The Grading and Excavation Contractor Blogs

The Blogger

John Trotti Grading & Excavation Contractor Editor

More from this blogger

  1. Vocational Education in Your Local Schools
  2. Glimmers from Deep in the Tunnel
  3. Tiers to the Fore
  4. Attaboys
  5. Do You Feel the Economy Stirring
  6. Stimulus Funds What's Next
  7. Investing in Training and Technology
  8. We All Need Some Idle Time - But Our Engines Don't
  9. Just the Facts, Ma'am
  10. Paperless Grading & Excavation Contractor
  11. Staying Focused at the Job Site
  12. You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet
  13. Saving Our Soil
  14. Transmixers
  15. Get Ready for Our May Issue
  16. Landfill Construction
  17. Jobsite Communications
  18. Simulated Dirt
  19. Hunkering Up to Meet the Future
  20. Health Care Assault on Construction Firms
  21. Who Checks Your Six
  22. Training It Starts with Your Image
  23. Is there a Moore's Law in Construction
  24. Technology How Much Is Enough
  25. Getting Set for Our Technology Issue
  26. World of Concrete 2010 - Still a Firm Foundation
  27. The Bottomest Line
  28. Life Beyond the School of Hard Knocks
  29. Developing and Using Standards
  30. A Late-Night Present From the Senate
  31. Lessons From Power-Gen
  32. The Action Desk
  33. NGVs for Fleet Operations
  34. Stimulus Funds for Infrastructural Repair Show Me the Dough
  35. Are You Ready for the GHG Emissions Inspector
  36. Do Statistics Tell the Safety Story
  37. LiDAR What is it and Why Should I Care
  38. Consolidation Happens
  39. Equipment Theft in a Tough Economy
  40. ICUEE 2009
  41. Standardization
  42. Causes That Matter
  43. Hard Hats and Safety Harnesses - but Situational Awareness Above All
  44. Signs of the Times That Make Sense
  45. The Human Element
  46. Whoop-De-Doozy
  47. Infrastructure in Dire Need of Overhaul
  48. All in it Together
  49. Pride in Accomplishment It's Part of Our Nature
  50. Y2K Plus Ten
  51. CNH Parts & Service Remanufacturing
  52. Construction Accidents Better But Still Too Many
  53. Not Like Your Father's Crawler
  54. Equipment Theft A Bigger Business Than Ever
  55. Two Days, Three Nights in Peoria
  56. Regulatory Compliance
  57. Fugitive Dust
  58. A Case for Dirtmanship
  59. Are We Still Having Fun
  60. The Best BMP for Erosion & Sediment Control is Knowledge
  61. Snoopy's Doghouse
  62. Leave Close at the Horseshoe Pit
  63. Bailouts, Stimuli, and our Future
  64. Tsunamis in the Sea of Change
  65. Rising to the Challenge of Change
  66. Fox in the Henhouse
  67. Writing Checks Our Resources Can't Cover
  68. Trenching Safety
  69. Dimensions 2009
  70. Bottom Lines
  71. Speed, Precision, and Awareness
  72. World of Concrete 2009
  73. Paperless iGrading & Excavation Contractor-i
  74. Tightening the Belt One Notch at a Time
  75. Operation Head Start
  76. Stimulating Thoughts
  77. Start the Year with PMA
  78. Staying Out of the Crosshairs
  79. Employee Free Choice Act (FCA)
  80. Keeping Pace with Workforce Change
  81. Forward to the Future
  82. Investing in Training and Technology
  83. Focusing on the Future
  84. Southern California Fires
  85. Bottom Lines
  86. In Pursuit of the Digital Jobsite
  87. Situational Awareness
  88. Coming to Grips with Change
  89. Sweeping Up the Scraps
  90. How're the Fish Biting Today
  91. Welcome to the New Site!
view all

GX Contractor Editor's Blog

December 21st, 2009 9:49am PST

Commitment Rather than Change

Posted By John Trotti 1 Comment

“I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to Earth.”—President Kennedy, May 25, 1961, before a joint session of Congress

Today’s pundits would have you believe that President Kennedy’s challenge to the American public was grandstanding rhetoric to get us to heat up the Cold War, but to me—an eager young Marine aviator sitting in the ready room—the gauntlet our Commander-in-Chief tossed down fairly sizzled in its brilliance. What a sensational concept—not that I for a moment believed it was possible. Maybe two decades, I thought, but in 1961, when the best we could toss into orbit could fit in a suitcase, this was right off the charts.

