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November 13, 2003
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STAFF Q&A/Dawn Maglicco ordinarily lobbies politicians. On Election Day, she keeps them honest. “No fistfights for me. They must save their well-muscled volunteers for that.”
In today’s highly partisan political atmosphere, there are still ways to get involved in the electoral process that everyone, regardless of political affiliation, can support. Dawn Maglicco has found one of them. Every election, she is out on the streets of Philadelphia, roving from polling station to polling station as a troubleshooter for the Committee of Seventy. She is one of a small but dedicated band of volunteers the century-old electoral watchdog group relies on to keep Philadelphia elections honest and fair. Maglicco began volunteering for the committee when she moved from Montgomery County to Philadelphia two and a half years ago. Her work—she represents Penn’s interests before city officials—requires her to steer clear of the partisan activity she engaged in as a Democrat in Narberth. Her boss, City and Community Relations Director Glenn Bryan, steered her to Seventy, and as she told us, her work with them has been both educational and enjoyable. Q. What does the Committee of Seventy do? Q. What do you do for the committee? It was a wonderful way, when I first began doing it, to learn the city. That’s how I got introduced to most of the neighborhoods that otherwise I would not have known to go to. Q. What parts of the city do you usually work in on Election Day? This election, I worked in the First and Second Wards in South Philadelphia. Generally, the mood was upbeat. The polling places are run by people from the neighborhood, they’re happy to see their neighbors, they’re doing their civic duty, they have a good time. Q. Doesn’t that bring you into contact with some of the people
you lobby on Penn’s behalf? Q. I assume they don’t assign you to polling places near where
you live. Q. Have you ever broken up any campaign high jinks at a polling place? There was an incident this election where I went to one polling place and police were on the scene. There was a mob on the sidewalk, not blocking the entrance but obviously intimidating people with a half-hour to go before the polls closed. We get a list of phone numbers to call in the event of a problem. The police, the district attorney, the city commissioners, the Common Pleas Court, the Democratic and Republican City Committees—they all have teams to dispatch when there’s trouble reported. It did make me happy that I didn’t have to go to the list [on Election Day]. Q. What about fistfights? Q. How did the committee get its name? I mean, who are these “70”? [We didn’t have to ask Voigt for the answer. The committee’s web site, www.seventy.org, explains that the name comes from the book of Exodus, in which Moses appoints 70 judges to rule on disputes. The committee’s charter calls for a 70-member board composed of community leaders. Vice President for Government, Community and Public Affairs Carol Scheman served on it, and City and Community Relations Director Glenn Bryan is currently a member.] |
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