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My dissertation submitted as part of an MSc in Public Administration from the Institute of Local Government at the University of Birmingham. It explores the citizen-state relationship and questions whether it is changing in response to the emergence of citizen produced websites. As the internet has matured, core characteristics of collaboration, transparency and flexibility have emerged. It is the contention of this dissertation that these changes have implications for the relationship between the public sector and private citizens. It considers the concepts of democracy, the provision of public goods and services and the cultures of the internet. The research is based on four case studies of citizen produced websites namely FixMyStreet.com, BCCDIY.com, OpenlyLocal.com and ArmchairAuditor.co.uk. Complementing these sites is consultation conducted with the residents of Hull that identified their attitudes towards the digital sphere. The dissertation finds that these websites are not being produced everywhere but argues that there is national resonance to what has happened already and concludes that they evidence a change in the relationship between citizen and state. It is the contention of this work that these websites are the embodiment of the coalition's ideal for Big Society that sees active citizens accepting the responsibility for local issues. The success, or otherwise, of this approach will depend on whether the public sector is willing to accept the mantle of leadership and do what is necessary by publishing data by default, engaging with concerned citizens and embracing the innovative approaches of the internet.
Citation preview
Doing I.T. Ourselves:
Citizen-produced websites and their relationship to public services
Benjamin Welby
M.Sc. Public Administration
2010
Institute of Local Government Studies, School of Government and Society
University of Birmingham
Date of Submission: 1st September 2010 Wordcount: 15,309
Page | ii
Abstract This dissertation explores the citizen-state relationship and questions whether it is changing in
response to the emergence of citizen produced websites. As the internet has matured, core characteristics
of collaboration, transparency and flexibility have emerged. It is the contention of this dissertation that
these changes have implications for the relationship between the public sector and private citizens. It
considers the concepts of democracy, the provision of public goods and services and the cultures of the
internet. The research is based on four case studies of citizen produced websites namely FixMyStreet.com,
BCCDIY.com, OpenlyLocal.com and ArmchairAuditor.co.uk. Complementing these sites is consultation
conducted with the residents of Hull that identified their attitudes towards the digital sphere. The
dissertation finds that these websites are not being produced everywhere but argues that there is national
resonance to what has happened already and concludes that they evidence a change in the relationship
between citizen and state. It is the contention of this work that these websites are the embodiment of the
coalition's ideal for Big Society that sees active citizens accepting the responsibility for local issues. The
success, or otherwise, of this approach will depend on whether the public sector is willing to accept the
mantle of leadership and do what is necessary by publishing data by default, engaging with concerned
citizens and embracing the innovative approaches of the internet.
Page | iii
Acknowledgements My thanks go to the people behind FixMyStreet.com, BCCDIY.com, OpenlyLocal.com and Armchair
Auditor as well as all those who completed the survey into web attitudes. Special thanks also go to Hull City
Council for providing me with access to the data and giving me the opportunity to study this MSc in Public
Administration.
I am grateful to the various people from different public sector organisations that I spent pockets of
time with at Priorsfield for sharing their experiences and providing stimulating debate. I would also like to
thank the academic staff at the Institute of Local Government Studies and my supervisor Dr John Raine.
Over the two years of working with Hull City Council I have been exposed to different parts of the
organisation and seen how the competing complexities of national and local government tie together. This
dissertation is the product of those experiences within the Schools’ Finance, Streetscene Performance, Web
Steering and Private Housing teams.
The author would like to thank all those concerned individuals who are going out of their way to
challenge the public sector and encourage those of us who are paid out of public funds to achieve greater
things at work. Twitter has connected me with a geographically disparate community of public servants and
private citizens who aren’t content to maintain the status quo. They are an inspiration and their authorities
are lucky to have them either behind the scenes, or challenging from the open.
My biggest thanks goes to Christine, my wife, it is not exaggerating to say that without her this
dissertation would never have been finished!
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Contents Abstract .............................................................................................................................................................. ii
Preface/Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................................. iii
Contents ............................................................................................................................................................ iv
List of Tables ....................................................................................................................................................... v
List of Illustrations ............................................................................................................................................. vi
1. Introduction & Literature Review................................................................................................................. 1
1.1. The nature of democracy .................................................................................................................. 2
1.2. Providing public services ................................................................................................................... 5
1.3. Cultures of the internet ..................................................................................................................... 7
1.4. Conclusion ......................................................................................................................................... 9
2. Method & Methodology............................................................................................................................. 10
2.1. Rationale and Approach .................................................................................................................. 10
2.2. Strengths & Weaknesses ................................................................................................................. 14
2.3. Ethical Issues .................................................................................................................................... 15
2.4. Conclusion ....................................................................................................................................... 15
3. Findings and Analysis.................................................................................................................................. 16
3.1. FixMyStreet.com.............................................................................................................................. 16
3.2. BCCDIY.com ..................................................................................................................................... 20
3.3. OpenlyLocal.com ............................................................................................................................. 24
3.4. ArmchairAuditor.co.uk .................................................................................................................... 28
3.5. Hull's Web Survey ............................................................................................................................ 32
3.6. Conclusion ....................................................................................................................................... 40
4. Conclusion & Recommendations ............................................................................................................... 41
4.1. Conclusion ....................................................................................................................................... 41
4.2. Recommendations, or 'what does this mean for service delivery?' ............................................... 45
4.3. Further Research ............................................................................................................................. 46
Bibliography ..................................................................................................................................................... 48
Appendices ...................................................................................................................................................... 54
Appendix 1: Web Survey ............................................................................................................................ 54
Appendix 2: Telephone Survey .................................................................................................................. 54
Appendix 3: Face to Face Survey ............................................................................................................... 54
Appendix 4: Survey Data ............................................................................................................................ 54
List of Tables Figure 1: Definitions of Democracy (adapted from Hendriks 2010, p. 22) ....................................................... 3
Figure 2: Models of democracy (Hendriks, 2010, pp. 2-28) .............................................................................. 4
Figure 3: The rise of governing by netowrk (Goldsmith, 2000, p . 20) ............................................................. 6
Figure 4: Total survey responses ..................................................................................................................... 13
Figure 5: Average Age ...................................................................................................................................... 32
Figure 6: Why didn’t you use hullcc.gov.uk? ................................................................................................... 33
Figure 7: What is your preferred means of contacting the council? ............................................................... 34
Figure 8: What kind of internet user are you? ................................................................................................ 34
Figure 9: What was the main purpose of your visit? ....................................................................................... 35
Figure 10: What service area were you interested in? ................................................................................... 36
Figure 12: Summary of hullcc.gov.uk being rated from very dissatisfied to very satisfied ............................. 36
Figure 11: How did you find the process of obtaining that information? ....................................................... 36
Figure 13: Which of these areas would you like to see the council develop or improve? .............................. 37
Figure 14: Usage of social media tools ............................................................................................................ 38
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List of Illustrations Illustration 1: FixMyStreet.com ....................................................................................................................... 16
Illustration 2: BCCDIY.com ............................................................................................................................... 20
Illustration 3: OpenlyLocal.com ....................................................................................................................... 24
Illustration 4 ArmchairAuditor.com ................................................................................................................. 28
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1. Introduction & Literature Review In recent years there have been numerous websites designed to deliver or augment public services.
