Master's students completing summer internship experiences deliver pitches highlighting their internship organization, policy interest areas, and policy impact.
Transcript:
Good evening everybody.
Welcome to the school pitch competition
I'm thrilled to be able to join you I just
wasn't sure I was going to make it but
just got off a plane and
managed to get here in time to see these
wonderful wonderful presentations I'm
really looking forward to it I want to
thank our judges who are going to be
introduced by Listen just
a moment I want to thank Phil and
Kathy power for the gift that made
this all possible from the beginning.
And.
I want to thank Liz and Cindy for
putting on a great show tonight and for
all the work that they are doing with all
of you to make the program impractical
policy engagement real so thank you very
much and let me turn it over to this.
Everybody welcome.
It's fun to be up here.
With a more diverse group and M.P.P.
class actually our M.P.P. class is really
diverse but we've got all different sorts
of people here today it's so wonderful to
see everybody thank you so I'm Liz Gerber
I'm the director of the program and
practical policy engagement and I'm really
pleased to invite everybody to this
in our inaugural pitch competition which
in addition to P 3 you are putting
in partnership with the Office
of graduate career services here
at the ford school and I also want
to offer a shout out to Jennifer and
where's Peter Peter who have really
moved this effort along and who
are of course amazing partners so we hope
you'll find this fun and dynamic event.
And we're going to you're going to
have a chance to hear our students
talk to you about their summer
internship experiences in 3 minutes or
less we think this is an important
skill for them to have to be able to
very clearly and
concisely articulate applied policy
the real world policy experiences that
they've had in a powerful way and so
we've got our judges who are going to be
helping both assess their performance and
then also provide feedback to the students
and in the spirit of continuous learning.
I want to say that this program is
exemplary of the kind of event that P 3 S.
going to be.
Doing partnering with other
units around campus we think
that we can have the most impact when
we have great partners were small and
we want to be big and we want to have
a big impact so this is a good example of
the kind of partnering that
we want to be able to do and
I want to echo Michael's thanks
to Phil and Kathy power for
the generous gift from the power
foundation that is helping to make all.
All of this possible so
again let's give Phil and Kathy and
I thank.
Our other judges who I'm
going to introduce now so.
The students of course will be introducing
themselves as part of their pitch So
Naomi Goldberg who is an M.P. P.
alone $2008.00 she is
the director of Policy and
Research the movement
Advancement Project or map which is
a leading policy were who where
she leads policy work and
work designed to understand and
increase the capacity of the L.
G.B.T. movement and
she's also a member of the Ford school's
alumni board so thank you Naomi.
Next we have Kelly Michaels who
joined the university in 1998 and
was appointed vice president for
communications in 2017 as vice president
miss Michaels oversees all aspects of both
internal and external communications for
the university including communication
policy media relations advertising and
marketing and creative editorial and
design services so thank you
Kelly next we have
Relf Johnson who is an M.B.A.
along 1902 he is the for
the Americas region
at the consulting firm of McKinsey
all you consulting people out there.
During his professional career he
held other positions at McKinsey
the Cuyahoga County Welfare
reform agency and
the General Motors Corporation Ralph
is the past chair of the U.
of M.
Alumni Association Board of Directors
the university's annual fun and
the Ross School of Business is on
board of governors so welcome and
thank you for coming.
Next Cathy power who is
principal power foundation she is
a dynamic community volunteer and
activist and she's provided energy and
leadership to such organizations
as Planned Parenthood of Michigan where
she chaired the board is that correct.
Chaired the board and
also I know she's very active and
passionate about the Humane Society
of your own valley.
And then last but
not least I'll introduce Phil Power.
He's a B.A. you want me to say
what year you graduated Phil.
That's right thank you but.
That wasn't a test I just
wanted to say you know.