Now, I believe, is the time for us to do something equally mind-boggling: build cities that really work and that you and I and our kids can afford and enjoy living, working, and playing in.

Questioning a System Run Amok
Maybe you just like living in your truck or car for umpteen hours a week, windows rolled up and doors locked to keep all the advantages of urban life at bay. If you’re typical of residents in the LA Basin, Atlanta, DC, Kansas City, Seattle, or 100 other population centers in the US, you are destined to spend upward of 600 hours this next year cursing the traffic with breath whose saving grace is that it’s probably purer than the air from which it came. At the same time you find yourself fighting off dehydration with water that costs more than the gas you’re burning because you’re afraid to drink the stuff from the tap.

While we’ve been humping our tails off to be able to enjoy “the good life,” doesn't it seem that the goal has moved farther and farther to the right—almost to where we have to ask whether it’s even possible to get there from here? While it’s not an acceptable situation, it’s one we live with, however much it raises the question, “What do we do about it?”

I don’t pretend to know the answer—partly because I’m not bright enough, but also because there is no single answer. Instead, let me take a different tack and suggest that we need to ask questions—lots of them—about why we chose to live the way we do and how this stacks up against our expectations.

For example, why do people live in Simi Valley, CA, and drive 45 miles—75 minutes minimum each way in the daily commute—to a job near the Los Angeles Airport? Or what could possibly possess a person to take a job in downtown Seattle, knowing full well that he can't afford a house for his family within an hour’s commute? Or how do you run a successful business in Atlanta when the people you’d most like to hire don’t feel safe living in the neighborhood? The questions are endless, but even before you’ve gone very far, you’re struck by recurring issues: safety, congestion, health, convenience, opportunity, and so on. So why don’t we do something about them?

Let me offer a couple of thoughts here. First, urbanization and the spectacular growth of our cities is a rather recent phenomenon for which there were few, if any, guideposts to mark the way. Second, to the extent we’ve done urban planning, it takes the form of exclusionary zoning practices more apt to consider land values than long-range utility. Third (but by no means last), the diversification of our society along racial, ethnic, and cultural lines has become a major driver in the continued press toward suburbanization and its resultant—you’re not going to like this—ghettoization.

The point I want to make here is that the forces we’ve allowed to shape the growth and development of our cities have little to do with their utility or inhabitability. Worse still, these factors have, in many instances, mutated or migrated over the years, leaving behind a legacy of legal and territorial entanglements that are no longer applicable and certainly not fiscally sustainable.

Changing the Experiment
It’s time to go back and challenge the assumptions on which the myriad planning decisions and zoning ordinances in our cities are based. Then we’ve got to weigh their validity in terms of what it will take to attract private investment back into areas blighted not merely by age and neglect, but by faulty, politically motivated, and all-too-often fraudulently initiated public programs. If there’s a major city in the country that isn’t in crisis with crumbling infrastructure, social unrest, and inadequate service delivery, please inform my ignorance, but the time is fast approaching when limited government budgets will be unable to respond to these deteriorating situations. The longer we wait to remove the politically enacted impediments to private investment in our inner cities, the worse the situation will become. Our cities need rebuilding, so let’s commit ourselves to that goal. It’s time to convince our elected representative to get out of the political agenda business and let the market economy do its job.

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

ron

January 6th, 2010 9:03 AM PT

A country's economic health is not measured in what it spends, but the value of the goods and services created. Wealth is a function of productivity. Commuting is not productive in terms of time nor resources. It is a cultural change that is needed too.

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get GX Contractor Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our GX Contractor email newsletter!