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- Presentation made in Paris on 11th October 1996 to the OECD’s
Environment Policy Committee, Task Force on Transport.
- In it I try to encourage our group to take advantage of the same
communications techniques which are at present being used to such good
advantage by private sector groups.
- While I feel strongly that there is no reason that public sector
undertakings as important as the EST program should continue to operate
on the basis on fifty year old technologies and organisational
approaches, I am also aware that we need a good place to start. Which is what this presentation is all
about.
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12
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- Supported by a print handout with details on the suggested e/e access
routines and the six proposals
- Extended by a quick tour of key
WWW sites of The Commons at http://www.the-commons.org/
- Detailed support and additional background will be found in appropriate
sections of The Commons
- Further materials & information available from EcoPlan
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- He that travels in theory has no inconveniences; he has shade and
sunshine at his disposal, and wherever he alights finds tables of plenty
and looks of gaiety. These ideas are indulged till the day of departure
arrives, the chaise is called, and the progress of happiness begins. A
few miles teach him the fallacies of imagination.
- The road is dusty, the air is sultry, the horses are sluggish, and the
postilion brutal. He longs for the time of dinner that he may eat and
rest. The inn is crowded, his orders are neglected, and nothing remains
but that he devour in haste what the cook has spoiled, and drive on in
quest of better entertainment. He finds at night a more commodious
house, but the best is always worse than he expected.
- Samuel Johnson, The Idler, no. 58, in Universal Chronicle, London, 26
May 1759
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- Are we here “travelling in theory with no inconveniences”?
- EST/1812 parallels? Are we too
heading toward disaster?
- Are we going to able to make that vital turn ... in time?
- We know that our policies & practices are hugely wrong..
- … and that our message is not getting through to our leaders.
- Accordingly, is what we are doing with this program enough?
- If not, is it important enough to try something different?
- Or do we just keep on marching? marching? marching?
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- Only one of many necessary tracks for policy and practice
- But a VERY important one!
- Because it allows us to “put our heads together”
- It cannot however be “mastered from outside”
- Leaders & advisors must be prepared to become “practitioners”
(i.e., reasonably skilled users in their daily lives)
- This we around this table can begin to do today!
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23
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- Our new tools and where to start
- Reactions to non-travel Vancouver Conference proposal
- And what happened in its wake
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24
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- Six Steps Toward Sustainable Transport
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27
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- International Group Work Packages
- (Hardware, software,
routines)
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- 1. Put the new media to work for EST & for yourselves
- 2. Back & use the Sustainable Transport Emergency Program
- 3. Support the S/T Economic Development Initiative
- 4. Link early to the EC’s forming-up TbyT program
- 5. Sponsor 1998 Daughter of Vancouver Conference
- 6. Link to and support Global Laboratory Curriculum
- (incl. The
Transportation Program)
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- All have come out of Vancouver e/e
follow-up
- All share basic objectives and
priorities of EST
- Each aims to implement practical
solutions
- All involve on-going initiatives
elsewhere
- (Opening up possibilities for
cost-effective partnerships)
- All increase linkage and impact
of research community with practical remedial processes
- All can be done by group as
whole, or individually
- All are thoroughly documented via
The Commons
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- Become sustainable transport practitioners yourselves
- Improve email-2 and Web skills of group (coach needed)
- Try to use e/e to work at home at least one day/week
- Join core group Videoconferencing-Plus demo program
- Cancel your next physical meeting
- (Be sustainable -- use your new electronics skills instead)
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- Shape & use STEP to support EST objectives
- Consider STEP as one of EST’s links to the outside world
- Establish an electronic conference to invite public discussion of EST
issues and eventual remedial measures
- Set up protected ftp (library) site within STEP for private group
exchanges and document sharing (encoded)
- Use STEP as a forum for pre-publication and critical open discussion of
selected papers and results
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36
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- Participate in on-going brainstorming & preparatory discussions for
the planned 1997 S/TEDI Toronto Symposium & Demonstration Program
- Scan S/TEDI program materials and sources for practical hands-on
measures of EST progress
- Give attention to prospect for strategic linking of EST policy
objectives to priority new work issues
- Further develop your e/e skills by using both STEP and New Work Web
sites and related facilities in the process
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37
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- TbyT - Querying the potential for substituting telecoms for (some
portions of) physical transportation
- Associate early with this new EC program as part of your search for
specific policy leads to incorporate into final EST recommendations
package
- Use as a means to develop more concrete and complete views of
transport/telecoms trade-off potential
- Enrich TbyT by bringing in at the outset the EST program’s special
perspectives and expertise
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39
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- Review STEP proposals for a more (a) inclusive, (b) action-oriented 1998
follow-up to Vancouver
- Check out discussions of proposal for women leadership (as a symbol of
the new inclusiveness)
- Bring in OECD (and your Ministry) as active co-sponsors of this
important, path-breaking event
- Present EST findings and recommendations to this critical audience for
comment and discussion
- See if you can help make specific, hands-on EST recommendations to the
needy host city (cities)
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- Inspect GLC program materials and Web sites to scan for link potential
to EST
- Consider a demo showing how these schools’ environmental indicator maps
can complement and extend more official information channels
- Give the program your formal endorsement (at OECD & individual
ministry and agency levels)
- Participate as parents and citizens in this and similar school programs
in your community
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49
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- An electronic handout in support of 11 Oct. presentation
- A handy means for sharing presentations with others who may not be able
or choose to attend
- Because electronically transferable, lends itself to wide international
distribution and use.
