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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Atlanta, GA | Posted: April 8, 2022
The School of Public Policy has given Margaret Burgess, PUBP and ECON 2008, its 2022 Distinguished Alumni Award. She received the award at the Ivan Allen College Distinguished Alumni Awards on April 7 alongside several other honorees.
Burgess received her J.D. from Berkeley Law School in 2015 and is now an attorney with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), where she works to protect consumers from unfair and deceptive business practices. She told us more about her work, her life post-graduation, and what winning the Distinguished Alumni Award means to her.
Before this job, I largely worked on cases that fought housing discrimination and other civil rights abuses. I came to the Federal Trade Commission because I appreciated the work it was doing on behalf of many groups of people I was already serving — this time, in the context of the marketplace. Through my civil rights work, I saw how important it is for a person to be able to access credit, build wealth, and purchase the goods and services they need so they can lead better lives. I was also drawn to the large impact the FTC can have, in everything from shutting down complete scams to stopping large corporations from doing unlawful practices.
I really enjoy the investigation part of my job. As a staff attorney, I’m able to start looking into certain businesses based on consumer complaints, news articles I’ve read, tips from insiders, etc. I like to be able to respond to the issues I’m hearing about in the moment and dig into them, to see if there’s something we as an agency can do to help.
My public policy education helped me appreciate the lack of black-and-white answers to many major policy questions, as well as how to think critically about addressing those questions. This was great training for law school and now for my career as a litigator. I have to be able to anticipate and persuasively respond to questions that come from a judge or to arguments from opposing counsel, which requires examining the many angles to any given issue.
How meandering my career path could be, and how I hope this continues as I get older. I’m glad I seized on the opportunities that came my way—from working on a congressional campaign in rural Missouri, to a civil rights firm in D.C., to legal aid in Atlanta. In college, I often felt like I needed to set myself onto an established career path and stick to it, but the reality has been much more exciting and valuable. I hope I keep taking jobs that stretch me and make me slightly uncomfortable!
I’m humbled by this award. It’s also a lovely reminder of the tight-knit School of Public Policy community at Georgia Tech and how the school does a great job of making alumni still feel connected after graduation.
Seek out jobs where you can work with people you admire and enjoy being around. The substance of your work is important, but it fades in importance if you’re not with people who support you, motivate you, etc.