These sites have occasionally been prompted by dissatisfaction with existing services and sometimes they
have come from a desire to improve access to democracy but in the majority of cases they have been
developed to support the public sector, not to attack it. These sites question whether online service should
be entirely the responsibility of 'the state' and attempts to draw out the lessons for local authorities in how
they approach, and embrace, those concerned citizens with the requisite skills to do it themselves.
Having worked in a number of areas directly affected by these websites the issue of how local
authorities respond to what they cannot control has inspired this work. Over the last 18 months it has
become clear that the potential exists for local authorities to save significant money by using the internet
effectively. What these sites suggest is that the burden of developing those channels does not need to be
met internally. However, whether such expertise is available across the country is questionable. In order to
test the hypothesis that 'citizen produced websites are increasingly important to public service provision and
are consequently reshaping the relationship between citizen and state' this dissertation considers four case
studies and the attitudes of residents in Hull.
The dissertation begins with a literature review that considers the theoretical and conceptual
context for this debate. It distils discussions about the nature of democracy, considers the nature of public
service delivery and then addresses the role of the internet and the cultures it promotes. Following an
explanation of the methodological approach and a discussion of the quality, and limitations, of the research
the findings are presented. The case studies of FixMyStreet.com, BCCDIY.com, OpenlyLocal.com and
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk are complemented by quantitative and qualitative research completed in Hull
providing the basis for subsequent analysis. Conclusions on this research, the recommendations for local
authorities and the options for further study bring the dissertation to its completion.
This is a dissertation that does not seek to consider the impact of the internet and technology on
democracy. It does not seek to examine whether the 2010 election was the first internet election as it was
claimed in the build up. It does not look to test the emerging model of Big Society and critique its potential
for delivering services and protecting the vulnerable. This dissertation considers the current position of
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citizen-led websites in the British landscape by focusing on four particular examples of this trend. It asks
what those websites mean for the attitudes of local authorities towards the public as providers, not just
customers and it tests the implications of those ideas with primary research completed with residents of
Hull. At its heart is the question – what does the fact that ordinary people are making unsolicited websites
that deliver services mean for the relationship between citizen and state?
This dissertation is concerned with the relationship between the public and their services and the
implication of citizen-produced, web-based activity. These ideas flow out of a wider discussion on the
nature of democracy, the provision of public goods and services and the culture of the internet. As a result,
this literature review provides a theoretical and conceptual background to the case studies examined in this
work.
1.1. The nature of democracy Britain is a democratic monarchy. Her Majesty Elizabeth I is our head of state but the nation is
governed by members elected as representatives for their constituents using a first past the post system. At
a local level a similar system exists for the election of councillors. This means we have limited power and
influence over daily decision making; our engagement with democracy is indirect. However, such a system
would not meet with approval from some of those who have attempted to define democracy. Figure 1
demonstrates that what democracy actually means is open to debate.
Lane & Ersson (2003, p. 3) A political regime where the will of the people ex ante becomes the law of the
country (legal order) ex post
Beetham (1994, p. 28) A political concept, concerning the collectively binding decisions about the rules and
policies of a group, association or society (...) embracing the related principles of
popular control and political equality
Hadenius (1992, p. 2) A political system in which ‘public policy is to be governed by the freely expressed will
of the people whereby all individuals are to be treated as equals’
Popper (1945, p. 69) A type of government in which ‘the social institutions provide means by which the
rulers may be dismissed by the ruled’
Dahl (2000, p. 37-38) A constitution in conformity with one elementary principle, ‘that all the members are
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to be treated as if they were equally qualified to participate in the process of making
decisions about the policies the association will pursue’
Schumpeter (1943, p. 269) That institutional arrangement for arriving at political decisions in which individuals
acquire the power to decide by means of a competitive struggle for the people's vote
Goodin (2003, p. 1) A matter of making social outcomes systematically responsive to the settled
preferences of all involved parties
Finer (1999, p. 1568) A state where political decisions are taken by and with the consent, or the active
participation even, of the majority of the People
Lincoln (1863) Government of the people, by the people, for the people
Churchill (1947) No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise…democracy is the worst form
of government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time
Figure 1: Definitions of Democracy (adapted from Hendriks 2010, p. 22)
In the 2010 general election the outcome was not decisive despite a 4% increase in the turnout to
65.1% (BBC, 2010b). The Liberal Democrats took 23% of the vote but only 57 seats whilst Labour, who
polled 29%, had 258 leaving the Conservatives with 307 seats on the strength of 36.1% of the vote (Ibid).
The first coalition government since World War Two, between Conservatives and Liberal Democrats,
entered government on the strength of 59% of votes cast; however, those 17.5 million votes only represent
an electoral mandate from 39% of the country1. This result came against the backdrop of campaigns against
a ‘broken voting system’ and renewed calls for Proportional Representation (38 Degrees, 2010; Take Back
Parliament, 2010; Vote For A Change, 2010).
Such questions are not new. In 1774, fifty-eight years before the 1832 Reform Act, Edmund Burke
formulated two models of representative democracy: delegate and trustee. The delegate model of
democracy is closer to an understanding of direct democracy. In this model those who are elected make
decisions on behalf of the public, as their delegate rather than for them as someone with more knowledge.
They do not have the autonomy to act out their own ideas, theirs is a power delegated from the public who
1 The total Conservative and Liberal Democrat vote was 17,563,328 of a total vote of 29,691,380. This represented a
65.1% turnout. The total electorate eligible to vote in the 2010 general election was 45,608,879. This percentage is obtained by dividing the total Conservative and Liberal Democrat vote by the total electorate and multiplying by 100.
Page | 4
are not themselves in a position to govern. In the trustee model the responsibility of governance is placed
in the hands of an elected ‘trustee’ and requires them to use their personal judgement to act in the best
interests of the community even if that means ignoring the wishes of their electors. After winning the
election Burke declared that ‘your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgement; and he
betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion’ (Burke, 1906). He was not returned when
the people of Bristol next visited the ballot box and this indirect, trustee, model remains central to British
politics.
Kemp (1943) and Lucas (1976) have argued that representative government was the most viable
option available with participation in the democratic process being about wider discussion and debate, not
the narrow focus on Westminster. Haskell (2001) has developed those ideas and argued that representative
democracy safeguards the nuances of the public interest and ensures due process rather than simple
majority rule. However, recent academic thought and literature stands in support of direct and deliberative
forms of democracy with a number of academics, including Mark Warren (1999a; 1999b; 2002), Iris Young
(2000) and Michael Saward (2000) proposing that limiting direct participation dilutes democracy.