- Permits a restatement of important points that do not seem to be getting
through by other means
- May reach people who are not “print-receptive” (not all of whom
necessarily idiots)
- Permits presentation to be made without requiring the speaker always to
travel (sustainable transport)
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- Uses readily available PC tools (which are improving all the time)
- Toughest problem is finding balance between presentation form and
content
- It does take time though
- & thought, & patience, & perhaps a bit of touch
- And respecting intellectual property
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- You are best placed to decide that!
- You may wish to note that the entire text of the presentation is
reproduced on the following page.
- This may suggest to some that the entire effort is a waste of everyone’s
time?
- Or, alternatively, that creative restatement of central points and
issues is possibly much needed?
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- Sustainable Transportation Breaking the Impasse: Through the New Media,
Direct Citizen Involvement, Linking Initiatives, & the Global Lab
Curriculum A Word of Background
Presentation made in Paris on 11th October 1996 to the OECD’s
Environment Policy Committee, Task Force on Transport. In it I try to
encourage our group to take advantage of the same communications
techniques which are at present being used to such good advantage by
private sector groups. While I
feel strongly that there is no reason that public sector undertakings as
important as the EST program should continue to operate on the basis on
fifty year old technologies and organisational approaches, I am also
aware that we need a good place to start. Which is what this
presentation is all about. This
presentation is... Supported by a print handout with details on the
suggested e/e access routines and the five proposals Usefully extended
by a quick tour of key WWW sites of The Commons at
http://www.the-commons.org/ Detailed support and additional background
will be found in appropriate sections of The Commons Further materials
& information available from EcoPlan Who am I & why am I here
today? By background, education, chosen life work EcoPlan A thinking
garden (not a “think-tank”) Impact of technology on people in their
daily lives Communications, Environment, Learning, Work Policy and
decision-making focus (not research per se) A consistent, explicit ethic
to provide deep roots Public/private partnerships that work Network
approach to building knowledge & community Long term presence and
commitment (temoin) Our long-standing OECD links: 1969-1996 What I Won’t Talk About Today (But if
time allowed perhaps should) The sad story of Sustainable Development
The hopeful end of closed government The Brains on the Knee syndrome
OECD history and desirable futures The Environment Directorate:
1971-1996 Work and employment as the ‘back door’ for achieving many
environmental objectives Learning curves (barriers to some, joy to
others) Sustainable Transportation Perspectives Environmentally
Sustainable Transportation: 1759
Perspectives He that travels in theory has no inconveniences; he has
shade and sunshine at his disposal, and wherever he alights finds tables
of plenty and looks of gaiety. These ideas are indulged till the day of
departure arrives, the chaise is called, and the progress of happiness
begins. A few miles teach him the fallacies of imagination. The road is
dusty, the air is sultry, the horses are sluggish, and the postilion
brutal. He longs for the time of dinner that he may eat and rest. The
inn is crowded, his orders are neglected, and nothing remains but that
he devour in haste what the cook has spoiled, and drive on in quest of
better entertainment. He finds at night a more commodious house, but the
best is always worse than he expected. Samuel Johnson, The Idler, no.