Phil is a former newspaper publisher and
served on the University of
Michigan's Board of Regents from 187
to 1999 he's a member of
the Ford School Committee and
we welcome him in that capacity he was
the owner of the home town communications
network an award winning group of 64
community newspapers in Michigan and
the upper Midwest Phil founded the Center
for Michigan in 2006 a think and
do tank that encourages
greater understanding and
involvement in public issues amongst
America's citizens I'm sorry
amongst Michigan citizens I'm going to
just add in here that the Center for
Michigan publishes the outstanding
bridge magazine and
Phil shared with me just a minute
ago that they just hit 1000000
readers on bridge magazine in
just 5 years so if any of you.
If any of you are not readers of bridge
magazine add yourself to that 1000000 it's
well worth it it's amazing journalism
I think it's the best journalism in
the state and not just saying that because
Phil and Kathy are here it's the real
truth and he also helped form the
Corporation for a skilled workforce and
served as vice chairman of the Michigan
Economic Development Corporation So
thank you Phil for being here as well.
And with that I'm going to turn it over to
the students so we'll have the 1st student
come up and please enjoy their
pitches good luck stooge.
Hi I'm sure I mean I'm a master's in
public policy as well as a masters in
social work specializing in community
organization so I think when I
view of changing the world maybe like some
of you maybe not like some of you but what
I thought I was going to do I thought I
was going to be a lawyer I thought I
was going to help many clients and
I thought I was going to maybe make
some impact case law along the way but
as I began my career as a lawyer I
found myself questioning on a very.
On a very frequent basis how was
my work serving my clients So for
example if many people come to
a lawyer asking for compensation for
accidents one way you can help them
is to give them that compensation and
getting it through the court system but
another way that you can approach this is
analyzing the issue from a different
perspective trying to avoid such accidents
in the 1st place by helping to enhance
safety guidelines for trucks so
that kind of shaped my approach to
the work that I wanted to do I wanted to
approach problems that my clients faced
in real life I wanted to think about
the interests that were at stake and
I wanted to solve it in a way that
wasn't limited to just legal options so
this summer I had
the opportunity to in turn at Detroit
City Council I was working in Council
member of Calcutta near the Lopez office
what she does is that she advocates and
city council making laws for the city of
Detroit and she also works on a very.
Close basis with about 100000 constituents
in her district that she serves and
one of the issues that we're face in
her district was a huge truck problem
so about 25 percent of US Canada
trade goes through the trite and
her district that's one bridge that allows
all the trucks to pass through and there's
a new bridge that God how international
bridge that's coming up with well.
So as I began to analyze the issue I
thought OK it is a big part of the charts
economy Detroit is even burning itself as
a larger sticks help so there is a reason
to look at how to help truck companies
operate better helped truckers
operate well but at the same time a lot of
trucks are going through on your own and
residential areas including
in the district and
this cost a lot of problems for example it
could cost traffic problems congestion it
could cost safety problems with accidents
and also cause a lot of unseen pollution
which will lead to reduce health
outcomes and I also realize that
by my thing which is that heavy trucks
actually lead to increased road where
which means more potholes for all of
us traverse a Michigan roads every day.
So what I did for the office was I helped
to generate innovative options by doing
comparatively search on says use and
countries around the world and
what I discovered was really interesting
for example one option that I discovered
was that New York City community members
actually partner law enforcement and
they get money from helping to enforce and
idling laws and
from a totally different
perspective just thinking about
the engineering part of it you can do
basic trucking modifications as well for
example if you remove the mirrors and
you put safety cameras
you can actually increase fuel
efficiency and this reduces emissions so
I believe although it only takes about
a policy to be implemented I believe that
this will help to fund sustainable
trucking that will help to balance
the different interests at stake and
that will help to build a better Detroit.
So as compared to the past before
this internship and coyote's that
I want to continue to explore these
big problems that people face and
I want to continue to look at defense
in chess as well as to explore many
options to help decision make
us reach better solutions and
in order to analyze this open
mind I've taken up some.
Future positions for
example I'm doing social wrote
placement with the Office of
metropolitan impact in UN be able on and
that covers a wide range of interests as
well as I'm starting a research assistant
**** working on financial policy
at the Center for finance law and
policy which is just up there
said this building Thank you.
Everyone.
We're parsing hope
everyone's having a great
day when 4 weeks down of a master.
In other words I'm also very excited for
the 1st option.