Figure 2: Models of democracy (Hendriks, 2010, pp. 2-28)
Hendriks (2010) proposes a summary of four different forms of government (represented in Figure
1), indicating that Britain is a Pendulum democracy. We have a form of government based on majority rule
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but it is an indirect and representative model where the responsibility for providing public goods and
services has been handed to our elected representatives. This conflicts with recent consultation carried out
by the Department of Communities and Local Government (DCLG, 2009) which states that 'it is fundamental
to local governance that citizens have the right to influence the decisions that affect their lives and their
communities'. Our involvement with the democratic process of decision making may be restricted but
recent studies have suggested that rather than striving for political influence in the main debating hall
people are instead ‘working around the state’ (Laycock, 2004, p. 266). Perhaps this offers an opportunity for
the 'large and untapped pool of people who would like more say in what happens in their area' to exert
their right without requiring political revolution (DCLG, 2009).
1.2. Providing public services In such a situation where councillors and MPs are not directly delivering services how do they
ensure they get what they voted for in Parliament and that we got what we voted for at the ballot box?
How does central government relate to the local and how do we, as citizens, relate to them both? In
analysing these relationships the principal-agent model offers a tool for understanding the dynamics of
trust and accountability. According to Lane (2000, p. 132) the theory applies to ‘human interaction
that…*involves+…an agreement between at least two persons according to which one (the agent) is
instructed to take action on behalf of another (the principal)’ and places the relationship within government
by arguing that ‘government is the principal and the bureau chiefs…the agents’.
Although elected members govern through bureau chiefs they do so because of the power
delegated to them at the ballot box by the electorate. Consequently local government activity becomes an
agent of twin principals: not only centrally elected representatives but Mr and Mrs Griffiths of Starkey
Crescent as well. Williams and Giardina (1993, p. 161) suggest that this means
‘the decision-making process can be described as a network of principal-agent relations: electorate/elected public officials, elected public officials/bureaucracy’.
This produces ‘an exchange agreement where both governors and the governed exchange part of their
power but one in which both parties need the other…*ensuring government carries its function+…on
condition that powers are not exceeded and that the agent is accountable’ (Hughes, 1998, p. 230).
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Over time different approaches have been taken to ensure that the agent produces what the
principal wants: fair and equitable treatment of all. The idea of Traditional Public Administration (TPA),
based on the Weberian principles of the bureau, has given way to New Public Management (NPM). And
whilst Olsen (2006), Schofield (2001) and Du Gay (2000) reject the complete dismissal of the ideals
underpinning TPA, NPM is seen to completely discredit what has gone before (Hughes 2003). The
subsequent impact of Modernising Government (Cabinet Office, 1999) was to cement existing ideas of
outsourcing and partnership working that had been a feature of John Major's government and develop
them further into ideas of network governance (Bovaird, 2009 (February lectures), Goldsmith & Eggers,
2004).
Figure 3 demonstrates a comparison of these models with the rigid, hierarchical model of TPA giving
way to greater public-private collaboration and, as capabilities to manage networks increased, to deliver the
ideal of 'joined-up government' through more effective partnership working and, ultimately, ideas of co-
production (Hajer & Wagenaar, 2003; Goldsmith & Eggers, 2004; Bovaird, 2007).
Figure 3: The rise of governing by netowrk (Goldsmith, 2000, p . 20)
The debate over network governance and co-production has looked at how formal public sector
agencies would work together to solve wicked issues (Agranoff, 2007). However, this has sometimes
bypassed the public as a potential network, strengthening the divide between public sector and private
citizen.
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1.3. Cultures of the internet This dissertation presents case studies of situations where the 'principal' has found themselves
wanting greater participation in the delivery of goods and services. This has not been in a formal, electoral
way but as an extension of an online culture where people pool skills, experience and resources in a
completely natural and relational way. 70% of UK households have access to the internet, two thirds of the
country are engaged in 'social computing' and 44.2% of the population have active user accounts on
Facebook (Office for National Statistics, 2009; Li & Bernoff, 2008; eMarketer, 2010).
Where the internet goes next is providing significant food for thought. For some, the internet has
been blown out of all proportion; it is simply a tool that lets us do what we did slightly better and has no
greater significance. Others argue that the real impact of the internet is yet to be felt and it will take some
time before it is second nature for the majority of people (Edgerton, 2008). Keen (2008) and Carr (2008)
suggest that it is having a significant but negative influence on the way we discern truth. They contend that
expertise has been displaced by a wall of amateur noise. The fourth school celebrates the rise of the
amateur and is entirely positive about the internet. In bringing more diversity and choice as consumers or
providing new and interesting models of community and collaboration the future of the internet is bright
and entirely positive (Anderson, 2007; Shirky, 2008; Benkler, 2006). Finally there are those who think that
the open, collaborative web has been a good thing but it is a passing phase. Eventually, Zittrain (2009)
argues, we will need the corporations the internet has rejected to step in and retake control.
If the open, collaborative web is only a passing phase it is certainly having a significant impact on
contemporary life. The internet has changed the way we access and acquire knowledge. News footage
travels around the globe in seconds changing the focus of both politics and society. We can pay our bills and
make our complaints virtually and in real time across a myriad of different websites. But arguably the most
significant impact has been on the blurring of the line between public and private in how we live our lives.
Every day millions of people share the banal, and the poignant; the exciting and the mundane; the real and
the exaggerated through a host of digital networks and communication channels. However, not everybody
is producing or interacting with content but many more are consuming it. Howe (2008) credits Bradley
Horowitz of Yahoo with identifying the 1:10:89 principle of online activity which suggests that in every
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hundred people one will create something, ten interact with that new creation and the remaining 89 merely
consume it (Howe, 2008).
Leadbeater (2009) refers to our world as ‘web-infected’ by combined product of peasant, academic,
hippie and geek resulting in what he calls 'we-think'. Such a trend, Lessig (2008) argues, represents a
conflict between two cultures. He suggests that the historic, and prevalent ‘read-only’ culture in which
people consume what they were given is being overtaken by a ‘read-write’ idea where people are not
simply consumers but producers with value in their shared creativity (Ibid, p. 28-29). This is a challenge to
the business world, and commercial copyright in particular with the suggestion being that the rise of the
amateur alongside technological transformation has enabled faster, cheaper, smarter and easier means of
working (Lowe, 2008). Li and Bernoff identify this as the groundswell, ‘a social trend in which people use
technologies to get the things they need from each other, rather than from traditional institutions like
corporations’ (2008, p. 9).
