Internship Leads to Examiner Job at the Alabama Department of Revenue
Posted on June 15, 2020
#MyFirstJob is a series focused on 天美影视传媒 Class of 2020 graduates who are beginning their careers.
After graduating from South this spring, Amara Baltimore landed a job with the Alabama Department of Revenue, but the coronavirus pandemic means she has to work from home.
A kitchen table serves as her desk, with manila folders stacked on the floor next to a printer. On a wall hangs the flowery painting she bought at a thrift store.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a good Zoom background 鈥 I think it looks sophisticated,鈥 Baltimore joked. 鈥$10 at Goodwill. So worth it.鈥
At the 天美影视传媒, Baltimore was a Mitchell Scholar who became president of the Beta Gamma Sigma business honor society. She majored in accounting in the Mitchell College of Business. An internship with the Department of the Revenue turned into a full-time job as a state revenue examiner.
She will start graduate school at South this fall, too, with plans to become a certified public accountant.
Baltimore is just 22 years old, but she鈥檚 already conducting audits and interviewing taxpayers. Even with her identification badge, people sometimes assume she鈥檚 a student in training. That often ends when she begins asking direct questions about state tax returns.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 this number?鈥 she likes to ask. 鈥淲here did this come from?鈥
If they can produce a receipt, the interview moves on to the next question. If they can鈥檛, the process might end with a bill for thousands of dollars in back taxes. Baltimore is sympathetic but forthright.
鈥淲e try to be professional,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to be confrontational.鈥
Baltimore comes from Hazel Green, Ala., a small town north of Huntsville. She makes the six-hour drive home several times a year to visit family and friends. Yet she chose to begin her career in Mobile.
The pivotal moment of her college career was meeting a department of revenue recruiter at a South event. She followed up on that encounter and was selected for an internship. She did well and was hired full-time.
While Baltimore鈥檚 career path is on track, her final months of college brought unexpected changes. The Class of 2020 will always remember that. She made the best of her virtual commencement ceremony.
鈥淚 was there in spirit,鈥 Baltimore said, laughing. 鈥淚 got to see my name scroll across the screen like a movie credit.鈥
She and her roommate, an audiology student at South, have shared several apartments in west Mobile. They鈥檙e moving into a bigger place this summer.
Earlier this year, Baltimore adopted a cat named Annie. She likes to watch television serials and read John Grisham thrillers. She was excited to see that the Mobile Public Library has reopened with curbside service.
In her spare time, she does yoga. With one of her first paychecks, she treated herself to a Lululemon accessory.
鈥淚 haven鈥檛 gone crazy, because I鈥檓 saving money for graduate school, but I did buy a $75 yoga mat,鈥 Baltimore said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really good.鈥
On weekday mornings, she tries to follow a work routine. She gets up, makes a cup of coffee and turns on her computer. She does as much work as she can manage.
鈥淯sually, when we鈥檙e auditing people, it鈥檚 face-to-face interviews, so this has changed everything,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ow we鈥檙e sending out letters, e-mails, saying this is what we鈥檙e looking at. It鈥檚 not the ideal way to do it. A lot of people don鈥檛 understand what鈥檚 going on, so it鈥檚 better to do in person.鈥
She enjoyed working in an office building off I-65, but doesn鈥檛 miss commuter traffic, getting dressed for work, or crowds of people. In a way, working at home suits her. She finds it quiet and relaxing.
鈥淚鈥檓 an introvert at heart,鈥 Baltimore said, 鈥渁nd now it鈥檚 just me.鈥
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