The Marin County Board of Supervisors has reappointed a planning commissioner and named a new member to the panel.

Margaret Curran, a commissioner since 2016, received another term. The San Anselmo resident has worked as town manager in Tiburon, planning director in Santa Monica, assistant city manager in Beverly Hills and town manager in Telluride, Colorado, according to her application for reappointment. She has a bachelor’s degree in sociology and a master’s degree in urban planning from the University of California, Los Angeles.

“One key to great public service for all residents, particularly historically underserved communities, is for boards and staff to never forget that serving the public interest is why government exists in the first place,” she wrote in her application. “This may seem obvious, yet it all too often gets replaced with the upside-down notion that the public should get out of the way of government. Service erodes badly when the public is viewed as a nuisance or impediment.”

Robert Sandoval, a lawyer for a cryptocurrency company in San Francisco, is a board member for the San Rafael Park and Recreation Commission and the Point San Pedro Road Coalition. He has a bachelor’s degree in politics and economics from Occidental College and a law degree from the University of Chicago. He has worked as a deputy attorney general at the California Department of Justice.

“To help the County address the needs of our diverse population in Marin, I would be committed to ensuring that land use, housing, and infrastructure reflect a broad range of perspectives,” he wrote in his application. “I am a Mexican American father of a young family in Marin and would embody the diversity of Marin on the Planning Commission. Moreover, as an attorney I have years of professional experience representing diverse client interests and reaching consensus.”

The county received four applications for the at-large seats, which have two-year terms. Longtime commissioner Don Dickenson, whose term expired this year, did not reapply.

The supervisors made the appointments at their meeting Tuesday. The commission’s work includes approving or rejecting housing development plans and use permits, although its decisions can be appealed to the supervisors.

Aside from the at-large seats, the commission includes one member from each of the five supervisorial districts. Their terms are four years.