When seen in the light of our earlier discussions about democratic participation and the provision
of public goods and services these internet cultures of collaboration and openness question the classic
understanding of citizenship and the relationship between principal and agent. Clay Shirky’s Here Comes
Everybody (2008) discusses in depth the opportunities that exist for people to pick up and run with new
ideas and forms of participation. He suggests that ‘the scope of work that can be done by noninstitutional
groups is a profound challenge to the status quo’ (Ibid, p.48). In its use of open source software and greater
interactivity with the American people the Obama administration has begun to develop this idea of 'Gov2.0'
(Lathrop & Ruma, 2010; Obama, 2009). In Britain, the first 100 days of the coalition built on the outgoing
government's commitment to publishing open government data in support of transparency and to
stimulate innovation (Cameron 2010; Brown 2009). Furthermore, our new government have used crowd
sourcing in support of the Big Society vision that the public should be able to contribute money saving ideas
and reshape legislation (Her Majesty's Treasury, 2010; Telegraph, 2010a; Telegraph, 2010b; Her Majesty's
Government, 2010).
Rather than NPM approaches to government, or institutionalised control over what is heard and
consumed, the open source, collaborative and crowd sourced cultures of the internet offer something
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different. It is argued that this leads to the co-production of services outside the state's leadership and
control requiring a new paradigm in approaching public services; a communicative approach under the
moniker 'We-Gov'. (McCormick, 2010; Campbell, Goldsmith & Tumin, 2010; Boland & Coleman, 2008).
1.4. Conclusion This literature review has considered the existing structures of governance and the way in which the
delivery and management of public services has altered as a result of changing ideologies before addressing
the ‘web-infected’ culture in which we live and noting the potential for this to affect current models of
service delivery.
The historic idea that political democracy means an arms-length principal-agent relationship rooted
in the ideal of public service having responsible for service delivery is coming under scrutiny. Some modern
Britons want something more. Where once they may have felt powerless to do anything about the
prevailing political norms the twenty-first century citizen is able to use the internet to alter the shape of
public service delivery. Following the 1:10:89 principle we must recognise that not everyone will be
motivated, or skilled enough, to design and publish their own website but, if somebody else did, it would be
readily available to other interested parties.
The nature of this discussion is not one of politics but it is heavily informed by them. The electoral
pressure over our political structures has resulted in plans to hold a referendum in 2011 (Gay &
Woodhouse, 2010). At the same time, the rhetoric of Big Society has given fresh impetus to the idea of co-
production whilst the commitment to publishing open data confirms its significance to the coalition
government. The distinctions between citizen and state are being reconfigured and irrespective of the
referendum, there are increasing opportunities for concerned citizens to make a point and influence or
deliver services themselves providing a model of democratic participation that is more than what happens
at the ballot box. Through the use of case studies and research from the people of Hull we will explore
these developments and attempt to answer the following research questions:
How have citizens produced websites that provide public services?
What do these sites mean in the context of the debate about democracy?
Are citizen produced websites important to the future of public service delivery?
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2. Method & Methodology
2.1. Rationale and Approach My working environment has brought me into contact with citizen produced websites and exposed
me to the internal debate over what they mean for the future of public service delivery. This dissertation
draws on personal experiences from my time in Hull. Consequently it is important to identify that I am not
an entirely dispassionate observer. As a 'digital native' I have great belief in the potential contained within
the internet for more meaningful engagement and significantly reduced costs. Therefore, my role as
'research instrument' is configured by my ontological, epistemological and axiological ideologies (Piantanida
& Garman, 2009; Patton, 2002). Without them I would not have been motivated to consider this topic.
The goal of research is twofold. On one hand it exists to uncover previously unknown ideas, beliefs
and facts whilst on the other its use lies in testing existing hypotheses. In order to explore the research
questions identified in the Introduction a multi-method approach to research has been taken: qualitative
case studies are used alongside a cross-sectional quantitative survey. In this way data from multiple
methods can be used, providing a way of attacking 'a research problem with an arsenal of methods that
have non overlapping weakness in addition to their complementary strength' (Brewer & Hunter, 2005, p.4).
In order to conduct this research it was important to design a stategy that would 'obtain answers to
research questions' (Burnham, Gilland, Lutz, Grant & Layton-Henry, 2004, p. 30). The first stage of designing
such a strategy was a literature review that provided a theoretical and conceptual foundation for
understanding the issues of participation and democracy, public service delivery and the emergent culture
of the internet.
Coupled to this was unstructured exposure to the local government digital community. Twitter
provided a mechanism for building a network of officers working in communications and engagement as
well as those involved in the design and production of the four websites in question. This has allowed
insight into long running but sporadic discussions. This was supported by attendance at unconferences such
as LocalGovCamp Yorkshire & Humber or LocalGovCamp Lincoln which afforded opportunities for face to
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face and round table discussion2. Throughout the research period the use of social bookmarking and a
private blog have enabled these contributions to the debate to be recorded alongside my developing
thoughts and ideas on an ad hoc basis (Borg, 2001; Janesick, 1999).
2.1.1. Case Study
The four websites that have been chosen represent a period of three years in the history of online
civic engagement by those outside government and their selection was informed by the findings of the
earlier research phase. Initially the examples of FixMyStreet.com and BCCDIY.com were identified as
suitable examples for consideration. However, as the research continued it seemed logical to include the
experience and contribution of OpenlyLocal.com and, most recently, ArmchairAuditor.co.uk in order to
create a broad-based sample that allows for contrast and comparison between cases.
All qualitative research depends on whether the ‘findings are grounded in empirical material’ (Flick,
2009, p. 15). The case studies have been researched empirically using observation of the sites as they have
developed. This has provided an understanding of the circumstances around their creation and their
interaction with existing state led activity. Having first been alerted to the impact of FixMyStreet.com on
service delivery in April 2009 I was aware of the debate and, 'on the spot' as different ideas were
formulated and sites were launched providing real-time overview to developments in the field.
The websites are different examples of citizen-led activity in areas that in theory were the
responsibility of the state to provide. They have been done unbidden, at no cost to the public purse. In
examining these case studies it is hoped to shed some light on all the research questions established earlier.
In order to do so the following questions were asked of each site to provide a background for analysis:
What is the site and what is its purpose?
Who set it up and why did they do that?
How does the site work in practice?
2 An unconference is a participant led gathering on a theme or purpose. It differs from the classic conference model in
that they are run for free, the agenda and schedule is set in the morning by the attendees and use round table discussion rather than lecture style sessions.
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2.1.2. Survey
As part of the process to improve the council's web presence Hull City Council measured the online
attitudes and browsing habits of Hull's residents. This allowed me to consider these issues on wider scale
than a restricted sample might have achieved. The survey provided access to a large urban environment
with a history of deprivation that regularly ranks highly in the wrong league tables. However, it is also home
to a technologically advanced telecommunications infrastructure and a highly active digital community
which has spawned the successful digital conference Hull Digital Live. Against this backdrop Hullcc.gov.uk
was recently awarded only 2 stars (out of a possible 4) in the annual review of council websites, a reduction
in its rating in previous years (SOCITM, 2010).
