Design at Scale 2021- The Lost Year (Sha Hwang)
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If you are on Slack open up a draft message, if you do not have Slack write a note or an email
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That action can be walking, taking a nap, or answering that email in your inbox
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Hang onto that thought you have
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These might be hard things to be reminded of as we’ve been through a lot this year from Covid to the Texas power outages
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It is hard for us to understand scale (such as thinking billionaires are marginally richer than millionaires)
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We also have short memories (as we can normalize horrible events very quickly)
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We know you care about your craft, recognize the complexity of work you engage in, and in participating the challenges/rewards of design at scale
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Slow layers have all the powers
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Fast gets all attention
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The answer depends on work you choose to take on, and how to choose what work nourishes you
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We have worked on safety net, and supporting unemployment insurance benefits
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We’ve also worked on new initiatives such as expanding paid leaves laws in the states
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The Helsinki Design Lab
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Center for Urban Pedagogy
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Code for America
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And many others
—> We are in dark and tragic times these days, with a systemic government failure that has led to 600,000 dead, a number that feels impossible to understand
—> We are also in an economic crisis, with millions of livelihoods at stake since state unemployment insurance systems can’t meet the demand placed on them
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For example during the Texas power outages, people were melting snow in bathtubs to wash kids, out of fear they would not be able to access running water
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Tech is not the answer or root cause for these problems
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Rather, we are looking for leverage points for high impact
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It was called Form 8 and had been in existence since the 1930s
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Our project included training and gathering feedback, and rolling out the change in workflow and training tutorials
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Trust in a 600,000 person organization improved by 24% in just five years
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We worked with state level efforts to integrate health/economic benefits with Code for America and the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities
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We constantly talk to people who will end up using our service
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We also helped people submit key documents required for eligibility
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We also got approval to roll the program out state wide, and the Vermont legislature approved the changed
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All work will have same look and feel
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This woman was able to produce her own wireframes for what medicare.gov should look like
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We were confident that contractor’s wireframes could translate to people’s lived experience and that it had the right types of validation
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As company founded in a crisis (we were people who knew people), we were beneficiaries of access and privilege
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We’ve grown to 200 people, and have become majority women across the board
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We will hit a milestone of becoming majority BIPOC soon
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We’ve begun an engineering apprenticeship program and it’s rewarding to see the interest and making transition into civic design space
—> We’ve made a dent in the past few years: We’ve saved hundreds of years of time for public and civil servants, and saved hundreds of millions for agencies in operating costs
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It begins with the first Women’s March on Washington in 2017
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DC that day felt like a funeral with everyone mourning or enraged,
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This was how many veterans were waiting to hear their appeals
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Some of you might have lost friends
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Some of you might have got sick with COVID and recovered
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Some of you might have known people who’ve lost loved ones
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Kids who lost a year of education
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Those who died
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Those who lost work
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People with Covid
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If this was a lost year, what did you lose this year for?
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We hope this year will shape you in some way
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That the injustices and failures of institutions that you have witnessed this past year, whether they were shocking or sadly familiar
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I hope they don’t paralyze but animate you
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So much work to build and repair
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I had similar experience working on healthcare.gov, where I learned the statistic that 40,000 people died each year in the US because they were uninsured
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Crude back of the envelope math showed that every 1,000 people who enrolled for ACA program was the equivalent to life saved down the line
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I could not get that number out of my head, watching enrollment numbers appear on the dashboard
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Consensus
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Legacy Modernization
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Designing for acessability
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Designing without resources or mandate
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Approaching critique
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Some people are already working in these spaces
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To others, I say our critical public services are key foundations of our times
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With declining trust in democracy, racial strife, climate volatility, it feels overwhelming to direct our attention towards these issues
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Our institutions must be able to deliver the promises they make for the public
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If we can’t meet these basic needs, we might not deserve to face these other crises
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I want to highlight Sara Schulman’s role on ACT UP, who points out that political progress is won by coalition
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But only because the problems are decades in the making
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Don’t let the fire that brought you here, be the fire that burns you out
Q&A
- How do you NOT get overwhelmed by the scale of the problems you are facing?
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This helps us navigate the obstacles along the way
2. Progress takes work (so true) and change takes time. Given the culture of government, how do you get the right level of commitment from gov leaders to make progress?
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In fact it’s the opposite, people understand the problems and structural incentives and pain points
3. How can the broader design community contribute to your work and redesigning public services?
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Look at layers that resonate with you, and problems to work on