PDA

View Full Version : The Art of Planning and Politics



CTroyMathis
19 January 2003, 11:54 PM
The Art of Planning and Politics

Most planners disdain playing politics. Yet political astuteness was, and continues to be, a predominant characteristic of the field's pioneers and a prerequisite for achieving change.
By Richard H. Carson
Oct 21, 2002
http://www.planetizen.com/oped/item.php?id=70

Every great religious movement was created by an inspired individual--like Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha or Krishna--who had no formal religious training. The religion then became institutionalized and bureaucratized by a priesthood who often became self-serving and more piously self-righteous than their founder in carrying out their duties.

Planning is no different. In the states where planning is mandated--like Oregon, Washington and Florida--the planning programs were created by inspired citizen legislators who were not trained professional planners. In order to carry out these progressive public policy initiatives a bureaucratic priesthood of planners was created.

Planners are good at carrying out the programs that others create. However, most of us are not inspired visionaries and very few of us have the political skills to make such a vision a reality. This is why most of the great planning pioneers came from other professions. Sometime ago the American Planning Association announced the top six "most significant planning pioneers" in Planning Magazine. The winners came from such professions as architecture, journalism, landscape architecture and law. There was not a planner in the bunch. And although these folks were drawn from different professions, they did have one common attribute--they were politically astute.

Part of the problem is that most planners disdain playing politics and therefore are bad at it. It is not an important part of our educational training or ongoing professional training. I find it curious that the planning curriculum of academia does not require students to read such classics as the Art of War by the Chinese general Sun Tzu (6th century B.C.) or The Prince by Renaissance statesman Niccolo Machiavelli (1515). Neither do we read the more contemporary social commentary such as Community and the Politics of Place by Daniel Kemmis (1990) or Manufacturing Consent by Noam Chomsky (1988).

But the art of planning is about policy making, politics and power. And you do not have to be a politician to play political hardball. How can we achieve anything if we do not want to know the damn rules of the game? We go around telling people that our truth will set them free, but we are clueless about the political reality needed to achieve it. In any culture there are ways to achieve cultural change, but you must understand the local rules before you can achieve anything. Quite the contrary, we have a bad habit of taking enlightened statutory goals and making them tedious, onerous and overly complex through an administrative rule-making process.

We tend to leave the larger political sea changes to the primary special interest protagonists who are polarized between the development industry and the environmental constituency.

Most planners use the word “political” as a pejorative term. It usually is used when referring to elected officials who get in the way of us doing our job. The latter is usually caring out development codes or land use plans created by past elected officials. We see no inherent lack of logic on our part when we do not want the current elected officials to change the rules created by previous elected officials.

Many of the more politically astute planners eventually change careers and become community development directors, city managers or county administrators. It would be fair to characterize such people as “paid politicians.” Political, strategic and organizational planning skills are as important as land use planning skills to such people. For some reason, such people become appointed officials and do not want to be an elected official. This is probably because they like being their own boss and do not function well as part of a governing body.

So how do you become more political? Politics is the use of strategy and tactics to compel or cajole elected officials, voters and special interest groups toward the goals you have set or have had set for you. So you need to:

Learn to lobby and negotiate behind the scene.
If you expect good public policy to reveal itself in a public hearing, then you are gambling with the outcome. Good public policy is created by the dialogue and collaboration that occurs before the public hearing.
Working behind the scenes does not mean you lie or misrepresent the facts. Indeed, it will be the strength of your word and character that people will come to rely on.
Develop a broader understanding of how the other government agencies and special interest organizations involved actually function.
Identify both the visible and the invisible movers and shakers.
Determine what it is a decision-maker is passionate about and what it is they want to achieve.
Let those with the political power think that your great idea is their great idea.
By the way, here is some parting political advice from the Chinese warlord Sun Tzu:
“Plan for what is difficult while it is easy, do what is great while it is small. The difficult things in this world must be done while they are easy, the greatest things in the world must be done while they are still small. For this reason sages never do what is great, and this is why they achieve greatness.”

gc
20 January 2003, 11:37 AM
Thought provoking it is, yes.

freewaytincan
20 January 2003, 04:14 PM
I think an interesting read was Suburban Nation: The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream. It does more than comment on our current standings, as most do; it offers solutions. Click here (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0865476063/qid=1043093532/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_1/102-7961569-2450509?v=glance&s=books&n=507846) to see the listing on Amazon.

MustangMonkey
21 January 2003, 03:17 PM
Verry true article. IMHO

tamtagon
21 January 2003, 04:59 PM
what does IMHO mean?

freewaytincan
21 January 2003, 10:43 PM
In my humble or honest opinion.

mikedsjr
12 February 2003, 06:29 PM
I think that article is very true. One i wish i truly had the time to get involved in so that i get begin to understand everything and lobby properly. I guess my basic issue is have put so many other things as priorities above this. And it is the ones who make it almost their calling, or important to their life, that tend to try to do these things.

I eventually hope to have a time in life to get involved. Im learning mainly right now.


Originally posted by CTroyMathis

If you expect good public policy to reveal itself in a public hearing, then you are gambling with the outcome. Good public policy is created by the dialogue and collaboration that occurs before the public hearing.
Working behind the scenes does not mean you lie or misrepresent the facts. Indeed, it will be the strength of your word and character that people will come to rely on.


CT,

you included this as well. I do believe this to be true. But how much lobbying is done by interests groups within the city politics? And which is better: getting involved in a interest group with your cause or getting involved on your own?

freewaytincan
12 February 2003, 07:13 PM
You know that he's under the ocean right now, right? You won't be getting a response for a long while, not 'til April, I believe...

mikedsjr
13 February 2003, 09:33 AM
No, i didnt realize that.

He is probably safer below water than above.