"You walk the talk"
Seorang teman
telah memanjangkan melalui emel tulisan anak seorang mantan pemimpin besar
negara ini. Biasanya saya tak pernah
membaca tulisan puak-puak ini. Teman
saya menambah dengan catatan berikut:
“You walk the talk first” dan
“100% correct! Get rid of the outriders... a
nuisance to others”
Terimah kasih John
kerana sudi berkongsi artikel.
By MARINA MAHATHIR
The Government wants us to change our lifestyles to cope with inflation.
It
is easier said than done since most people were having it difficult even
before
the hikes. The Government must first set an example by doing
things it should have
done long ago.
WITH the
recent hike in fuel prices and the Government's exhortations
for us to
change our lifestyles in order to cope, may I provide here some
suggestions
for the Government and those who work for it to "share our
burden".
1. Stop
having meetings, especially out at resorts, far enough away to
be able to
claim transport allowances. Have online meetings instead or
teleconferences.
Use Skype or chat.
2. No need
to order special pens, bags, T-shirts, notepads and other
goodies
for those same meetings.
3. No need
to order kuih for mid-morning or teatime meetings in
government
offices, or nasi briyani lunches for those meetings that
happen to
end just at lunchtime.
4. Cancel
all trips for government servants to conferences overseas
unless
they return with full reports of what they did there, who they
met and
what they learnt and how they mean to apply what they learnt
at home.
Ask them to do presentations to colleagues who did not get
to go, on
the most interesting and important papers that they read.
5.
Scrutinise invoices for contracts to make sure they are truly
reflective of what those
projects or supplies cost.
6. Stop
elaborate launches for government programmes.
In
particular, stop the buying of souvenirs, special batik shirts,
corsages, bouquets and caps.
7. Make
all civil servants and politicians travel economy class.
That means
really travelling at the back of the plane and not
buying
full fare economy class tickets that allow them to be
upgraded
to Business Class.
8. Stop
having the full complement of police escorts to cut
down on
petrol costs. If they need to be somewhere by a
certain
time, start earlier like the rest of us. Wouldn't be a
bad thing
for them to also experience a traffic jam.
9. Once a
week (or more), have ministers use public
transport
so they know what everyone else has to suffer.
This might provide them with
the incentive to improve them.
10. Once a
week, let ministers go to a market to buy food for
their
families with instructions to not spend more than RM100.
11. Get ministers to carpool. They might get more work done
11. Get ministers to carpool. They might get more work done
just
by being able to talk to each other to see what can be
coordinated
between their ministries. For instance, the Ministers
of Health and Women could
discuss what to do about women's
health issues in
the car on the way to work. Maybe have a
secretary to travel in the front seat to
take down notes on what
was discussed. By the time they get to their
offices, things can
get implemented.
12. Once a
month, get civil servants to work with one
disadvantaged
group in order to be better able to appreciate
their
problems. It could be blind people one month, hearing
disabled
people the next, orang asli the following month and
people living with HIV/AIDS
after that.
We could
start buddy systems which pair one civil servant
with one
disadvantaged person and at the end of it, ask each
pair to
make recommendations on how to make life better for
each
other. This might get rid of the problem of desk jockeys,
people who
never stray very far from their desks yet make
policies
for people they know nothing about.
13. Have
PA systems that shout out the name of the officers
who have
to serve people at government offices so that people
get the
services they came for and don't have to keep coming
back just because the
officer was out having coffee.
No counter
should be left unmanned for more than five minutes
before the
officer is paged to go back to their stations. This should
cut down
waiting time for the public and save them transport costs
in having
to keep returning just to get one thing done.
14.
Government officers who lose people's files should be fined and
have their
names publicised for being careless and causing
inconvenience
to the public. Instead of making the public travel to
their
offices several times to deal with their problems, they should
travel to
go see their client and deal with it right there and then.
And every
officer who goes out of the office should be given a
reasonable
time to get his work done after which he is expected
back in
office so he doesn't waste time doing something else.
15. And
newspapers should save paper by reporting real news
rather
than non-news that they carry, particularly nonsensical
utterances
by politicians.
As they
say, we need to do this all together in order to make a
difference.
So if the Government and politicians make these
lifestyle changes, I will do
my part and change mine.
Thank You.
Marina
Mahathir
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