So my name is Anthony as I've been
standing up here as we've been doing
a little bit but I would love to talk
to you about my internship experience I
as a 1st John student here
a student of color really
find immense value in higher education I
don't think I need to tell this audience
that higher education can do some amazing
things towards iconography ability and
empowering people to really further
their lives and many great areas and so
it may come as a shock to you that over
There's a select few subset that really
work towards furthering students
like myself and our outcomes they're
called minority serving institutions there
are $800.00 of them and I really
thought wow these are really important
institutions because there are certain
people like me and people who don't have
the opportunity to come to a school like
Michigan or who don't even think that they
have the chance to come to a school like
Michigan and so enter the Center for
minority serving institutions it's
a great center it advocates for and
kind of hope redistribute resources
from the University of Pennsylvania
down to many of these other
institutions that really need help and
uplifting their voices and so
what I did was I applied thinking I really
want to help kind of reach out and become
a part of this great network and work for
them not knowing how transformational
this experience would be for
me I wonderfully got accepted
to this internship and
started working with Dr Marybeth Gasman
There she is an incredible person and
I will speak more to that later but
I want to say that over this internship
I got to experience some really cool
things to help uplift and
kind of support their mission I
wrote an article about one of the newest
types of I'm a size which Brock Obama
put into a bill right before he became
president I got to work on this really
interesting research report that focused
on the outcomes that might affect.
These institutions if the house went
through with their proposal for the higher
education reauthorization bill I got
to work on another really great Twitter
conversation with policy experts across
the nation talking about the institutions
and these all really came because
of my skills that I was learning in
the classroom learning how to write well
learning how to communicate positions and
learning how to do a lot of really
invested research in these areas and so.
Well I left the institution knowing that I
probably won't ever return to the center
to work there full time.
I took away a lot about
how to advocate for
those who need help in uplifting their
voices specially in policy Spears
how to communicate your ideas
when you're trying to work.
On a large issue that can be very vast and
cover many different areas and
then also how to lead Marybeth Gasman
was an amazing leader and
taught me how to selflessly
give opportunities and
resources to other people and so I really
hope that I can take this going forward
and imply and
apply this to my work also helping and
encouraging other students to continue
to pursue higher education in the future
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU.
Good evening can hear me OK beautiful but
it.
OK so my name is Jonathan poser
I'm a 30 year do a masters student
at the Center for Russian East European or
Asian studies and
the Ford School of Public Policy I've been
fortunate enough to spend about 3 years
of the last 10 studying working and
travelling in Eastern Europe and.
What started as a kind of general interest
in Russian language courses led to a year
or a semester studying in Moscow 2 years
teaching English in Kiev Ukraine and
a season recruiting in Ukraine Moldova for
an international educational exchange
program it was during this last experience
in 2015 when I interviewed a number of
Ukrainian teenagers who had been displaced
by the conflict in the eastern part of the
country as I reflected on that experience.
I and the effects of things like systemic
corruption conflict and just deep seated
social inequity I understood that I
wanted to develop the policy skills
necessary to assist people in Eastern
Europe that to the capacity that I'm able
in the leaving leave eating some of the
the adverse circumstances that they face.
So this summer I had
an internship at the Trust for
social achievement which is a nonprofit
in Sofia Bulgaria that services.
Minority communities in Bulgaria and
tries to integrate them into Bulgarian
society specifically they target the Roma
the Roma commonly known by the pejorative
term gypsies constitute about 5 to 10
percent of the country's population and
are on average the poorest people there.
The organization works to
alleviate some of the most.
Significant challenges that they face
in areas such as prenatal health care.
Infant of care Early Childhood
Education Workforce Development and
you fall into your ism the Roma have
been typically marginalized and denied
access to many of these areas of society
for centuries in many European cities.
So using a holistic approach
to poverty alleviation and
social integration the trust for
social achievement partners with
international and domestic organizations.
In all of these areas so at the trust I
had the opportunity to work on a number of
different projects but primarily I was
tasked with writing a policy brief
that is going to be used as
an advocacy tool to lobby for
the elimination of fees associated
with kindergarten attendance
basically making early education free for
every child in Bulgaria.
