A proposal to the The
Campaign for Better Transit from the
Minciu Sodas laboratory.
Riders' Angles
Citizens assessing government: Evaluating Chicago Transit Authority performance and standards.
Goal | Perspective |
Aims | Investigations |
Team | Budget
Goal
How can we make sense of government performance?
Let us think sensitively! We propose to look at public transit performance from the rider's point of view.
Performance measurement is a rather new concept in government. In Chicago, there
is a need for the Chicago Transit Authority to pay attention to our most basic
expectations. However, when transit is thought of as a system for transporting
us, then we get looked upon as freight.
Instead, transit is for our transitions. We say goodbye to one time and
place, and we say hello to another. We set our frame of mind. Is our
journey convenient and productive? cheerful or stressful? relaxing or
exhausting? invigorating or plodding? uplifting or depressing? integrating or
isolating? Is it eventful, in good ways or bad?
Public transit lets us share our costs, but we may also share our
sensitivity and responsivity. Let us open all manner of feedback loops.
How can we structure the system, the measurements and responses, to bring out
the best in riders, drivers, managers and planners?
Perspective
If we, the riders, are central, then let us also be the center of
response. Every aspect of the system should amplify our concerns, and
encourage our solutions. What may look like a seat is actually our throne.
We should never suffer without a reason, but should freely engage each other to
accommodate each other. On any transit issue, we should be able to
approach our driver with respect as our champion.
We, the riders, should drive our public transit system:
- Let's not assume that all riders are the same. We have different purposes for riding the bus (or not riding):
going to work, school, hospital, park, mall, church, date, game, friends and
relatives. What improves service?
- Let's assume that the ride is part of life. We're spending enormous amounts of time, often an hour or two per day,
on our wait and ride: reading, resting, chatting, eating, working, phoning,
praying. How might we rethink our social space, and physical space, for
best use of our time and relationships?
- Let's design measures around what riders are trying to accomplish.
How can we know: If we are going to work, that we won't arrive late once
too often? If we need extra help getting on or off, that we will be
assisted? If we go out at night, that we will have a way to get back
home?
- Let's involve riders in the solution. Riders affect every aspect of
the ride. Active riders can set the norms and expectations. What are
sensible roles that bring out the best in riders, drivers, managers and
planners?
Aims
We propose to involve riders in the solution, by involving them in the
investigation of the Chicago Transit Authority's performance and standards.
- Organize input from riders. We will organize around CBT a lively and effective
online community of active riders in Chicago and beyond. Our riders will convey
online, especially as bloggers, moments that illustrate what riding adds or
subtracts from their quality of life, such as Shannon Clark's "bus-ride
moment"
Bridges and Steelworkers. We'll strive for the spirit of New York's
Straphangers'
Rider Diaries, but in a wider variety of venues and formats, with the
CBT website as a central hub. Our riders will contribute words, images and also data, as they find
convenient, from themselves and others, into a shared online database. They
will be active in local action and global dialogue for measuring and enhancing
transit performance.
- Create a database for analyzing the CTA budget. We
will enter CTA budget data into a database. We will design, modify or
purchase tools for programatically stripping the data out of the PDF format,
and where necessary, we will enter the data by hand. We will create an
interface for the CBT to analyze the budget and correlate it with other data
resources such as census data. We will collect some data from other cities around
the world that we might make some comparisons. We will make available online
some part of this data and functionality.
- Bring together creative experts on making sense of government performance.
We will organize a working group
Thinking
Sensitively of Minciu Sodas lab members, enthusiasts and scholars from Chicago
and around the world, who have ideas on making sense of government performance.
We will present issues, examples and data from Chicago and the CBT in a way that is of
global interest, and will garner ideas, experience and enthusiasm from other
cities. We will survey the theory and practice that is defining and
redefining the state-of-the-art in measuring government performance. We
will use local and global input to develop a theory for the CBT linking quality of life,
citizen action and government performance.
Investigations
Investigating and organizing go hand and hand. Open investigation
integrates us around the truth. Social organization connects us with reality.
