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City
Leaders Offer Inspiration for Public Service
By
Merri Rosenberg

Left to Right: Georgia Pestana, Liz Abzug, Ester Fuchs,
C. Virginia Fields |
A
standing-room only crowd packed the Sulzberger Parlor on
October 10 for a spirited panel discussion on "How
To Go Out and Change the World (Or At Least New York City):
Women in City Government." "Changing the world
is one of the prime aspirations of Barnard women,"
said President Judith Shapiro in her opening remarks. "Tonight's
panel features leaders and innovators who speak out and
make waves."
Co-sponsored by the Center for Research on Women, the Urban
Studies Program, the Office of the President, the Office
of Alumnae Affairs, and the Office of Career Development,
the panel brought together such impressive municipal luminaries
as Manhattan Borough President C. Virginia Fields; Ester
Fuchs, special advisor for governance and strategic planning
to New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and professor of political
science at Barnard and Columbia University; Liz Abzug, adjunct
assistant professor of urban studies at Barnard and former
director for federal affairs and programs, New York State
Office of Economic Development, and Georgia Pestana, Barnard
'84, Chief of the Labor and Law Employment Division of the
New York City Law Department.
The panel's collective message was an invitation to the
mostly undergraduate audience to consider contributing their
talents to public service.
Manhattan Borough President Fields noted: "Politics
and public service is one of the most important ways to
make a contribution to the world. Decisions that get made
there affect everyone from the womb to the tomb."
"Work from the ground up," urged Pestana. "Understand
what's happening. You live here, and are as responsible
as everybody else. You should become involved."
Pestana pointed out to the audience that one of the great
benefits of working for city government was that "you
get lots of responsibility early on in city government."
She cited her own experience, not long after graduating
from law school, working on cases like conditions in single
room occupancy buildings or the plight of prisoners who
were psychiatric patients in city hospitals.
"I was debating whether I should go into psychology
or law," said Stacey Gottesman 04, who is president
of Women in Politics, a campus political organization dedicated
to raising campus awareness of important political issues.
"I want to have an impact on people and I was inspired
by Georgias example. I feel now I should get involved
in law and politics."
Ester Fuchs also suggested that women's involvement at the
highest levels of municipal government was critical to making
a difference. " When you appoint women to executive
positions, they bring different networks to the conversation,"
Fuchs said. "Having diversity of any kind in the room
makes a difference in what kinds of names get forwarded
for positions. That's critical to the outcome."
And as Fields observed, "Become involved. Volunteer.
You're here at Barnard, in Manhattan, part of Columbia University.
The resources are here, the opportunities are here, and
the communities are here. You're at a place, at a time,
when so much is happening. Become a part of that. Expand
on the academic part of what you're doing. Take advantage
of everything this great city has to offer."
Abzug, whose late mother, Bella, was a member of Congress
from New York, said: "Weve come a long way but
we still have a long way to go. You have so much talent
and opportunities ahead of you, but were reaching
a scary moment in history and we need to move faster. Push,
persist, and do it with heart and soul."
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