Article Summary of "Citizen Involvement in Transportation Planning" by John Forester

Citation:
John Forester. "Citizen Involvement in Transportation Planning." Deborah Kolb, ed., When Talk Works, (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1994), pp. 317-320.


This Article Summary written by: Tanya Glaser, Conflict Research Consortium

Lawence Susskind chaired the regional Citizen Advisory Committee considering a proposed extension of the Boston subway system. While the Committee was successful in reaching a consensus recommendation, their proposal was overruled by the state. Susskind felt that the Committee's main goal needed to be reaching a consensus recommendation. Without consensus, any settlement was likely to unravel due to later political infighting.

Susskind found that when the various options were discussed abstractly there was a lot of disagreement. But when options were presented in fairly concrete images, agreement came much more easily. Initially the engineers called for a ten thousand car parking garage at the site. Citizen groups opposed any parking. When the Committee reviewed slides of actual parking garages of various sizes, the engineers realized that their plan was unrealistic and the citizens' position softened. The Committee succeeded in developing a win-win option, supported by everyone on the Committee. Susskind notes that "the option included a set of trade-offs that no one had envisioned in the first place, which was, you could improve the environment in exchange for allowing this development to go ahead."[p. 319]

Unfortunately, the Committee had only advisory power. The state chose to implement an option without the environmental compensations. When the Committee challenged the state, they were dismissed and the task force dissolved. This angered the members of the Committee, who had agreed not to block the subway extension in exchange for a voice in the planning process. However, the state's decision stood and the subway extension was built without environmental protections and without court challenge.

 
CRInfo Version VI
Copyright © 1999-2007 The Conflict Resolution Information Source
CRInfo™ is a Registered Trademark of the University of Colorado

Project Acknowledgements

The Conflict Resolution Information Source
Guy Burgess and Heidi Burgess, Co-Directors
c/o Conflict Information Consortium (Formerly Conflict Research Consortium), University of Colorado
Campus Box 580, Boulder, CO 80309
Phone: (303) 492-1635; Fax: (303) 492-2154; Contact

University of Colorado at Boulder
Let there be work, bread, water and salt for all. -- Nelson Mandela

Featured Links
Organizations Making Noteworthy Contributions to Conflict Resolution and Peace:
National Association for Community Mediation
National Association for Community Mediation


Partner Projects
CRInfo mini-grant recipients, gateway partners, and affiliated projects:
Collaborative for Conflict Mgmt. in Mental Health
Collaborative for Conflict Mgmt. in Mental Health

"[P]romoting the use of conflict management techniques in the mental health and social service systems through training, technical assistance, consultation, information dissemination and evaluation services"

Shimon Peres
Shimon Peres

Former Foreign Minister of Israel, and 1994 Nobel Peace Laureate