The core of this report was based
on a recently published World Bank
impact evaluation of
a year long national study
conducted by the World Bank and
the trust for social achievement in how to
most effectively increase participation
in early education from the communities.
I combined the results of this report
which basically said Make it free and kids
will attend and mixed in a little bit of
information about the long term benefits
of early childhood education including
Ypsilanti zone Perry Preschool Study and
then also made projections about the long
term positive impact both socially and
economically that early education
would have on Bulgarian society.
So the opportunity was phenomenal for
a number of reasons of all of the projects
that were proposed would require the
direct application of skills like policy
writing research sadistical analysis and
program management
all of which I've been learning here at
the ford school and all of which I relied
upon during my time there I was
also eager to develop my experience
working with marginalised populations in
the Greater Eastern European region so
I came away from this experience
with one primary lesson was that
change is possible slow and incremental
and unsexy as though it may be.
Organizations like the trust for
social Cheeseman have moved the needle
on some really challenging issues and
some very difficult political
circumstances I've also learned
that poverty is intersectional it's
there's no magic bullet there's no panacea
a multi-dimensional problem requires
a multi-dimensional set of solutions and
finally the opportunity to work for the
trust which shows that human has renewed
my desire to work in international
development and now I'm grateful that I
have this set of experiences to draw from
in the pursuit of that ambition thank you
very much thank you.
Hi there my name's And
as in cool and I am a 2nd year
masters of public policy student here at
Fort and I spent my summer in the Detroit
mayor's office of Workforce Development
and so I was driven to this opportunity
because I've had this long term interest
in growing sustainable economic growth and
I've sort of been winding my way around
how exactly I want to do that and
before coming to foreign I worked in
economic development here locally and
I worked mostly on the business incentive
side in the program implementation side of
things and my interest in workforce
development and actually helping employees
and working on policy emerged out of that
so the mission of the mayor's office of
Workforce Development is to connect
employers with job seekers and
to create sustainable career pathways for
residents of the city of Detroit and
they do this through systems
change training and career path
mapping and through barrier elimination
and that barrier elimination piece is
where I spent my time when I specifically
looked at child care and I looked at
the unequal access to high quality
child care in the city of Detroit and
why traditionally disenfranchised
groups might not be using
the formal market at the same rate as more
affluent and well positioned groups and
so I sort of put together a memo that was
my deliverable for the summer and it broke
it had sort of 3 stood distinct parts the
looking for gaps and then the 2nd
more subsidy and part substitute
substantive parts looked at what fixes
might exist both at the municipal and
the state level and so at the state level
or at the municipal level the biggest gap
that we looked to fill was that
there weren't enough teachers and
employer employees in this space and so
I put together a training plan sort of
mapped out how much that would cost for
somebody to become an entry level worker
in the city of Detroit in the child care
industry and whether it was worth
their time to do so financially and so
that was kind of exciting because within
solving a workforce development problem
we could actually start
employing more people in luck.
Career planning and then at the state
policy level which is most where most of
the subsidies are controlled in the state
of Michigan example that's most a little
sister of to illustrate of to me was
looking at the income eligibility
requirements and so most commonly in the
state of Michigan if somebody is on child
care subsidies that means they're income
eligible which basically means you have to
be a low be below a certain threshold and
Michigan that threshold is 130 percent
of the federal poverty level and so if
you're looking at a family that's a single
parent with one child that means if they
are making and I'm not making this up any
more than $21100.00 a year
they are not eligible to
enroll initially in child care subsidies
at the same time in the state of Michigan
on average childcare costs just under
$10000.00 a year per kid and so you
can see a very realistic scenario where
somebody is just above that threshold and
spending a half or a 3rd of their income
on child care and that's a problem and
so this internship inspired me
to continue down this path and
to keep working on this policy area
hopefully once I graduate from the Ford
school there are some really innovative
thinkers in this space both in to train
across the state of Michigan and so I'm
excited to continue the fact so thank you.
