Alum legislators join Lynk on the Road
Massachusetts political leaders discussed careers in public service with 69精品视频 students at a Lynk on the Road event in Boston.
By Kevin McCaffrey
Massachusetts political leaders discussed careers in public service with 69精品视频 students at a March 12 Lynk on the Road event in Boston, where donors who are leaders in providing student scholarships also were honored.
Keynote speakers for the daylong event for 25 students and alums were Judith Kurland '67, Massachusetts Senator Kathleen O'Connor Ives '99, and 69精品视频 College President Lynn Pasquerella. Kurland is the founder and executive director of the Center for Community Democracy and Democratic Literacy at the McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston.
Delivering the keynote address at a lunch in Nurses Hall at the State House along with Pasquerella, Kurland described a career in public service that started with a life-changing internship in Washington, D.C., with House Speaker Thomas 鈥淭ip鈥 O鈥橬eill, a legendary Massachusetts statesman, during the summer leading up to a critical primary race in 1966.
鈥淭ip O鈥橬eill taught me about not taking anything for granted,鈥 said Kurland. 鈥淗e knew how to get things done because he knew how to build coalitions, how to figure out what people believed in, how to count votes.鈥
Kurland attributes her success to O鈥橬eill鈥檚 careful mentorship of her.
鈥淭ip O鈥橬eill was my first mentor after my parents,鈥 she continued. 鈥淗e talked to me about everything. It was glorious, and at the end of the summer, he invited me to come to Boston to see how a Democratic primary race ended.鈥
O鈥橬eill crushed his opponents by a three-to-one margin.
Kurland鈥檚 subsequent career includes many notable achievements; she recently served as chief of staff to former Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino and she was regional director for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration.
Also inspiring participants was Senator Ives, who spoke both to welcome students and alumnae to the State House and at an end-of-day reception for Boston-based alumnae and students at the Liberty Hotel, once the historic Charles Street Jail.
鈥淭onight I want to talk to you about the importance of listening to your gut, and why it鈥檚 so important to make that little voice bigger every day,鈥 said Ives, describing how she came to run for office.
鈥淚 had a gut feeling I wanted to serve in the public realm,鈥 she continued. 鈥淚 knew I didn鈥檛 like some things I saw that were happening in my environment. I wanted to get to the table and be a part of the decision-making process.鈥
Ives (D-Newburyport) is now in her second term of office and represents the First Essex District in the Merrimack Valley. The senator earned a law degree from Pace University Law School and served on the Newburyport City Council. She was a member of MHC鈥檚 Weissman Center for Leadership鈥檚 Student Advisory Committee when the Center was in its formative stage in the late 1990s.
Joining Ives in the State House welcome was State Representative John Scibak (D-South Hadley). Scibak is the parent of a Frances Perkins Scholar and a longtime supporter of the College鈥檚 efforts to increase access for students of modest means. The office of Senate President Stanley Rosenberg (D-Amherst) was instrumental in helping to arrange the day.
Pasquerella also spoke at the luncheon bringing together students and alumnae supporters of student scholarships.
Afternoon panel discussions at the State House鈥檚 Gardener Auditorium featured alumnae who are prominent in government and public service, including Luisa Paiewonsky 鈥86, director of the U.S. Department of Transportation鈥檚 Center for Infrastructure Systems and Technology; Susannah Sirkin 鈥76, director of international policy for Physicians for Human Rights; and Demet Duran 鈥檒l, executive assistant at the Turkish Consulate in Boston.