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Reflections on Civic Engagement With Common Cause New York

Last in a series of posts from Common Cause New York's 2017 summer interns

Last in a series

Ghi chú của biên tập viên: Mỗi mùa hè, Common Cause New York may mắn được tiếp thêm năng lượng và tài năng từ một nhóm thực tập sinh. Họ giúp chúng tôi nghiên cứu các vấn đề của mình, tổ chức các nhà hoạt động của chúng tôi và hầu như mọi thứ khác cần làm. Khi họ trở về trường, chúng tôi đã yêu cầu họ suy ngẫm về thời gian làm việc tại Common Cause và những thách thức mà nền dân chủ của chúng ta đang phải đối mặt.

By Rifat Islam, Prep for Prep Intern

As the youngest intern at Common Cause New York, I did not know what to expect from the office experience. Bright-eyed and curious, I came to the office on my first day and immediately understood the behind-the-scenes environment in good government nonprofits. I was assigned the critical task of maintaining and updating Common Cause New York’s donor database. I cross-referenced the database with a donation list taken from every annual Common Cause Dinner since 2014. It is essential that a nonprofit, people-funded organization have an operable donor database to finance its work. Incomplete entries and data in the database only impede our goal as an organization. And once the donor database is updated, there still is the monumental yet benign task of mailing out annual donation requests, a frustrating endeavor

Besides that, I got to meet and engage with ambitious young adults in selective colleges and universities nationwide. I enjoyed hearing their life stories and watching their talents come to fruition. We worked as a team and made productive use of our time in the office. I was lucky to get to work with our Generation Vote partners in targeting New York City millennials in competitive districts to register and turn them out to vote.

I also did various small projects. I researched the corruption in Long Island politics and got a deeper understanding of why transparency in government is so integral to the democratic process. I took away the lesson that it is up to each of us to be a watchdog for democracy and to hold our elected officials accountable to the people. Also, I scoured the web for the contact information for political candidates. This information will be used to phone these candidates and ask them to fill out a questionnaire. And finally, I worked with the NY Civic Engagement Table to scan the voter registration forms that people filled out under our guidance. This way, if a voter cannot vote because his/her name is not in the poll book on Election Day, we will have proof that this voter did indeed register properly and on time.

Doing this type of work made me more grateful for how hard nonprofit agencies work to secure funding for their projects, and I wish more people would see it. Now more than ever, it is time for people to engage with their government and enact reforms that help everybody. 

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