Good evening everyone my name is here and
I'm an international student from Pakistan
the folk I'm going to the floor at school
I was involved to intergovernmental
with international development
organizations in Pakistan implementing
energy policy in various forms
it was during my time day that I
realized that not enough was being done
in creating a larger global impact and
I saw potential for improvement.
I question see international
development organizations in how they
decided which countries would you would
reduce sieved policy interventions and
why how do I look at resources do
these policy interventions where
these resources come from and
most importantly how global
policy made us think about fighting the
energy challenges that we all face today
through my past experiences and
the learning that I was able to gain
through my courses at the ford
school I soon realized that
my questions would be answered through
learning from the World Bank and
that is why I decided to at the World Bank
headquarters in Washington D.C.
this summer within the climate
change division the World Bank
as some of you may know is the leading
international development organization
that works towards eliminating
power to in all its forms
while I knew what to expect
somewhat from my time at the bank I
was utterly surprised by
the diversity pluralism and
equality that I experienced in all
my interaction that the World Bank
every person that I met was from
a different part of the world and
even though we had differences
in our cultural and
professional backgrounds
it was exciting to see
how we used all those unique
perspectives to come together and
work towards a common goal that of
achieving that of fighting climate change.
During my time there I was mostly
involved in 3 tasks Firstly
integrating the 2050 Paris agreement
into World Bank operations Secondly
composing a guidance note on energy
sector climate adaptation and
thirdly and what was probably
the highlight of my work over there
evaluating different tools of
climate finance using cash flow and
economic models to see what the impact
of that will be on the cost of
electricity and then using that analysis
into helping decision makers and
stakeholders within as well
as outside the World Bank to
decide how to EFF efficiently
allocate resources to climate finance
and there were many things that I learned
during my time there at the World Bank
especially how crucial
climate change is within
the overall energy realm especially and
I decided to bring that inspiration
with me to school I am now taking
a course on climate change
convention and what the impact of that
will be on policy around the world and
I also plan to actively get in Waldron
climate blue which is a society dedicated
to creating awareness about
climate change and I sincerely
hope to contribute more towards this
newly found passion of mine thank you.
Hello everyone my name is squires and any
friend of mine knows that I often prefer
the company of books to other people.
I really partial to fiction and especially
international authors who I started
reading at a pretty young age I can really
chart a connection from my love for
his and you know to my undergraduate study
of anthropology my Peace Corps service
in Morocco the work I did later with
refugees in Portland Oregon and
ultimately my decision to come to the ford
school and study international policy.
I believe that there are many voices
under represented in the policy arena and
a personal goal of mine is to learn
how to elevate and those voices and
shed light on their stories and
so with that goal in mind and
because I thought a summer
spent reading would be fun I
specifically sought out an internship
as a researcher a writer and
I was lucky enough to secure position with
direct relief in Santa Barbara California.
Direct Relief is a humanitarian aid
organization that supports domestic and
international partners with
medical relief assistance.
With the aim to improve the health and
lives of those
affected by poverty or emergency
situations I worked with the research and
analysis department which uses data and
mapping.
To enhance or enable the direct relief and
partner organizations capacity
to respond in crisis situations
specifically I my research focused on
the ring a refugee crisis happening right
now in Bangladesh where over 1000000.
Have fled genocide and
political persecution and me on Mar.
To settle now in Bangladesh where
today we have the largest and
most densely populated refugee camp in
the world it's also a very precarious Lee
positioned in the southern coastal Basin
which is prone to Monsoon flooding and
landslides and also typhoons so
I got to investigate the intersection
between existing environmental and health
hazards as well as the response to this
crisis by the HOPE Foundation which is
director Leafs partner in Bangladesh.
My primary to Liverpool
was a 3 part story series.
That looked at the refugee crisis and
highlighted the role that
the HOPE Foundation played in Bangladesh I
really liked doing this research it was
engaging for me given my interest
in international development and
also the connection to refugee
policy a practical takeaway for
me was I got to learn our mapping software
which I just thought was the coolest.