This quantitative research adopted a cross-sectional approach by providing a snap shot of the city's
attitudes. Although the council had conducted previous consultation it was not effective as a tool of
comparison as the research which was carried out was limited in scope and could not constitute a
longitudinal study as there was no attempt to track individuals over time. Furthermore, because the council
was particularly interested in the attitudes of those who did not access the internet such as the elderly, or
those from a poorer social background it meant the survey was conducted over the telephone and face to
face as well as through hullcc.gov.uk meaning three variants of the survey were used, a further departure
from the previous research.
The questionnaire asked a selection of up to 31 questions that were dependent on the answers
respondents gave and whether they were accessing it via hullcc.gov.uk, over the telephone or face to face.
Paper versions of these surveys are available as Appendices 1 to 3. Although I set the questions the final
surveys were designed in light of pilot work with a selection of staff within the Customer Service,
Communication & Marketing, Museum Education, Streetscene, ICT and Policy & Strategy service areas. The
questionnaire used a combination of closed and open questions as well as Likert scales, multiple choice and
single option questions. The raw quantitative data is included at Appendix 4. The free text responses
provided useful information to the council but the quantity of information they contained has meant
choosing to focus only on the quantitative data..
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The web survey was added to hullcc.gov.uk and in this way was made available to all visitors of
hullcc.gov.uk irrespective of where they lived and, because we could not predict who would visit the
website we made the decision to give 50% of visitors in a particular time period the opportunity to
complete it by appearing in an in-page pop-up that asked visitors if they wanted to complete the survey. If
they said yes it would take them to the survey after completing their visit if no then the survey would never
present itself to that visitor again.
Kingston Communications handled the telephone survey as part of the council's call centre
contract. Callers to the city's 300300 helpline were asked if they would be happy to complete a survey and,
if so, they received a phone call later that day to follow their enquiry up. The sampling within this part of
the survey was therefore self-selecting. In the first place it was restricted only to those who contacted the
council via the telephone and, of those, only members of the public who expressed a desire to be included.
To complete the offline survey the council commissioned Force 7 on the basis that they would
target make use of the city's Customer Service Centres to ensure that the views of those without access to
the internet provided balance to the responses gathered elsewhere.
Figure 4: Total survey responses
The surveys ran concurrently with Kingston Communications and Force 7 instructed to poll a
minimum of 500 respondents to provide an offline sample size of 1,000. The web survey targeted 1,000
responses to provide a total sample of 2,000. After running for 4 weeks there had been a total of 1,847
responses. As can be seen from Figure 4, 938 responded via the website and a combined total of 909 from
the offline surveys. Although Force 7 failed to reach their target there was a good balance between those
399
938
510
Offline Online
0
200
400
600
800
1000
Face to Face Web Telephone
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who accessed the survey online, and those who accessed it though offline channels allowing Hull City
Council to bring the consultation period to a close.
2.2. Strengths & Weaknesses No research can ever lay claim to perfection. And whilst it is good to acknowledge the strengths of
the research contained in this dissertation it is important to reflect critically on the processes used and the
activity recorded.
In terms of the consultation in Hull there are inevitably certain limitations in the data. By choosing
to use only the quantitative data and discount the qualitative responses I have purposefully limited the data
being considered in this research. The concerns and issues contained within them had operational
resonance and the dissertation is not negatively impacted by their exclusion. Neuman, (2006, p. 222)
suggests that the researcher can never know ‘whether the cases selected represent the population’ and
with the data collection outsourced to Force 7 and Kingston Communications this adds a further variable
into both the sampling process and the execution of the survey. However, by targeting those who have
visited the website, contacted the council via the telephone or accessed services offline it is hoped that this
purposive sampling has targeted knowledgeable individuals by identifying those relevant to the research
topic rather than necessarily being representative of the population (Flick, 2009). Arguably the size of the
sample was a strength of this research as it offset these limitations in the data and provided a wide ranging
picture of use across the city, both genders, all ages and different access channels.
The empirical research into the website case studies found its strength in the public way in which
those sites were birthed and the access to the discussions which took place via social networks, forums and
blogs. Moreover, because these phenomena took place outside of Hull and away from my working
environment it was possible to be a detached observer rather than an involved public servant. Nor was I
involved as a private citizen as I live outside Hull meaning that my expectations of a council could remain
separate from my working environment. This allowed me to appreciate the nuances of the situation from
within an organisation and lend balance to my personal perspective.
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However, this meant that I was not party to the discussions behind the scenes in those locations
where citizen produced websites had local significance such as Birmingham. Moreover, despite my hoping
to have structured discussions it proved impossible to do so with either stakeholders from those authorities
or the individuals who had contributed to the design and delivery of their websites.
2.3. Ethical Issues The research contained within this dissertation does not touch on sensitive ethical issues. However,
in approaching the consultation Hull City Council were legally obliged to comply with data protection
legislation. Consequently, all personal data relating to those who conducted the survey was separated from
their responses. Contact details have been securely stored and used only to follow up those who expressed
a desire for further involvement in the council's web design project.
2.4. Conclusion This research is not perfect. It would have benefited from greater access to the narrative, ideas and
opinions as understood by individuals involved with the citizen produced websites contained within this
dissertation whichever side of the public sector/private citizen axis they represent. Nevertheless, it is
believed that the overview provided by four separate studies is more important than the personal
motivations or the characters involved. As a result this research treats the sites and what they represent as
important rather than the developers behind them, save to recognise that they are produced by
independent, concerned amateurs rather than public sector employees.
Furthermore, those websites which demonstrate the themes and allow the issue to be explored do
not stand alone. By using quantitative research produced through consultation with residents of Hull we can
test the emerging ideas in one of the largest urban environments in the country. This will provide an
opportunity for us to weigh the impact of the case studies and draw conclusions about the value of citizen
produced websites, the implications they have for the relationship between citizen and state and identify
opportunities for future research and discussion.
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3. Findings and Analysis As explored in the Methodology this dissertation is based on a case study of four separate websites
combined with some quantitative research conducted in Hull. This chapter will present the findings of that
research and analyse each part of the research individually. Each website will be considered using three
separate questions as well as a concluding analysis. Although the raw data from Hull is included at Appendix
5, this study will consider a selection of relevant questions only.
3.1. FixMyStreet.com
Illustration 1: FixMyStreet.com
3.1.1. What is the site and what is its purpose?
FixMyStreet.com, launched in early February 2007, helps people to report, view and discuss local
problems to their local council by simply locating them on a map irrespective of where they are in the
country. Those problems range from potholes in the road to graffiti to broken street lights and once the
location has been selected a resident can add details of the problem and an optional photograph.
These reports are posted publicly and with the ability for people to leave their own updates. This is
linked to a mechanism to provide alerts when problems are reported within a given radius or an entire area.
As a result residents can browse all the problems in their area and contribute updates to them and avoid
duplicating the same reports. It also means that the responding council is able to post further information
to the individual who reported the issue but also to any other interested residents. However, if the council
does not respond or the problem is not dealt with then these problems will continue to be marked as
'unfixed' or status unknown.
