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John
Trotti
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The present-day
hierarchy has had a profound effect on waste management
strategies, structure, politics, and certified authoritya
self-perpetuating aristocracy claiming a sort of moral
high ground that, until recently, has held at bay those
who would challenge that authority. It would be misleading
to suggest that no good has resulted from the hierarchy
and its adherents, but it would be equally wrong to
ignore the damage its institutionalization has wrought.
What damage,
you ask? The continuing decline in container recycling
despite the maturity of the programs to accomplish it
is one case in point, though the trend is often (and
perhaps correctly) dismissed as the result of a strong
economy. But aside from questions about the effectiveness
of "one-size-fits-all" approaches to any aspect
of human activity, the real damage of the hierarchy
lies not in its inability to align waste management
with the larger issues of social responsibility and
resource sustainability but, rather, the institutionalization
process itself.
This column
has devoted a lot of time and energy to the support
of new technologies and our need to look for ways to
employ them in our daily activities. But more often
than not, changes to the way we do business have run
afoul of the most pragmatic of issues: "We cant
afford it." Just once Id like to see the
dialog opened with the question, "Can we afford
not to explore and make use of new approaches
even when the dollars-and-cents part of the equation
doesnt seem to work out?" Viewed from that
perspectiveand in the context of slightly tangential
issues such as human resource recruiting and retention
challengesit might be easier to see where accommodations
can and should be made.
In the July/August
Editors Comments, I suggested that we "face
hard questions that will not go away through the espousal
of politically correct doctrine or continued pleas for
what ought to be, because when push comes to shove the
only effective actions will be those that deal with
what society does." This to me is most important
because I have seen no evidence that Americans are inclined
to make radical changes in their behavior just because
people in high places say they must, particularly when
those changes appear to them to be a retreat from greatness
rather than an advance to a better future.
No nation
on Earth has been quicker to embrace change when it
makes sense
and why not since were the first
nation in history whose underlying institutions are
geared to adopt rather than resist it. Its been
part of the magic of our success, yet today we see authority
becoming increasingly resistant to the development and
exploration of new ideas, and nowhere is this more evident
than in the viselike grip of the hierarchy on waste
management. Instead of open dialog, we have heel digging
at every turn on the part of groups that feel that waste
management boils down to a moral issue in which, if
you dont believe in a particular groups
solution, youre wrong.
I think part
of the problem in getting people to lend their wholehearted
support to waste management solutionseven those
that are demonstrably in the publics best interestslies
in too much centralization. While many believe that
this lack of commitment reflects the publics ignorance
of programs and their intent, Id like to suggest
that theres something in the relationship of Americans
and authority at play as well. Not only are we suspect
of authority, but we will go to great lengths to subvert
what we consider to be its illegitimate exercise, even
to the point of cutting off our nose to spite our face.
This brings
me back once again to technology and its role in supporting
dialog. Im going to propose that the less authoritarian
we are in developing and implementing waste management
solutions designed to meet longer range goals of sustainability,
the more support were going to get from the public.
Rather than insisting on adherence to a fixed list of
solutions, we should fight to increase the number and
flexibility of options in order to take advantage of,
rather than fly in the teeth of, what are the strongest
features of our national character.
When I set
about thinking about the subject, my thought was to
draw a great distinction between the elements of the
hierarchy and its institutional underpinnings, but Ive
since changed my mind. I think its time to dump
the hierarchy and its entire list of assumptions and
instead start with a fresh sheet of paper. Next, rather
than allow a small group of people to dictate what waste
management strategies and programs are appropriate for
all of us, we need to open up the dialog to the widest
extent possible, focusing not just on the substantive
issues of diversion and disposal but also on how waste
management fits into larger societal issues. If somehow
we end up back at the same place we started, well
at least be a lot wiser for the adventure.
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John an email
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