And also learning a little bit about
Excel gave me the opportunity to
apply quantitative analysis and tell data
driven stories specifically the direct
impact on the HOPE Foundation was also
really meaningful my reporting inspired
the director of the C E O to give the
HOPE Foundation a grant of $100000.00 and
also launching a company and fundraiser
that raised in additional $9000.00
in individual donations this funding
directly serves Hope's operations and
will lead to the completion hopefully
of her field hospital in the camps
which primarily serves women and children
who are just proportionally represented
in the population at about 80 percent so
professionally
I'm really excited to keep working with
direct relief actually as a contractor and
continue reporting on this crisis and
hopefully other stories in the future and
the experience confirmed that I can
leverage my skills as a researcher
writer and hopefully influence decision
makers again in the future thank you
thanks.
Hi everyone my name is Meghan Esther and
this past summer I interned at the Detroit
mayor's office and he had the distinct
pleasure to carpool with an A single from
Ann Arbor so we can talk about that later.
I came to policy school after 10 years
in the nonprofit sector where I was
supporting college and career access for
historically under-represented students in
New York City I returned to school and
to my home state because I wanted
to learn how to address social change at a
deeper level and I also wanted to venture
away from my experience in education and
learn about some new policy areas from
the start of my time here I knew I wanted
to work in Detroit for the summer for
one thing it's a very exciting place
to be right now and I remember when my
supervisor interviewed me she pitched the
pitch the excitement pretty hard she said
they're going to write books about this
time in Detroit Michigan Don't you want to
be a part of that very intensely and
I did I did want to be a part of it.
Folks in the mayor's office
are consistently reaching for
the same North Star goal to serve
the people of Detroit every action taken
every dollar spent every conversation had
it comes back to this mission of serving
the people of Detroit it's pretty
phenomenal I was thrilled to have
the chance to work with these people and
to learn about so many different areas of
policy I worked out of the office of
development and so provided support to
raise money for various mayoral priorities
so I got to work on projects and
work with departments ranging from port
security to lead remediation to parks
improvements all over the map but
the most exciting part of the summer for
me was working on a feasibility
study regarding expanding pre-K.
industry I knew the question that
the mayor wanted an answer to which was
can Detroit offer free universal pre-K.
but beyond that it was up to me and
my colleagues to figure out the rest
we engaged in stakeholder interviews
quantitative research and evaluation of
current policies both here and across
the country all lots of stuff that I
learned at the ford school last year and
this all culminated in a few meetings with
Mayor Dugan himself we laid out our
recommendations for expanding pre-K..
And at one point the mayor
actually looked at me and
said What do you think we should do just
like that he likes to point to a lot and
I was really excited a little scared but
mostly excited and emboldened to say like
I think we should do this we can do this
there's a real change we can make for
people in the city of Detroit so
later that week I attended a meeting with
the mayor and other city leaders including
the superintendent of Detroit Public
Schools the heads of the Kreskin colored
foundations and I listened to Mayor Dugan
lay out his plans for expanding pre-K.
in the city plans I had directly
worked on it influenced and
I watched the other leaders in
the room respond with excitement and
promises of lots of support financial and
otherwise and it was a very
exciting day to see my work follow through
all the way from the community outreach
phase to recommendations to the actual
start of implementation of a new policy
I've never experienced anything like that
before it was it was really incredible So
I started my time at Ford school thinking
I wanted to move away from news and
education and try something new but
to my surprise I found that the project I
was most energized by this summer was
about just that after my experiences and
a trait I now know that I definitely want
to work in a city that I care deeply about
I want to focus on policies that make
a direct impact in people's lives and
I learned that I may end up returning
to work all began for me working for
Youth and Families who knows maybe
even right here in Detroit thanks.
