Russian Mayor Bans Phrase 'I Don't Know'
Russian
mayor bans phrase 'I don't know'
By BAGILA
BUKHARBAYEVA, Associated Press WriterTue Sep
4, 6:56 PM ET
The mayor
of a Siberian oil town has ordered his bureaucrats to stop using expressions
such as "I don't know" and "I can't." Or look for another
job.
Alexander
Kuzmin, the 33-year-old mayor of Megion, has banned these and 25 other phrases
as a way to make his administration more efficient, his spokeswoman said
Tuesday.
"It's a
suggestion to the staff that they should think before saying something," Oksana
Shestakova said by telephone. "To say `I don't know' is the same as admitting
your helplessness."
To
reinforce the ban, a framed list of the banned expressions has been hanging on
the wall next to Kuzmin's office for the past two weeks, Shestakova
said.
Some of the
other prohibited phrases are "What can we do?" "It's not my job," "It's
impossible," "I'm having lunch," "There is no money," and "I was away/sick/on
vacation."
Kuzmin, a
businessman who was elected mayor 1 1/2 years ago, wants to "shake things up" in
Megion, a town of 54,000 in the Khanty-Mansiisk region, the spokeswoman
said.
The region,
located some 1,500 miles northeast of
But
construction has not kept pace, and the lack of adequate housing is one of the
town's most serious problems, Shestakova said.
"Town
authorities are there to make town residents' life comfortable and prosperous,"
Kuzmin, a trained oil engineer who studied business administration in
Officials
who disobey the ban while in the mayor's office "will near the moment of their
departure," the statement said.
Providing
the mayor with wrong or incomplete information, or being late in reporting
important information will be considered an attempt to undermine his work, it
said.
Anna
Borovikova, the mayor's chief of staff, said the novel approach has improved
discipline.
"Before, it
was so easy to say `I don't know.' Now before reporting to the mayor we prepare
several proposals on how one or another problem can be solved," Borovikova
said.
At first it
was hard to remember not to use the banned expressions, she said, and they
"slipped in sometimes."
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