58, in Universal Chronicle, London, 26 May 1759 Environmentally
Sustainable Transportation: 1812
Perspectives Environmentally Sustainable Transportation: 1996 Perspectives Are we here
“traveling in theory with no inconveniences”? EST/1812 parallels? Are we
too heading toward disaster? Are we going to able to make that vital
turn ... in time? We know that our policies & practices are hugely
wrong.. … and that our message is not getting through to our leaders.
Accordingly, is what we are doing with this program enough? If not, is
it important enough to try something different? Or do we just keep on
marching? marching? marching? The New Media, the e/e & Sustainable
Development Only one of many necessary tracks for policy and practice
But a VERY important one! It cannot however be “mastered from outside”
We must be prepared to become “practitioners” (i.e.., reasonably skilled
users in our daily lives) This we can begin to do today! acti Topics for
Review Today Our new tools and where to start 1995 reactions to
non-travel Vancouver proposal And what happened in its wake Five Concrete Action Proposals 2. The New Media & the Electronic
Environment (e/e) Next Stage Electronic Environment International Group
Work Packages (Hardware, software,
routines) Now, let’s go over to the Web and have a quick look at those
sites that have been set up under The Commons to support this work… Now that you know where they are, you
can always go back to check out and develop more detail for
yourselves. Five Proposed Link
Initiatives Arising from the
Vancouver Follow-up 1. Put these new media to work for EST & for
yourselves 2. Support the S/T Economic Development Initiative 3. Link
early to the EC’s forming-up TbyT program 4. Get behind 1998 Daughter of
Vancouver Conference 5. Make use of the Global Laboratory
Curriculum (incl. The Transportation
Program) Common Points of these Proposals All have come out of Vancouver
e/e follow-up All share basic objectives and priorities of EST Each aims
to implement practical solutions All involve on-going initiatives
elsewhere (Opening up
possibilities for cost-effective partnerships) All increase linkage and
impact of research community with practical remedial processes All can
be done by group as whole, or individually All are thoroughly documented
via The Commons 1. Putting the New Media to Work Become sustainable
transport practitioners yourselves Improve email-2 and Web skills of
group (coach needed) Set up protected ftp (library) site within STEP for
private group exchanges and document sharing (encoded) Use STEP as a
forum for pre-publication and critical open discussion of selected
papers and results Join core group Videoconferencing-plus demo program
Cancel your next physical meeting (Be sustainable & use your new
electronics skills instead) 2. S/T Economic Development Initiative
Participate in brainstorming & preparatory discussions for the
planned 1997 S/TEDI Toronto Symposium & Demonstration Program Scan
S/TEDI program materials and sources for practical hands-on measures of
EST progress Give attention to prospect for strategic linking of EST
policy objectives to priority new work issues Further develop your e/e
skills by using STEP Web site and related facilities in the process 3.
The EC’s New TbyT Program TbyT - Querying the potential for substituting
telecoms for (some portions of) physical transportation Associate early
with this new EC program as part of your search for specific policy
leads to incorporate into final EST recommendations package Use this link
as a means to develop more concrete and complete views of TbyT trade-off
potential Enrich TbyT by bringing in at the outset the EST program’s
special perspectives and expertise Let us give more thought to the
proposed “Daughter of Vancouver” Conference The 1998 Sustainable Transport
Conference Review STEP proposals
for a more (a) inclusive, (b) action-oriented 1998 follow-up to
Vancouver Check out discussions of proposal for women leadership (as a
symbol of the new inclusiveness) Bring in OECD (and your Ministry) as
active co-sponsors of this important, path-breaking event Present EST
findings and recommendations to this critical audience for comment and
discussion See if you can help make specific, hands-on EST
recommendations to the needy host city (cities) 5. The Global Laboratory
Curriculum Inspect program materials and Web site to scan for link
potential to EST Consider a demo showing how these schools’ environmental
indicator maps can complement and extend more official information
channels Give the program your formal endorsement (at OECD &
individual ministry and agency levels) Participate as parents and
citizens in this and similar school programs in your community How Hard is This Going to Be to Do?
Next Steps? For further
information or to follow-up on any of these ideas, don’t hesitate to
contact us at:
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