In order to question openly, we need to rise beyond our local and personal
concerns. The Minciu Sodas laboratory excels at relating any concern,
issue or project with "caring about thinking" so that it is of global and
general interest. Encouragement from people around the world helps us
invest ourselves in new approaches in Chicago. Our work-in-progress
attracts resources and partners, and inspires action and reaction.
Working openly we involve wonderful talents and leverage deep creativity.
We work with our investigators by meeting them half-way, finding how their
personal quests might also serve the CTB. They agree to give their
creative work to the public domain, or under licenses that contribute to the
public wealth. We select, design and conduct investigations opportunistically, according to
available investigators, resources, synergies. We also look for other
sources of funding. By drawing on multiple angles, we are able to best marshal
our resources to achieve our particular aims, as described above: Organize input
from riders, Create a database for analyzing the CTA budget, and Bring together
creative experts on making sense of government performance.
Working opportunistically, we develop an energy that we can channel and adapt
to CBT's priorities. We plan to conduct five investigations for synergy
from a variety of angles. Here is a sample of what might arouse global
interest and attract help for citizen assessment of government, as well as the
evaluation of the Chicago Transit Authority performance and standards.
Each of these investigations contributes to our understanding of part or all of
the feedback loop needed for monitoring and enhancing government performance.
- What makes blogging take off? Blogs (web logs) are
easy-to-author online diaries. What gives rise to a society of bloggers? Why are Brazil, Poland
and Iran blogging superpowers? A Polish
journalist wrote about a blogger romance in Silicon Valley, and now 100,000
young Polish women post their Internet diaries! How might we leverage,
in the spirit of The Cluetrain Manifesto,
the daily rapport between riders and drivers? We mix
online and curbside organizing with a dash of digital cameras to jumpstart a
world of blogging riders.
- How might gadgets enhance transit? Cell phones, Palm Pilots,
digital cameras, webcams, handheld GPS (Global Positioning System) devices,
smart cards and bar codes are all over the place. They let us record and
communicate where we are, what we see, hear and think. The coming year
will find new devices, some dedicated to
moblogging (mobile blogging). Such devices can interconnect worlds
of data with the physical world that we move through. So how might they
enhance transit? The data needs to circulate. Humans need to help
generate it, and they need feedback loops that encourage and reward their
participation. We look to design self-regulating systems that drive the
transit system to be self-accountable.
- How can we use math to make a point? Mathematical thinking is
key to understanding and evaluating performance. Unfortunately,
mathematics is taught in such a barbaric way that we generally are
uncomfortable sizing up real-life numbers, or distinguishing between various
kinds of trends. The CTA system, and the CTA budget, generate enormous
amounts of down-to-earth data. If I need to go three blocks, is it
better for me to wait for the bus, or to walk? A thoughtful website
might be a showcase for all manner of real-life math problems, and at the same
time attract attention to CTA performance, and how it might be improved.
Starting with the basics, we can show that, just as we weight many factors in
buying a car, so we do in managing public transit. We can design
performance measures that reflect personal preferences, or design
holistic
performance measures that consider how each kind of transit affects the
entire transit system.
- What kind of web functionality stimulates block club action?
Chicago is known for its block clubs. Typically they rely on just a few
leaders. We might design our web interface to serve not only
individuals, but leaders of small groups. We can encourage them to
gather ideas, experiences and data from their group. What might they
bring back to their group? What issues might activate a network of such
groups? We can look for ways of presenting online the work of such
groups to monitor and improve public transit.
- How can the behavior of a few individuals reform the behavior of an
entire system? We can draw inspiration from extreme
challenges. Suhit Anantula is attempting to make Hyderabad, India an
ambulance-friendly city. How can a handful of people change the norms of
a metropolis? We look for constructive mentalities that can spread
virally. We zone in on the leaders and the laws that set the tone.
We connect our issue with the points that might stir the public for new
behavior. Just as we learn from extremes around the world, so we can
look for the extremes in Chicago that are too easy to overlook! How is
the CTA preparing for the future, for example, to leverage emerging fuel
technology? or to embrace a high-tech lifestyle? or to support a positive
outlook for our neighborhoods?
