far too many of our deserving children continue to be stuck in persistently failing schools. Much tougher accountability measures are still desperately needed," Hogan said in a statement. 

Henry will officially take on his new post March 4.