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On a weeknight at city hall, residents file into a meeting room to weigh in on a proposed development project. A presentation is delivered. Charts are shown. When the floor opens, a line forms at the microphone. Each speaker is given two or three minutes.
The ritual is familiar across the country, with Mississippi no exception. It is also often described as listening.
When cities face major development proposals, officials promise to “listen to the community.” Public meetings are scheduled. Comment periods are opened. Residents are invited to step forward and share their thoughts.
These steps matter. They signal that public input has a place in civic decision-making. Yet they also raise a deeper question. What does it actually mean to listen?
A recent Mississippi Today story about a proposed data center in Clarksdale describes a familiar process. City leaders are considering rezoning land and discussing the potential economic benefits while also organizing opportunities for residents to weigh in.The intention is clear: before moving forward, officials want to give citizens a chance to be heard.
But hearing the public is not the same as listening.
Communities often mistake the opportunity to speak for the opportunity to influence. Public meetings and comment periods create space for residents to voice their views. That matters. At the same time, having a voice is not the same as having that voice heard.
Graham Bodie Credit: Courtesy photoMany public processes are built around what communication scholar Jim Macnamara calls an “architecture of speaking.” Governments and organizations invest heavily in messaging: presentations, announcements, public meetings and media campaigns. Far less investment goes toward the harder work of listening.
Listening at scale requires systems, resources and a willingness to let public input shape decisions. Without those elements, public engagement can easily become a box-checking exercise that satisfies legal requirements while leaving many residents unsure whether their voices actually matter.
To be fair, city leaders often do provide opportunities for public input. Notices are posted. Meetings are held. Consultants design engagement processes intended to give residents a chance to speak.
The problem is often not the absence of opportunities but the conditions under which they occur.
Public meetings are frequently scheduled at times that are inconvenient for many working families. Parents are trying to get children through homework and bedtime routines. Others may work evening shifts. Some residents simply feel uncomfortable speaking at a microphone in a crowded room.
Even when people do attend, the format rarely encourages careful deliberation. A line forms at the front of the room. Each speaker is given a limited amount of time. The exchange can feel less like a conversation and more like a performance.
The result is predictable. A small number of highly motivated participants show up and speak passionately. Many other residents stay home. Officials leave with comments on record, yet without a clear sense of how widely those views are shared across the community.
At this point, a familiar explanation often surfaces: People simply aren’t interested until a decision affects them directly. Civic engagement, the argument goes, will always be limited until residents become angry enough to show up.
There may be some truth in that observation. Yet it also assumes that the existing channels for participation are well known and widely trusted. In practice, many residents stay quiet for different reasons.
Research suggests that people often remain silent not because they are apathetic, but because they see little point in speaking up. Some worry about social or professional repercussions in small communities where relationships are close and disagreements can carry consequences. Others believe their comments will not be taken seriously or will have no meaningful influence on the final decision.
When people suspect that nothing will change, silence becomes a rational choice. Fortunately, there are better ways to listen.
Instead of asking residents to come to city hall, communities can bring conversations to the places where people already gather: churches, neighborhood parks, community centers and school gyms. A Saturday afternoon picnic or a discussion after Sunday services may not look like a traditional public hearing, yet these settings often encourage more thoughtful participation.
When conversations take place in familiar spaces, people who might never attend a formal meeting are more likely to join. Smaller group discussions allow residents to ask questions, hear different perspectives and explore trade-offs together.
None of this eliminates disagreement. Nor should it. Major decisions about economic development, land use and infrastructure inevitably involve competing priorities. What better listening can do is improve the quality of the conversation before decisions are finalized.
Data centers, for example, promise significant investment and jobs. At the same time, they raise questions about land use, water and energy consumption, tax incentives and long-term impacts on local communities. These are exactly the kinds of issues that benefit from broad participation and careful discussion. And those deliberations can and should allow for dissent and robust debate.
Public hearings will always have a place in local government. They provide transparency and create an official record of public input. But they should not be mistaken for the entirety of community listening.
Real listening begins earlier. It requires designing processes that make participation realistic for ordinary residents and meaningful for the decisions that follow.
The question facing communities like Clarksdale is not simply whether a particular project should move forward. Cities across Mississippi will continue to face proposals for new industries and large scale investments.
The deeper question is whether we are willing to build something alongside those projects: civic processes that allow residents not only to speak, but to know their voices will actually be heard.
Graham Bodie is a professor of the Department of Media and Communication in the School of Journalism and New Media at the University of Mississippi. When asked what he does for a living he responds, “I teach people to listen.” He does this by publishing, teaching and facilitating workshops that help debunk common myths about what it means to “listen well.”
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