- In what ways is art effective in sending a public message?
Democracy responds to the people. Change comes from a minority.
How can we provoke each other to think differently? What images and
stories help us focus on the issues? Which ones are able to move broadly
through the media? We encourage our community of riders to create works
in the public domain that might evolve and travel freely through the Internet
until they strike a nerve with the Chicago media, the people of Chicago, and
the CTA.
- What feedback systems bring out the best in riders, drivers and
managers? Our Investigators explore overlapping parts of the loops of
accountability. We encourage synergy amongst our various projects, and
look for what they say about the system as a whole. What does it take
for the transit system to be accountable? What motivates the players of
each role? How can the system serve a variety of riders? How can
it keep growing and improving as an integral part of our quality of life?
We look for ways to understand the system as serving the rider's point of
view.
Team
Andrius Kulikauskas, Ph.D. founded the Minciu
Sodas laboratory in 1998. He graduated from the University of Chicago
in 1986, B.S.Math, B.A.Physics, and was awarded a Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1993
from the University of California at San Diego (UCSD). His quest is "to
know everything and apply that usefully". He has lived in the Chicago
neighborhoods of Hyde Park, Marquette Park, Garfield Ridge and Englewood, and
ridden many miles on the 55th street, 69th street, Western, Jeffery, Orange, Red
and Blue Lines.
The mission of Minciu Sodas is to serve and organize independent thinkers
around the world. By focusing on our shared value of "caring about
thinking", we are able to attract and hold people of a wide variety of outlooks
and circumstances. Our endeavors include interconnecting software tools
for organizing thoughts, monitoring the wisdom of investments, organizing an
economy for working openly, structuring workspaces for fostering endeavors,
invigorating the commons for endeavors, making work fun, organizing Islamic
independent thinkers, practicing love as policy, dismantling the racial caste
system in America, providing education that fosters independent thinking,
uplifting life in the Lithuanian countryside, bringing peaceful
self-determination to the Middle East, and making sense of government
performance.
Minciu Sodas excels at team-building by investigating. We have trained and
organized teams of programmers for Agile Media/BAJobs.com,
and drafted software standards for TheBrain
Technologies and MindJet. We draw from a pool of 50 active and 500 passive participants. (Note
that we expect to attract many new members with expertise in government
performance, as well as active riders in Chicago). Here are some of our Investigators and Instigators:
- Joseph Goguen
is Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at
UCSD, and Director of the
USCD Meaning and
Computation Lab. He is a distinguished thinker in requirements
engineering, and a founder of algebraic semantics and algebraic semiotics.
He is the Editor-in-Chief of the
Journal of Consciousness Studies.
At our laboratory, he asks, What are values? How do you discern them in
objects and persons?
- Daniel Weinstein
is Assistant Professor of English at
Dakota State University in Madison, South
Dakota. He teaches writing,
technical writing, information architecture and web publishing. He is
investigating Visual language and teaching, including the use of weblogging.
- Raimundas
Vaitkevicius is Senior Programmer at
Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas, Lithuania where he teaches object
technology and statistics for psychology. He organizes teachers in the
Lithuanian Computer Society. He is investigating the use of tools for
organizing thoughts.
- Shannon Clark of
Chicago is CEO of JigZaw. His
company is an innovator in developing AI software for Information Extraction
and Integration. He excels at problem analysis. Shannon is the
Events Chair for the Ryze Business Network
in Chicago.
- Suhit Anantula
is an Analyst who is personally working to make Hyderabad, India an
ambulance-friendly city. As a social entrepreneur, he is taking up
the challenge to reduce pollution from Indian stoves, a leading cause of death
there.
- Algis Cibulskis
of Lithuania leads the Statistics Department for the
IT Center of the Ministry of Education.
His team is responsible for organizing the collection, reformatting and
analysis of data from thousands of schools.
- William
Wagner, a Chicago native, is the publisher of
Ljubljana Life
in Slovenia. He is writing a book on how our environment affects our
thinking, and vice versa.
