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Brigid Bergin (class of ’07) gets her dream job!

Brigid Bergin, an intrepid Urban Reporting student in our young school’s first class, has been rising through the ranks at WNYC since she began interning there before graduating. Her latest move, described in a glowing press release by Jim Schachter, the radio station’s vp for News, is excerpted below:

“Brigid Bergin could be running a newsroom just about anywhere. I
wouldn’t be the first to predict that she will someday.  She’s been our
morning producer and our breaking news producer, capacities in which she
pretty much did run this newsroom. During Sandy and its immediate
aftermath, she was the light post to which we all lashed ourselves, a
beacon of clarity whose signals kept our report running straight under
the most difficult circumstances.

But Brigid has not been content simply with being really good at what
she’s already really good at. She’s wanted to develop her reporting
chops, to become a story teller and an investigator. And the work she’s
done in a temporary reporting gig this year – did you hear her reporting
for NPR this week from Newtown? – has shown that she’s good at this
reporting thing, as well.

So Brigid now, formally, joins the ranks of WNYC’s reporters. Her
assignment is to cover City Hall and the provision of government
services, reporting to Andrea.  My advice to City Hall: watch out.”

Greg David Scores Again

More than 200 people packed the Yale Club this morning for an event hosted by Crain’s New York Business. But before the panel got started, our very own Greg got several shout-outs, including one from Deputy Mayor Robert Steel. The panel focused on the controversial proposal by the Bloomberg administration to “up-zone” the east side of midtown Manhattan. In addition to Steel, Steven Spinola represented the Real Estate Board of NY, Dan Garodnick voiced his concerns as a City Council member, and Lawrence Graham shared the perspective of St. Bartholomews’s Episcopal Church, which would be affected by the proposed re-zoning.

Get used to hearing about this topic – it’s a hot one in real estate and planning circles and we’ll be devoting an entire class to it later this semester.