3.1.2. Who set it up and why did they do that?
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FixMyStreet.com was developed by the charity MySociety.org. Their primary mission is 'to build
Internet projects which give people simple, tangible benefits in the civic and community aspects of their
lives' (FixMyStreet.com). Examples of their other work include TheyWorkForYou.com a site to track the
activity of your local MP and WhatDoTheyKnow.com a public portal for making and publishing Freedom of
Information Requests.
The site came about through frustration with the existing provision available through council
websites. Often the reporting mechanisms were hidden away and difficult to use. Furthermore, in order to
report a problem you'd need to know the council which was responsible for that location. Instead,
supported by the Young Foundation and funded by the Department for Constitutional Affairs Innovations
Fund, this project has produced a single website that can be used by anybody, anywhere in Great Britain so
long as they can find the problem on a map.
3.1.3. How does the site work in practice?
In the first six months the site received 3,000 reports and as of August 29th 2010 a total of 119,000
reports had been logged. However, only 35% are marked as fixed which suggests that councils are not
responding to the issues being raised (BBC, 2009a). However, of the 77,000 with an unknown status, 68,000
are categorised as 'old problems' that may have been resolved a long time ago without anyone providing an
update. This is one of the biggest challenges to FixMyStreet.com as the status of a problem relies on either
the person who submitted the complaint, or the council, to go back and provide an update. On receipt of a
problem an email is sent to the relevant council but this does not necessarily integrate with the systems
used by the councils. Whilst the council may respond to the report it does not necessarily mean they will
update FixMyStreet.com.
King and Brown (2007) provided a critique of how councils responded to FixMyStreet shortly after
its launch. They found that local government officers were concerned at the duplication of what was
available on their own websites and that they felt it was difficult to manage expectations regarding when a
problem might be resolved. Although FixMyStreet.com offers a council the facility to provide an update to
residents using the comments function a number of councils have noted that this creates an additional
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administrative burden that could be avoided if a resident used their website in the first place (McGuire,
2010).
However, some councils have chosen to explore how they might adopt FixMyStreet.com. In Barnet,
for example, they are running a version that uses the council's template. It can be accessed from the
homepage or directly at http://barnet.fixmystreet.com and provides a dashboard of recent problems
reported, and fixed. During August the council have fixed 56 problems that were reported through the site.
Furthermore, because it covers the country and uses open source technology others have developed
functionality to plug into FixMyStreet.com. A good example is Stuart Harrison, webmaster at Lichfield
District Council, who has built both a mechanism for reporting problems via Twitter (called Fix My Tweet)
and a mobile version of the FixMyStreet.com website. Those tools are not just restricted to his local
residents but, should they wish, have enabled every council to deploy a mobile problem reporting platform.
Other volunteers have produced apps that work with the Iphone and on Android smartphones. Very few, if
any, councils offer such mobile access to problem reporting through their own websites.
3.1.4. Analysis
FixMyStreet.com represents the first example of citizen produced websites considered in this
dissertation. Although it was built using government funds it is now operated independently by
MySociety.org. Arguably it provides a better service to the public than the efforts of local authorities despite
being produced by a civil society organisation. Whilst 50% of problems logged on the site have an unknown
status the example of Barnet suggests that those councils who embrace it can provide a transparent and up
to date snapshot of problems that have been reported.
FixMyStreet.com was designed for local people to easily report problems. It was also built for local
authorities. Not to draw attention to their failings but to simplify the act of reporting problems so that
people might avoid duplication, subscribe to local updates and do it online rather than through costlier
offline access channels. It demonstrates the economies of scale in providing a single national tools for
something common to all councils as well as economies of scope in that any additional functionality can be
accessed by all irrespective of where it was initially developed.
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The success in the approach FixMyStreet.com provides is seen in the fact that it has been adopted
by some councils to act as their mechanism of choice for reporting all problems. It is not a niche pressure
site that can be ignored by councils meaning that those who have developed their own solutions are
considering how it might provide true integration across their operating procedures. This site questions the
ability of councils to provide appropriate online services and some have responded negatively by continuing
to invest in their own solutions. This means that the public sector has continued to invest resources in
solutions that do not provide the joined up, transparent and feature rich approach offered by
FixMyStreet.com.
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3.2. BCCDIY.com
Illustration 2: BCCDIY.com
3.2.1. What is the site and what is its purpose?
BCCDIY.com was launched in September 2009 and describes itself as 'an unofficial website, aimed at
providing a useful service to people in Birmingham based on the contents of the Birmingham City Council
website, combined with other tools and services' (BCCDIY.com). It uses the content found on the official
website but has provided additional functionality such as the addition of local imagery, events and news.
The purpose of BCCDIY.com was to provide a site that was 'easier to navigate, better customisable
depending on the area you live in and more accessible to users with disabilities' (Birmingham Post, 2009a).
The site was built using open source software and its name highlights the adoption of a 'do it yourself'
attitude towards the information it contains. This means that instead of containing 'locked down'
information it embodies the knowledge of city residents who are able to change things that might be
wrong, add additional information or provide useful functionality such as integration with FixMyStreet.com
(Ibid).
3.2.2. Who set it up and why did they do that?
In the summer of 2007 Birmingham City Council announced that they were going to be replacing
their old website. Two years later there was no new website which prompted local resident Josh Hart to find
out what was happening using HelpMeInvestigate.com (HelpMeInvestigate.com, 2009; joshuahart.co.uk,
2009). A freedom of information request was submitted to the council and their response on 31st July 2009
stated that the project had begun in March 2005 with an estimated 7 month duration at a proposed cost of
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£580,000. However, the council's response concluded that the estimated date of delivery was now August
2009 and the estimated cost of the site would now be £2.803m (WhatDoTheyKnow.com, 2009).
This prompted the Tax Payers Alliance to ask ‘why the costs involved have been allowed to escalate
so massively’ (Birmingham Post, 2009b). On September 7th 2009 the new site was launched to widespread
disgust particularly via Twitter (Birmingham Post, 2009a). This prompted Glyn Evans, director of business
transformation to defend the site as being designed for a majority of residents, ‘not the Twitterati'
(BiminghamPost, 2009a).
This only served to agitate Birmingham's 'strong and vocal social/digital media scene' but rather
than continue to engage in fruitless criticism of the council Stef Lewandowski decided that the most
appropriate response was to see whether the people of Birmingham could follow their words with action
and build their own site (steflewandowski.com, 2009).
Within 24 hours he had put something together which provided a solid foundation for further
development that was 'not perfect, but...simple' (Birmingham Post, 2009c). A week later a hack day was
hosted at which sixty or seventy people attended (Eventbrite.com, DIYCouncil.com). Further functionality
was added, and novel ways of gathering the information the council wouldn't provide were used (When’s It
Bin Day?, 2009). After a couple of weeks there was an accessible site that 'didn't do everything, but what it
did do it did quite well' (DIYCouncil.com).
Clearly the driving force behind the project was Stef Lewandowski but it would not have been
possible without the effort put in by the volunteers who attended the hack day and subsequently
contributed to improving and developing the website.
