NYC Comissioner Martha
                  Hirst Advocates Pursuing Passion 
                  Over Prestige 
                Factors in Career Choice: I
                    think it chose me to tell you the truth! I came to New York
                    in 1973, and I thought it was just going to be for my junior
                    year in college. I was supposed to be an exchange-type student
                    at NYU. And that was a turning point for me. I began to take
                    courses in urban studies. I lived here and loved it, and
                    ended up having a double major in urban studies and history.
                    I then went on to get a master’s degree in urban planning
                    and got the opportunity to go to work in the housing agency, Housing Preservation and Development (HPD). That
                  interested me enormously because of some of the course work
                  I had done in neighborhood planning and former Commissioner
                  Nathan Leventhal, was about the most brilliant guy I’d
                  ever met. I thought, ‘I don’t care what job I do,
                  I’ve got to work with this guy for a while.’ That’s
                  how it started, and I’m still here.
                
                Obstacles: The
                    biggest challenge I’ve had is coming here to the Department
                    of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS). That’s
                    because it’s an octopus type of agency. We have four
                    or five large aspects to the agency—real estate transactions,
                    civil service administration, procurement—and we need
                    to have each of them working well with all the other agencies
                    and with each other. So I think that’s been my biggest
                    challenge and yet it’s been the most rewarding too
                    in that sense. When you see results like having people do
                    better and grow more efficient in their work and work better
                    as a team and accomplish some of our strategic objectives,
                    it’s incredibly satisfying. Also, having a full time
                    career and raising kids has been a big and very rewarding
                    challenge. Certainly, being an available parent and being
                    instructive and educating my children as a parent does. Luckily,
                    they’re great kids so it has been easier than it otherwise
                    would be.
                Proudest Accomplishments: I
                    think my proudest accomplishment was spearheading the effort
                    for a landmark civil rights legislation, which was the gay
                    rights bill enacted in 1986. Mayor Koch did a great job and
                    we were directly and closely on it. I also spent time at
                    the Department of Sanitation doing long-term waste planning
                    and led an effort there to close the Fresh Kills Landfill.
                    We had a five-year timetable, and we closed it in four years.
                    There are also all sorts of things at DCAS. When the mayor
                    came into office he turned the courthouse right behind City
                    Hall into the headquarters for the Department of Education.
                    Not only that, but he wanted a school on the ground floor
                    so that the educators and bureaucrats and on the upper floors
                    would be mindful of their mission every day seeing children
                    come to school. I helped to design the school portion with
                    some architects and designers. It was really important that
                    it be dynamic, bright, beautiful and engaging. It gives me
                    great pleasure to go over there and see kids every day.
                Turning point: I
                    think it was coming to New York. I lived in Greenwich Village
                    and went to NYU. I remember the first night I was here I
                    got up in the middle of the night and looked out the window.
                    I was on the 13th floor. And I saw a woman—I’ll
                    never forget this—riding her bicycle down the street
                    with her dog in the basket. It was about 3 o’clock
                    in the morning! And I thought, ‘this is a full time
                    24-7 kind of place that has loads to offer.’ New York
                    is a great place to be a young person and to be a student
                    of both urban issues and of life. The best of everybody is
                    here.
                Mentors: Professionally,
                    Nathan Leventhal has been and continues to be a mentor, along
                    with Mayor Koch  He was the first mayor I worked for
                    and his definition of public service being a noble and honorable
                    profession was something I took to heart. I thought he assembled
                    a great team and really taught us a great deal about the
                    way in which you serve the public. Also, the women in my
                    family were a huge influence. Both my grandmothers and my
                    mother had long careers in the nursing profession. One grandmother
                    was a pediatric nurse and the other worked with elderly people.
                    My mother was an oncology nurse. They had full time careers,
                    were very dedicated to their work and were very instructive
                    to me about the way you should lead a full and rewarding
                    life while making significant professional commitments.
                Advice: What
                    advice would you give to young people today?
                I
                    would encourage any young person with a hint of an interest
                    in cities or politics or government to try it. You work with
                    a wide variety of the most interesting people and get a chance
                    to really make a difference in neighborhoods and on a citywide
                    basis. You can see the fruits of your labors whether you’re
                    a budget person or a police officer or an analyst or even
                    a press secretary. We hope to be able to continue to attract
                    great young people to our work force and also encourage the
                    professional development I would certainly encourage people
                    to get into government. 
                I’ve
                    heard Mayor Bloomberg give sound advice to young people.
                    He says that young people should follow their passion and
                    interest and not pay attention to what their title is going
                    to be. If you find someone who is great to work with who
                    you think you have a lot to learn from, pursue it.#