Here鈥檚 how Honolulu rail CEO Andrew Robbins responded to the U.S. Justice Department鈥檚 recent subpoena of thousands of pages of documents as part of a grand jury investigation while the federal agency that is still holding on to a half-billion bucks of our rail money watches this and wonders.
Robbins: 鈥淎ny time you run into a large, complicated infrastructure project, wherever it is in the world, there鈥檚 usually bumps in the road.鈥
Bumps in the road, eh? You mean like when you got a C+ on a chem midterm but then studied really really hard the rest of the semester and finished with an A?
If they gave an Oscar for euphemisms, Robbins would be at the podium in a tux and a haircut thanking all the politicians and administrators who made it possible.
But I don鈥檛 want to be too hard on Robbins. He inherited the mess.
And when it comes to rail鈥檚 future, Robbins is far less bright eyed and bushy tailed than Mayor Kirk Caldwell, who was a really gifted and talented bumps in the road rail man even before he officially took office.
In 2012 when he was still just mayor-elect, how a recent negative court ruling would affect rail鈥檚 future.
鈥淭his is a bump in the road, 鈥渉e said. 鈥淚 assume there can be more lawsuits filed. We’ll address them as they come.鈥
They鈥檝e come.
But here鈥檚 the main reason why we shouldn鈥檛 be too hard on Robbins. His statement creates a teaching moment for all of us citizens.
Cliches ‘R Us
And Robbins鈥檚 use of 鈥渂umps in the road鈥 is so graphically inaccurate that it highlights the familiarity, power and danger of the term itself.
鈥淏ump in the road鈥 is a main-man utensil in policymakers鈥 tool kits of metaphors that are supposed to make us don鈥檛-worry-be-happy.
The term is meant to minimize the problem. Things may seem bad, but it鈥檚 only temporary. We shall overcome real soon.
Underlings hide documents and otherwise conceal bad news because they worry about how the public will respond. How sad is that?
So the term 鈥渂umps in the road鈥 is pablum, a clich茅 that works when it triggers those remaining nodes of optimism in our hearts and minds.
That makes the term useful to the user but insidious to the rest of us.
鈥淏umps in the road鈥 is the 鈥渢houghts and prayers鈥 of public administration.
Because the mass shooting tragedies are so closely intertwined with the use of 鈥渢houghts and prayers鈥 people have become much more critical and cynical about that term than they have about metaphorical jolts on some metaphorical highway.
Bumps deserves just as much skepticism. Here鈥檚 why.
The term bumps in the road is not used to analyze or apologize. No, it鈥檚 used to inspire. When you walk through a storm, hold your head up high and don鈥檛 be afraid of the dark. Then .
Though the person walking with you may be a federal marshal.
鈥淣ever,鈥 says a greeting card, 鈥渓et a stumble in the road be the end of your journey.鈥
One card could be the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation big shots鈥 mantra for getting past Middle Street: 鈥淩emember when you hit a bump in the road, it is a bump, not a mountain. Go over it, go around it, but don鈥檛 stop moving forward.鈥
Considering the upsy-daisy, downsy-daisy road conditions here, it鈥檚 not surprising that in Honolulu we have bumps in the road about actual bumps in the road.
The Pali Highway landslide is the most recent example. 鈥淲e鈥檒l have those boulders out of the way by the weekend鈥 has turned into a landslide mitigation project, an engineering term of art for 鈥渟ee you next year.鈥
Or the less famous but, it appears, even more complicated non-repair of the whopping, car-busting, been-there-forever .
But why should 鈥渂umps in the road鈥 become just as illegitimate a term as 鈥渢houghts and prayers鈥 has?
The term 鈥渢houghts and prayers鈥 has gone through a sad but deserving transition from an expression of good will and empathy to, as the , an expression of indifference to tragedy that merely intends to be empathetic.
It encourages 鈥渟lacktivism,鈥 which is an action taken to bring about social change that requires a very minimal commitment like, say, simply signing a petition.
Or — and this is where the term has really lost its legitimacy — as on the part of those who don鈥檛 want to consider gun control.
Both thoughts and road are minimizing terms. Both are meant to be reassuring and inspirational. Both substitute words for deeds and hope the rest of us do the same.
Like, 鈥渢houghts,鈥 politicians use 鈥渂umps鈥 to get their constituents to cut them some slack.
So 鈥渂umps鈥 may be a less emotional term, but it is just as cunning and disingenuous.
So here are some suggestions to policymakers about the term 鈥渂umps in the road.鈥
Don鈥檛 use it at all. Ever. Quit blanketing us with such nonsensical metaphorical reassurance when the expression the situation really calls for is 鈥渙y vey.鈥
Second, if it鈥檚 oy vey, then it鈥檚 oy vey. Deal with it. Recognize that your first job is not to inspire. It is to inform. Transparency, dudes.
Underlings hide documents and otherwise conceal bad news because they worry about how the public will respond. How sad is that? It鈥檚 also a violation of democratic and accountability norms.
So be candid. Leave the inspirational metaphors to the Hallmark greeting card writers.
And as for us commoners? Well, if you find the HART CEO鈥檚 recent statement reassuring, what can I say?
Rail is an extremely easy target, though. More generally, if we citizens want more candor and less bullshit, we also need to be more patient, less simplistic, and more realistic about quick fixes. Policymaking is hard work, especially the implementation part.
A good place to start is this: think of 鈥渂umps in the road鈥 as a coverup that indicates not how small a problem is but rather how big.
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About the Author
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Neal Milner is a former political science professor at the University of 贬补飞补颈驶颈 where he taught for 40 years. He is a political analyst for KITV and is a regular contributor to Hawaii Public Radio's His most recent book is Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.