3.2.3. How does the site work in practice?
Since the initial burst of enthusiasm the collaborative, 'do it yourself' approach has not produced
the additional functionality, or the updated content that was believed to be possible. The last recorded
update to the site was on October 16th 2009, four weeks after the site was launched and no money has
been pledged to support the running costs of the site (BCCDIY.com; Pledgie.com). Furthermore, the
collaborative environment for sharing ideas and making suggestions has seen only 3 updates since February
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2010, the most recent of which was June 6th 2010 (BCCDIY.pbworks.com). This is despite simple user tasks
no longer working when you browse around BCCDIY.com.
The new Birmingham City Council website has bedded in and although the city's digital community
remain disappointed at the result of spending almost £3m, volunteers who produced BCCDIY.com have not
provided a serious challenge to the council website. Indeed, the fact that the community based,
collaborative approach was unsustainable supports the investment the council made in the redesign of their
new website. Nevertheless the council commissioned a review into the episode. The 64 page review is fairly
damning about the tools the council bought and the design of the site as well as making no mention of how
the council involved its expert citizens about what they want from their website (Service Birmingham,
2010). BCCDIY resulted from that exclusion.
3.2.4. Analysis
In Birmingham the council spent a lot of money and took a long time to deliver a new
website. In a couple of weeks the local development community produced something that worked and was,
in their opinion, more useable than the official site.
However, since its launch little further effort has been made and, whilst it can be held up as an
example of citizen activity, it is clear that this example of community led citizen production was
unsustainable and did not provide a serious alternative to the council's offering unlike the organisation led
citizen production of FixMyStreet.com.
One analysis of BCCDIY.com would be to dismiss it as being a twenty first century example of writing
an angry letter and to suggest that it was purely done to make a point. The fact that the site was not
updated is therefore predictable: once that point was made, there was no reason to continue developing
the site.
The counter argument to this is found in the words of Stef Lewandowski who saw the production of
the site as more positive than writing angry tweets because it was 'about what we as citizens of a city
expect from our local government through the web' (steflewandowski.com, 2009). Although BCCDIY.com
may be dormant he has shifted his focus to every council site in the country and is attempting to build a
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national community of developers who can experiment and explore different approaches and tools for
supporting and improving council websites at DIYcouncil.com.
The BCCDIY.com case study stands as a lesson to councils that the public has the ability to use the
internet to good effect whether in producing something, connecting with interested individuals or
publicising an embarrassing story. Birmingham's new website remains an overly expensive investment but
whilst cutting spending is important councils need to engage with their expert citizens and ask them to help
design services (Telegraph, 2010c). Perhaps Bristol City Council have taken the experience of Birmingham as
their motivation for investigating ways they might work with the local development community rather than
in isolation from them (Eventbrite.com).
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3.3. OpenlyLocal.com
Illustration 3: OpenlyLocal.com
3.3.1. What is the site and what is its purpose?
Launched in September 2009 with information from 12 councils, OpenlyLocal.com now contains a
directory of 159 councils comprising 9,964 councillors who sit on 5,852 committees and 48,334 committee
meetings. It provides access to 321 hyperlocal sites, an open data scoreboard containing over 270,956
pieces of data and a breakdown of council spending using 148,983 financial transactions.
It has a dual purpose. Firstly, from the perspective of the casual viewer it provides easy to use
access to local democracy offering information about local councillors, subscriptions to updates relating to
them or their committees as well as keyword alerts for particular areas of local concern. Secondly, it
champions the cause of local open government data (countculture.wordpress.com, 2009). OpenlyLocal.com
is at the forefront of the open data agenda. It scrapes content from local authority websites before turning
that rough information into structured data and combining it with other relevant datasets. The finished
article is then made available for reuse in a variety of formats as open and linked data.
3.3.2. Who set it up and why did they do that?
Chris Taggart is an open government and transparency activist who set up OpenlyLocal.com in
September 2009. Having previously worked on Parliamentary data he was keen to explore the possibilities
at a local level where the understanding of democracy is often opaque and access to records limited
(countculture.wordpress.com.2009). He found that accessing a comparable level of information was 'fraught
with difficulties as there is no single source of data' and OpenlyLocal.com is his attempt at solving that
problem (Ibid).
However, his motivation is more than simply aggregating information. He believes that championing
the cause of local data can generate awareness of local issues, encourage community involvement, bring
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shared knowledge, increase efficiency, promote transparency and renew the relationship between local
authorities and the public (Taggart, 2009). Furthermore, he fears that the decline of local media has the
potential to increase the disconnect between the public at their elected representatives at a time where the
tightening of budgets and the potential cutting of services necessitates openness and the involvement of
the community (Ibid).
3.3.3. How does the site work in practice?
OpenlyLocal.com initially contained basic information relating to councillors, committees,
committee membership, and minutes for those committee meetings. In the 12 months since it launched it
has become a local hub of statistics, data and news relating to any given neighbourhood.
It has remained committed to its original aims of providing a platform of open governmental data
that supports and enhances local community action. The site now contains a directory of all the hyperlocal
websites in the country and provides tools to those citizen journalists that enable them to display
OpenlyLocal.com data on their websites.
However, whilst it contains an impressive amount of information the site is still limited in its content
by the way in which local authorities are publishing their information. There are 434 local authorities in the
United Kingdom but OpenlyLocal.com has only been able to collate the information relating to 159 whilst
the site's data scoreboard is only able to list 23 councils as having provided their data under a truly open
license allowing it to be reused as widely as possible. Whilst open government data has increased in
importance in the last twelve months the efforts of OpenlyLocal.com has so far only connected with those
individuals who understand the ideologies and are aware of the emergent trends. Unfortunately a number
of councils continue to see transparent government, freedom of information requests and open data as a
burden rather than a very natural part of local governance.
3.3.4. Analysis
“the raw data should be made available as soon as possible... As a lower priority, nice user interfaces should be made to it - if interested communities outside government have not already done it”
Tim Berners-Lee – Putting Government Data Online (2009)
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Tim Berners-Lee requested that government publish its raw data, and that it do so as quickly as
possible. Whilst the national launch of data.gov.uk, a central repository of government datasets, is worthy
of celebration the progress at local level has been much slower. OpenlyLocal.com has attempted to further
the debate and has at least provided a nice user interface for the data it has obtained. Prior to this site
there was no easy way of comparing structured data from one part of the country with another. However,
the difficulties he has had in obtaining democratic information (only 37% of councils are represented after
12 months) suggests local authorities are performing poorly in helping members of the public to engage
with their elected representatives.
OpenlyLocal.com is more than simply a portal for local democracy. By aggregating information from
a number of sources contextual information about expenditure, crime, health and demography is added to
the details of a councillor. Because the data is completely open it means that the information and tools
available to developers, and novices, is easy to access and publish elsewhere. This is particularly beneficial to
hyperlocal citizen journalists who can ensure their readers are better informed and have greater awareness of
the issues facing their local areas.
