Sunday, May 20, 2007

The Opportunity In TAMPOA's Malaise

When one goes to meetings in this town, it is painfully obvious that TAMPOA has a serious image problem. Unfortunately, for the residents of the Annex who care about how we are perceived, TAMPOA continues to take the low road and echo a "Frankly-my-dear-I-don't-give-a-damn" approach to its dealings with the rest of the community when it comes to Southard street and possibly other portions of the Truman Waterfront. This is very sad, as well as down right stupid.

Unfortunately the reality right now is that there is so much anger and resentment lingering in the Annex over TAMPOA's litigation strategy that the TAMPOA Board is virtually paralyzed by a circle-the-wagons mentality. About the only actions it feels empowered to take now have to be guaranteed to be undeniably safe, insular, and low profile. The Board has effectively painted itself into an insular box thanks to its reliance on some incredibly bad advice that ignored the context of the problems it has faced. In many respects, right now the Board feels and acts like its hands are tied, and it is adrift in the litigation winds. It is hoping in vain for a miracle that may lead it out of the black hole it is now in and does not seem to realize, despite some advice to which it has been privy, that the problems it faces will still exist regardless of whether TAMPOA wins or loses its litigation with the City.

Right now, TAMPOA is living its life through its litigation, a typical, but dangerous, syndrome from which many who put all their eggs in the litigation basket suffer. This has caused the TAMPOA Board to become incredibly defensive, hostile, and edgy at the slightest criticism.

The Annex right now is very polarized, but the issues over which that is occurring are at best diffuse. The polarization lines are clearly drawn. You are either with the Board, or you are viewed as a virtual traitor. Yet there is no clear line or issue on which everyone agrees; only bits and pieces. Everyone wants change, but few here seem to agree on (or perhaps even know) what that should look like. Folks in the Annex right now are stuck, and all their leaders can muster at the moment is to vent and blame, neither of which moves us closer to a resolution of the existing ill will between TAMPOA and the City that has now infected many other City residents.

For those of us who feel like it is time to stop all the nonsense the Board has continued to allow itself to become enmeshed in and to seek creative solutions based on objective criteria, the Truman Waterfront Project offers TAMPOA a renewed and unique opportunity to foster creativity and cooperation with the City and other City residents. That opportunity will require new thinking, new attitudes, the ability of TAMPOA to put itself in the City's shoes, a clear nonjudgmental understanding of the City's perspective, and decision-making based on objective criteria, not blame, finger pointing or accusations of gamesmanship. Frankly, we are not sure the TAMPOA Board, as a whole, is up to the task or has the leadership it needs to get where it needs to go. Nonetheless, the opportunity for change or doom is there in the Truman Waterfront Project.

This opportunity is not simply to successfully construct the Waterfront Project. If that is all that both sides (TAMPOA and the City) think the Project is about, the Project has already failed as far as the relationship between the parties is concerned. No, the opportunity is a renewed chance to focus on the most critical question facing TAMPOA and the City. However, the question is more critical for TAMPOA since it may involve TAMPOA's survival as an institution that purports to govern the Annex.

That question is a simple but essential one. How can we all create the respect for each other that will make it possible to constructively discuss (and even disagree over) options while uniting behind common goals? That is the hard but essential question the TAMPOA Board and those of good will in the City must wrestle with if the Waterfront Project is to succeed.

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