Just Maintaining

David M. Dye
4 min readJul 20, 2023

“Our very idea of productivity is premised on the idea of producing something new, whereas we do not tend to see maintenance and care as productive in the same way.”

— Jenny Odell, How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy

A couple of years ago, the political leaders of the United States were negotiating (which might be a generous characterization) a large infrastructure bill. To generalize, one side took the position that infrastructure includes things like roads, bridges, ports, transit systems, and the electric grid. The other position took a broader approach and included items like health care, technology, job training, and scientific research in their definition of infrastructure. And yes, there’s much more nuance in the arguments from both perspectives, but what’s important here is that there’s even a discussion about infrastructure. Both parties agreed they needed to invest in infrastructure. The questions aren’t “if,” they are “what, where, and how much?”

My question is: Why?

Why did (and do) we need to have a conversation about maintaining our infrastructure? When you build a road, you know it will deteriorate. When you build a bridge, the engineers tell you upfront what the serviceable life of the bridge will be (and there are fun graphs that show the downward curve of the bridge’s reliability over time).

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David M. Dye
David M. Dye

Written by David M. Dye

I work with human-centered leaders to help them get results without sacrificing their humanity. I’m an author, consultant, podcast host, and love to hike.

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