- Joe Damal is a Chicago
community organizer, a living legend for several challenging sectors of
Chicago youth.
In 1999, he lead one of the first Minciu Sodas investigations,
Ever change your mind? for the
Youth Outreach Program of the Chicago Public Schools.
- Ian Bruk
is a Consultant. He has spent the last three years analyzing the performance
of 200 companies, and is leading and funding our work to develop
Material Change (Living Research
Reports), software to monitor the wisdom of investments.
- Peter Kaminski is CTO of
Socialtext, a leader in social
software. He is an Internet pioneer, award-winning designer of the 1993
NetCruiser browser, founder of Yipes Communications, NanoSpace and PDIAL, and
instigator of the Social
Software Alliance.
Thank you to our many contributors to this proposal:
Suhit Anantula on
ambulance
friendly cities,
Natalie d'Arbeloff on
artistic
focus,
Stanko Blatnik on
web systems,
Ian Bruk on
village
transit, Richard Cayzer on
the future,
Steve Cayzer on
social
factors,
Prem
Chandavarkar on
great love,
Shannon Clark on
the CTA,
David Ellison-Bey on
inspiring
others, Shane Hopkins on
Chicago and
NY transit, David Kaminski
on gadgets
and video, Debra Louison Lavoy
on dialogue
with drivers,
Miranda Mowbray
on transit
around the world, umesh
rashmi rohatgi on
the role of
government, Lucas Gonzalez Santa
Cruz on
evoking ideas.
Budget
Our purpose is to build local and global momentum in support of The Campaign
for Better Transit. We want to engage all who might wish to make sense of
government performance, especially monitoring and enhancing transit in Chicago.
Our long term impact depends on us tapping into what our participants truly care
about. We therefore plan to deploy our resources flexibly, so that we
might meet our investigators half-way, and encourage them to adapt, for our
sake, investigations that they are conducting for their own reasons.
We best leverage our integrity with a fractal distribution of our resources
and responsibility. We have a lead organizer, Andrius Kulikauskas, who
makes sure that we have a team, and that we meet our basic aims. He will
select and lead a team of 5 investigators whose efforts will help him meet these
aims, but moreover, will open up thoughtful questions, attract helpful
participants, and generate synergy, momentum and community. They will all
be assisted by 25 instigators who will be rewarded for a variety of small jobs
and thoughtful help. We also expect to attract about 125 participants who
care enough to get involved in some small way.
Our budget therefore, for one year, is:
$5,000 for our lead organizer, Director Andrius Kulikauskas.
Roughly $1,000 of this will be for travel to and from Chicago. (He will work in
Chicago for one or two months).
$5,000 for our 5 investigators. They will receive stipends $4,000 =
5 x $800. We reserve $1,000 (20%) for administrative costs and
discretionary resources.
$5,000 for our 25 instigators. They will receive rewards $4,000 =
25 x $160. We reserve $1,000 (20%) for administrative costs and
discretionary resources.
TOTAL: $15,000
We look forward to working closely with the staff and enthusiasts of The
Campaign for Better Transit. We shall make every opportunity that they
might participate actively through our laboratory as investigators and
instigators in these and other endeavors.
We should be quite flexible and creative with rewards for our instigators.
They may be cash, but depending on how we structure our work, may be gadgets, or
even coupons towards gadgets. The coming year will see handheld devices
that we can't yet even imagine, and we may also get support from manufacturers
in Silicon Valley or Japan. Therefore, we advise to hold back on any such
purchases until we know more about our investigations and partners.
We will make sure that our team has a strong presence in Chicago, but also
encourage anybody around the world who has a great project, or brings a lot of
energy. We will use this money, as much as possible, to leverage the
personal work that we want to do anyways, rather than just pay to get a job
done. We will look for other sources of funds. We're looking for a
lot of synergy amongst us, between CBT and our lab, and support for ongoing work
at our lab.
Thank you for your consideration of our proposal!
Andrius
Andrius Kulikauskas
Direktorius
Minciu Sodas
http://www.ms.lt
ms@ms.lt
Grudu g 6, Vilnius, LT2020, Lithuania