For instance, when the Transportation Bureau wants to build a road and encounters a river, they certainly look for the most cost-effective solution. If they can avoid building a bridge, they will, opting instead to fill the river with soil and construct a dam, laying the road straight across. Even if they have to build a bridge, they'll avoid constructing it too high.
In such cases, the Water Resources Bureau won't agree. Blocking the river affects flood drainage and drought resistance. Who will be responsible if problems arise later? You could say the two departments have this kind of relationship. In Hanwu, it's quite contentious; however, since we're far from Hanwu and both departments are outsiders here, their relationship isn't as tense."
The three listeners were taken aback, hardly believing that upper-level departments could operate this way too.