Hi My name is Emily Fletcher and
I'm a 2nd year M.B.A. M.P.P.
dual degree student and my journey here
started when I left my hometown of
Seattle Washington to attend Dartmouth
College where I studied neuroscience and
anthropology and through these
majors I discovered a passion for
health care because health care seemed
like a way to address complex deeply
meaningful problems and have a real impact
on people's lives so after I graduated
I spent some time working in global health
programs and then health care research and
consulting and I really liked working at
the intersection of public policy and
business but I found that working at
these sort of high level health care that
the level of high level health care
stuff didn't really scratch my itch for
having an impact on people's lives and
seeing the end result of my work so
returning to school I discovered that I
wanted to have a more local focus to my
work so this summer I interned at civic
consulting Alliance in Chicago which
is a nonprofit consulting organization
that works with public sector and
nonprofit sector clients in the areas of
public safety education health care and
economic vitality and
C.C.A. is unique because they receive
funding from the business community and
philanthropic organizations with which
allows them to provide consulting services
free of charge which is pretty amazing and
so why it hope to diversify my
experience and expand outside of health
care I found myself working with
a collaborative of 6 hospitals and
health systems known as West Side United.
And West Side United is a really
innovative initiative because it's 6
hospitals coming together to collectively
address social determinants of health and
these hospitals typically view
one another as competitors so
in Chicago in the downtown area where you
may have taken a selfie in the bean Oregon
to see Hamilton life expectancy
is 85 years if you go 3
miles west to Garfield Park Life
expectancy is 69 years and
a lot of people think this is completely
attributable to gun violence and
that's just not true it's heart disease
it's diabetes it's a wide range of social
determinants rating from ranging
from education to job opportunities
to overall economic vitality
in those community areas and
these community areas
comprise 560000 residents so
working with these hospitals I was tasked
with the den of finding ways that they
could really embrace their
anchor institution mission and
address community health on the west
side so we I used my Ford school skills
to analyze quantitative health data from
the city in the C.D.C. I interviewed 20
Community Health stakeholders on the west
side in their places of work and
I aggregated these analyses into
decision making frameworks that I
walked through with my executive level
clients in steering committee meetings so
my deliverables were very thick power
points as well as some major sees
that I walked them through and
forced them to make decisions on and so
we coalesced around 4 key
priority areas Maternal and
Child Health childhood asthma
behavioral health care and
hypertension and then we did further
research into best practices and
evidence based interventions
in each of those areas and
indemnified 3 in each area that could
be scaled across the 6 hospitals.
So while I hadn't intended to work in
health care I loved this project because
it allowed me to work in the community
where the impact would happen and
these priorities will guide future
program and partnership development
moving forward so I'm excited to continue
watching the work of West Side United and
I hope you'll pay attention to because
it's a really really cool project so
I told my managers when I left C.C.A.
that I loved my time there but
because I have this passion for local work
and I'm originally from Seattle which is
also a city facing some unique challenges
in terms of growing economic inequality
affordability funding public
education my next step and
I hope my next professional adventure
will take me back to Seattle so
maybe I'll be opening up C.C.S. Seattle
office in a few years thank you thank you.
Thank you.
OK the last place I would want
to be is one of you 5 judges
because I have no idea
how you are going to
select among these amazing both
presentations but also these very
moving experiences that our students have
had so I'm sitting over here thank you.
So can we have a round of applause for
all of thanks
we will break for a few minutes so
that the judges can confer.
We've told them that they can't take 4 or
if everybody would just hang tight in
here there's food and drink outside after
the judge's return so
it'll just be a few minutes so
talk amongst yourselves and
they'll be right back thank you.
OK so the judges have conferred
they have of I assume struggled a bit and
they have concluded that there will be 2
know I don't know how you came down.
To even be able to come to this so so.
The 2 1st place winners of the 1st
the inaugural pitch competition at
the ford school are Meghan Esther.
And Emily Fletcher.
Congratulations to all of you and
why don't make in an Emily.
Where you come on down.
Come on down guys congratulations.
I guess we don't like.
But next year.
For the 2nd.
Please.
All right Pete.
To meet you.
We.
Want you.
To.
BE Yes OK We'll leave.
Little boy or.
Girl is for.
You.
At least OK you are.
Right that is.
What.
We're here for you the OK.
You.
Ever.
Really get it.
Because.
If.
You do you.
I hope all of you all of you 1st
Cheers I hope you have found
inspiration all of you 2nd
years proud of your colleagues
let's go enjoy some Did you
want to say anything all right
all right let's go enjoy the reception in
the Great Hall thank you all for coming.