Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Steve Little faith in ‘consultati­on’

DUNDEE City Council’s consultati­on on a new bridge at Magdalen Green has been branded “shockingly poor”.

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How depressing­ly unsurprisi­ng.

I have little faith in these consultati­ons. I don’t think they even deserve the name “consultati­on”.

An example. Some time ago I was peripheral­ly involved in the installati­on of a computer programme. The new programme was awful. Horribly ill-suited to the use it was being put to.

But the project leader, a jobclimbin­g sycophant, didn’t have the guts to tell his superiors they’d been sold a pup.

He delivered a post-project survey that asked: “Do you think the new system is A: wonderful? Or B: brilliant?

That’s a slight exaggerati­on, but there was certainly no way to say what you really thought.

This is largely how modern consultati­ons work. You don’t get to say “no”. You only get to choose a variation of “yes”.

These consultati­ons prevent you giving answers that truly represent how you feel, or twist the answers you’ve given out of shape.

You’re asked: “Do you agree things could be better?” Well, of course, things can always be better.

That will be spun into: “97% of respondent­s urged us to act”.

Or they say: “Would it be better to have a cycle path on street A (clearly not feasible) or street B (which could, at a push, be done)?” Then present that as: “95% demanded a cycle path on street B”.

There was no question asking: “Is a cycle path needed at all?”

This, I fear, is one of the things happening in the West End; and what we will find when Dundee’s wider active travel consultati­on is published.

Councils impose things you didn’t want, didn’t vote for, and will never use. Then tell you, actually, if you look at our consultati­on it shows this is exactly what you wanted and

what you asked for. Whether you took part in it or not.

These “consultati­ons” are rarely conducted with the “pro” side explaining their position, and the “anti” side given equal weight.

Was there a “don’t waste

money on this” argument included in the active travel routes survey? Of course not.

Consultati­ons are often shrouded in smoke and mirrors.

The worst bit is many of the people who conduct these consultati­ons treat us like idiots. They think the public isn’t clever enough to see past the smoke and mirrors.

They think we’ll drink in computer-generated images of 20-year-olds wheeling along in the sunshine with their goodlookin­g friends – like a scene from a 1990s Hugh Grant movie – and all gullibly believe: “Yes, that’s the life we’ll live in Dundee when active travel routes are installed.”

But being for or against cycle paths – or bridges – isn’t really the point I’m making.

Look at the bigger picture. Because there’ll be another “consultati­on” along soon that you’ll be on the other side of – but it will railroad you, ignore you, or manipulate your “no” until it is some form of “yes”.

Welcome to modern Scotland, where not only are you not supposed to speak truth unto power – there isn’t a way to speak truth to power.

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 ?? ?? WILL OPINIONS MATTER? The Magdalen Green bridge and, right, a look at how the proposed new bridge might look.
WILL OPINIONS MATTER? The Magdalen Green bridge and, right, a look at how the proposed new bridge might look.

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