Defending What You Don't Agree With
The first is about a transportation planner who is assigned
to develop a project he sees as unnecessary. At first he tries to convince
people it is the wrong idea, but he is forced to continue. Because he isn't
sold on the project himself, he doesn't try hard to make it work. This gets him
in trouble with his bosses.
Threatened with dismissal, he makes a more concerted effort.
His new approach is more effective at selling the idea. Unfortunately, others
start to see the proposal as his pet project. This leads to personal attacks on
his character. Ultimately the politicians reject the project. He sees this as a
personal failure. Perversely, he also sees it as a personal success, since he
was opposed to the project.
The essence of story is conflict and I think this idea does
provide several levels of conflict. The protagonist has internal conflicts with
conflicting goals. The protagonist faces a conflict between self preservation
and professionalism. The protagonist faces interpersonal conflicts on two side;
proponents of the projects and critics of the project. The situation would
force the protagonist into some personal growth to deal with the conflicts.
Monitoring Program
This idea isn't as well developed as the previous one. It
comes from my personal experiences. The last major project I worked before I
left the field was to develop a program to monitor the implementation of the
transportation plan. This generated a lot of conflict.
While I was only assigned to the project in the last few
years of my transportation planning career, I had advocated for the idea from
very early in my career. My earlier efforts were not very effective.
I wanted to put this all behind me, but I recently saw an
article by Bent Flyvbjerg ( see: http://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/community/people/bent-flyvbjerg
and http://flyvbjerg.plan.aau.dk/
). While I was still at work, I read some of his work that criticised
transportation planning and forecasting.
The article, "How Planners
Deal With Uncomfortable Knowledge" (see http://eureka.sbs.ox.ac.uk/4662/ ),
touches on some of the conflicts that I ran into.
The problem with this idea is that I find it "too close
for comfort." Many people would see this as a good reason to pursue it. I
feel it would be dangerous because I would lose sight of my goal to tell an
entertaining story.
When I made "Line
of Taxis" (see http://www.dynamiclethargyfilms.ca/filmlist/line-of-taxis
), I drew from personal experience as well. In that case I chose to focus on
the emotions that I felt and place them in a different context. I think this
made it a much better project. It forced me to focus on the emotions of the
characters and not just on the plot.
The essential conflict of the story is that some people
don't want to have their work monitored. They see that as a personal attack. I
never saw it that way and didn't really appreciate why they were so resistant.
The sad fact is that all too often attempts to monitor people's work are a
thinly veiled attempt to blame them for the failures of the system.
This has been a big issue in the education field, where
standardized tests are often used to blame teachers. This only diverts
attention from other problems where the effort would be much more effective. I
think the effect of this approach has been to punish honesty and reward
dishonesty.
W. Edwards Deming (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._Edwards_Deming
) is often cited as the source for this approach. This is a misunderstanding of
what he said. In his books he says that it is the system that is the cause of
most problems. It is rarely the individual that is the problem.
The challenge for the protagonist of the story is to
overcome the fear people have. Internally the protagonist would need to resist
the idea that the resistance he faces is grounded in evil intent. Of course, in
the real world I wasn't able to accomplish this, so it is hard for me to see
how to do it in a realistic way in fiction.
Now, how I would create a situation in a transportation
planning context that addressed these issues, but not deal with a monitoring
program, is a challenge in itself. The only thing I can think of is to have the
protagonist be assigned to review another person's work. The emotional
interaction and attitudes would be similar.
This requires further thought.
This post is a mirror from my main blog http://www.dynamiclethargyfilms.ca/blog
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