🗣️ RTT‑AGERI — Messaging Guide
Clarity, Calm, and Public Trust
This guide defines how RTT‑AGERI is communicated to city leadership, staff, media, and the public.
Its purpose is to ensure that AGERI is consistently understood as a proactive infrastructure stewardship initiative, not a crisis response or political signal.
1. Messaging Objectives#
RTT‑AGERI messaging is designed to:
- Build understanding without alarm
- Reinforce preparedness over reaction
- Preserve public trust
- Support leadership credibility
- Avoid technical overload
Messaging discipline is treated as a governance responsibility, not a public‑relations afterthought.
2. Core Narrative#
What RTT‑AGERI Is#
RTT‑AGERI is a proactive framework for understanding and modernizing above‑ground electrical infrastructure before failures occur.
It helps cities:
- Detect gradual infrastructure stress
- Plan upgrades deliberately
- Reduce emergency disruptions
- Coordinate across systems
What RTT‑AGERI Is Not#
RTT‑AGERI is not:
- A response to a specific incident
- A declaration of imminent failure
- A technology mandate
- A political or regulatory action
3. Tone Guidelines#
All RTT‑AGERI communications should be:
- Calm — no urgency inflation
- Measured — no speculative claims
- Plain‑spoken — minimal jargon
- Forward‑looking — focused on planning
- Trust‑reinforcing — competence over drama
Avoid language that implies crisis unless one exists.
4. Approved Framing Language#
Preferred Phrases#
- “Proactive infrastructure planning”
- “Early identification of risk”
- “Long‑term modernization”
- “Reducing emergency disruptions”
- “Strengthening system reliability”
- “Planning ahead for climate and growth”
Phrases to Avoid#
- “Imminent failure”
- “Crumbling infrastructure”
- “System collapse”
- “Emergency conditions” (unless factual)
- “Aging time bomb”
5. Audience‑Specific Guidance#
City Leadership#
Emphasize:
- Decision readiness
- Capital alignment
- Reduced surprise risk
- Public trust preservation
City Staff#
Emphasize:
- Support for existing expertise
- Better planning tools
- Fewer emergency escalations
- Clearer priorities
Media#
Emphasize:
- Preparedness
- Transparency
- Long‑term stewardship
- Calm leadership
Avoid technical deep dives unless requested.
Public / Residents#
Emphasize:
- Reliability
- Safety
- Responsible planning
- Clear communication
Avoid internal scoring terminology.
6. Relationship to RTT Facilities#
RTT‑AGERI is communicated as:
- A domain extension of RTT Facilities
- Focused specifically on above‑ground electrical infrastructure
- Integrated with water, transportation, communications, and public buildings
AGERI is never presented as a standalone or isolated effort.
7. Handling Questions About Risk#
When asked about infrastructure risk:
- Acknowledge that all infrastructure ages
- Emphasize early detection and planning
- Avoid speculation about failure timelines
- Reinforce that planning reduces disruption
Example:
“This work helps us plan upgrades before problems become emergencies.”
8. Climate & Resilience Messaging#
Climate impacts are framed as:
- Planning inputs, not political statements
- Stress factors to be managed
- Reasons for long‑term resilience
Avoid framing climate as a justification for urgency or alarm.
9. Consistency & Discipline#
All RTT‑AGERI communications should:
- Align with this guide
- Be reviewed for tone consistency
- Avoid improvisational framing
- Reinforce calm competence
Inconsistent messaging is treated as a trust risk.
10. Canonical Status#
This messaging guide is canonical.
All RTT‑AGERI communications — written or verbal — should align with its principles.