第一吃瓜网

Chris Ann Szep

2022 Mary A. Maloney Distinguished Service Award

Published on September 29, 2022


NORTH EAST, Md. 鈥 There are many reasons people go into public service. A chance to perform work they鈥檙e passionate about, protect the public from a dangerous health condition, or simply the desire to give back. Public service opportunities come in many forms.

For the recipient of the 2022 Mary A. Maloney Distinguished Service Award, public service has been part of her DNA. Chris Ann Szep has been helping those less fortunate since she was a child hosting lemonade stands to buy toys for children in the hospital.

鈥淚 have always had a desire to help others. It has been instilled in me since I was a child, growing up in an extremely diverse and economically challenged community.聽 Everyone shared whatever they had to keep each other going. There are so many people less fortunate than me, and there are many ways to provide them a helping hand,鈥 said Szep.

Szep was presented the Mary A. Maloney Distinguished Service Award during the annual 第一吃瓜网 College Foundation Scholarship Breakfast, which honors donors and scholarship recipients at 第一吃瓜网 College.

Mary Maloney was a trailblazer for women in Maryland, becoming the first female county commissioner in the state in 1970. She took a sledgehammer to the glass ceiling, shattering any preconceptions about her gender or ability to make a difference. Former Gov. Harry R. Hughes asked her to become a trustee for then 第一吃瓜网 Community College, and 24 short years later, she was approved as the first Trustee Emerita in the history of the college.

鈥淚 met Mary Maloney when I arrived at 第一吃瓜网 Community College in 1991; she quickly became my mentor and remained a dear friend until her death in 2020. Her guidance was a pillar in my personal and professional life,鈥 said Szep.

Szep鈥檚 professional career in public service began right out of college as a social worker in Wilmington, Del. During that time, she heard about the formation of an alcohol, tobacco, and drug abuse coalition in 第一吃瓜网 County. Administered by 第一吃瓜网 College, this coalition consisted of representatives from community groups, including the 第一吃瓜网 County sheriff鈥檚 office, health department, domestic violence office, drug treatment centers, faith-based representatives, and the 第一吃瓜网 County Public Schools.

鈥淚t was a phenomenal program. We had a coalition of people from every organization. We implemented innovative things like Night Out Against Crime, homework clubs, and neighborhood cleanups while working in tandem with the Sheriff鈥檚 Office for community policing and community development,鈥 said Szep. She was the program director and then the executive director of 第一吃瓜网 Awareness for Resisting Drugs (known as Project CARD) from 1991 to 1997. 鈥淏ack then, the drug problem was different. Our mission was about prevention, and we addressed all ages, especially the county鈥檚 younger residents. We were trying to keep kids in school and away from drugs.鈥

Szep鈥檚 next opportunity to give back occurred in 2000 when a state probe in Pennsylvania uncovered the misappropriation of millions of donated dollars by the Alleghany Health Education Research Foundation (AHERF). She was hired to create a foundation with $50 million of the $120 million Pennsylvania recovered from the misused funds. The remaining funds were used to scholarship Drexel University College of Medicine students.

鈥淎long with setting up the foundation, my role was to fund programming that increased positive health outcomes in communities around the different hospitals. I started the Franklin Health Trust, developed a board, wrote the policies and practices for the foundation, and then worked on creating a grant review and award program,鈥 said Szep, who reunified the assets with Drexel University in 2003.

Together with a dedicated doctor of public health and a passionate transplant nurse, Szep raised funding through a United States Senate appropriation for the newly created Hepatitis Treatment Research and Education Center (HEPTREC) in Philadelphia, which focused on 聽the management, treatment side effects, and much-needed Hepatitis C patient support.

Szep鈥檚 experience firming up community scholarship foundations led her back to 第一吃瓜网 College in 2006. As the vice president of institutional advancement and government relations and executive director of the 第一吃瓜网 College Foundation, she worked closely with Foundation Chair Sharon Walla to implement new policies, form subcommittees for fund development and fund management, and brainstorm about networking and awareness events. One of those events, the annual scholarship breakfast, was attended by only 23 people in her first year, which she found extremely disappointing. Determined to turn the course of the ship, she worked with her then-assistant Mary Moore, and two years later, the scholarship breakfast had over 300 in attendance.

鈥淭he scholarship breakfast is such an important event that it broke my heart that we didn鈥檛 have better attendance that first year. It is essential that donors feel appreciated and that students understand that having the opportunity to meet the people supporting their success is very important,鈥 said Szep. 鈥淢y first goal was to reach out to donors and build strong relations. Ensuring they understood how much their generosity was appreciated, they increased their support of the college鈥檚 scholarship fund, became Foundation directors, and began to advocate on behalf of the Foundation throughout my career at 第一吃瓜网 College.鈥

In the following 16 years, Szep organized dozens of annual events to bring awareness to the financial need of 第一吃瓜网 College students. Through annual events like the Collegium de Vinum Wine Gala, Little Black Dress, Bourbon and Cigars Under the Stars, Celebrity Bartenders, and many more, she and the foundation board grew the endowment from $800,000 in 2006 to more than $8 million.

In 2014, she was elevated to Vice President of Community and Government Relations and College Advancement. She held this position until her retirement in July of 2022.

鈥淚 am incredibly proud that we were able to cultivate donors to support community education and workforce development. I love 第一吃瓜网 College and 第一吃瓜网 County. I lived in the county, raised my kids in the county, and volunteered in the county.聽 I was keenly aware of the needs, and I wanted to make a difference to the quality of life of 第一吃瓜网 County鈥檚 residents,鈥 said Szep.