Chris Taggart is eager to work with local authorities to improve the way in which they are publishing
and treating raw data. This accounts for the Open Election Project which encouraged all councils to publish
their 2010 local election results in a way that was 'machine-readable' and allow remote indexing and
interrogation. The support for local authorities has continued following the coalition government's
commitment to publishing spending data with OpenlyLocal.com being a source of best practice as well as a
watchdog to ensure councils are not simply paying lip service to their obligations or being exploited by
private sector suppliers (OpenlyLocal.com, 2010; countculture.wordpress.com, 2010).
OpenlyLocal.com was launched at the same time as BCCDIY was being produced in frustration at
Birmingham City Council's failure to involve concerned, expert citizens in ways that could have ensured the
service available to the public met expectations. Where that citizen produced site was attempting to
reinvent an entire council web presence, Chris Taggart's website is a mechanism for aggregating multiple
sources of information to provide a meaningful overview of data relating to a particular locality. Both sites
are attempting to repackage existing council information in ways that are more meaningful and accessible
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to local residents. The fact that this activity was taking place independently of one another in separate parts
of the country is proof that there is definitely an interested community outside government of concerned
citizens willing to invest time and effort into producing useful resources for others.
OpenlyLocal.com is the work of a single activist who believes that there should be greater
transparency to government and easier access to public data but he is approaching the topic with patience
and in a way that provides insights for all those involved with the process whether ordinary resident,
hyperlocal activist, private company or local council.
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3.4. ArmchairAuditor.co.uk
Illustration 4 ArmchairAuditor.com
3.4.1. What is the site and what is its purpose?
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk takes raw financial data published by the Royal Borough of Windsor and
Maidenhead (RBWM) and provides a user friendly interface for people to investigate what their council has
been spending with external suppliers. Currently it covers 115 different services, 1,938 suppliers and 10,439
individual payments.
This means that a visitor can access a high-level view of amounts spent by each service area and the
totals paid to particular suppliers as well as being able to drill down into the detail of an individual payment.
In each occasion there are comment threads allowing for contextual information to be added, questions
asked and opinions shared. Built with open source tools using open data published by RBWM,
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk has been made available to anyone who wishes to take the source code, add their
local data and produce versions for any other councils.
3.4.2. Who set it up and why did they do that?
The man responsible for this citizen produced website is Adrian Short. It is not his first citizen
produced, government focused activity as previously he was responsible for the Mash The State campaign
which encouraged councils to make better use of a technology called RSS to provide remote access to real-
time updates and combine it with the use of QR codes (square barcodes) to add virtual context to physical
objects (MashTheState.org.uk; mashthestate.wordpress.com).
Mash The State represented a challenge to local authorities to improve their own websites and
understand the simplicity of existing web technologies but ArmchairAuditor.co.uk is a completely
independent service produced at the government's behest. Writing at the height of the expenses scandal
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and year before the election David Cameron wrote about his vision of a new politics central to which was
the public scrutiny of data:
'we will extend this principle of transparency to every nook and cranny of politics and public life, because it's one of the quickest and easiest ways to transfer power to the powerless and prevent waste, exploitation and abuse'. (Guardian, 2009)
Following the election the coalition government has moved quickly to put this into action stipulating that all
councils must publish external spending over £500 and inviting us all to be part of 'an army of armchair
auditors' (Pickles, 2010).
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk is motivated by a desire to help people look at the data which has been
released so that they can make their own minds up about what is going on because 'when people are
informed they have more power...[and are]...more involved in democracy [by having] a close idea of what's
going on on a daily basis' (adrianshort.co.uk, 2010).
3.4.3. How does the site work in practice?
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk has a specific focus on providing an overview of data in RBWM but does not
claim to provide an analysis or to draw conclusions about patterns of spending within the authority. It is
currently the only example of this raw data being used by private citizens to build such a tool. However, by
providing a signpost to raw data across the country, and making the source code for the site available
according to open source principles the building blocks are in place for it to be deployed elsewhere.
Supporting innovation in the presentation of data and providing opportunities to the private are
two of the motivations behind the release of open government data. For the residents of RBWM this has
meant they have two tools to help them understand what local spending consists of. The publishing of their
raw data has facilitated the creation of ArmchairAuditor.co.uk but they also present the information using a
commercial product called Spotlight on Spend. The two sites can be compared and contrasted in terms of
the features they provide and the interface they offer but whichever site you prefer the positive reception
of ArmchairAuditor.co.uk has brought it to the attention of local, and national media (adrianshort.co.uk,
2010).
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3.4.4. Analysis
Raw data is overwhelming and 10,000 row spreadsheets are generally only of niche interest.
Likewise there is significant disillusionment with our existing model of politics and the behaviour of those in
power. However, they do not act as a barrier to individual passions about government spending – whether
it's too much in the wrong places, or not enough elsewhere. ArmchairAuditor.co.uk is motivated by a desire
to put useful information into the hands of the public, free from interpretation and without spin.
Sometimes that means entirely innocent items of expenditure suddenly become highly embarrassing when
reduced to a spreadsheet (as in the case of Woking Borough Council and their £18,254 spend on lingerie
which was actually a refund of rates (Get Surrey, 2010)). However, openly commentable, transparent
environment allows for that context to be provided, and offers a challenge to local authorities to increase
the contextual information on what they spend.
Adrian Short suggests that in twelve months more will be known by the public about public
spending than those within government did last year. By giving people tools to 'surf through the froth of
data, make sense of it and get into informed conversations with their neighbours and the people spending
the money you're creating a genuine power shift from the government to the governed' (adrianshort.co.uk,
2010 – Radio 4 interview article). It is hard to argue with the analysis that this represents a significant
change in the dynamic between the principal and the agent.
RBWM published their data and a member of the public chose to build a collaborative tool to
present that data and facilitate local residents in evaluating, auditing and challenging the council on its
external expenditure. Although ArmchairAuditor.co.uk complements the commercial product purchased by
the council it is questionable whether Spotlight on Spend provides additional functionality that made the
investment worthwhile. Because of this it is possible that as more councils publish raw data they will adopt
the Armchair Auditor platform as their free, open source, mechanism for contextualising their raw data.
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk is not a political website, it does not include any democratic information, it
does not provide any way of transacting with the council and is not built using tools or information that
constitute fundamental parts of a council website, nor is it making a point about existing council websites
and the quality of their provision. This is an example of a citizen produced website that has been
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encouraged, and facilitated, by local authorities and in that respect provides a logical progression through
these four case studies. FixMyStreet.com is a site built by a non governmental organisation to deliver
particular services. BCCDIY.com saw disillusioned Birmingham residents produce something new and
competing. At the same time OpenlyLocal.com was scraping together a national resource of democratic
data from inaccessible locations and providing both challenge and encouragement to local authority
approaches to transparency. ArmchairAuditor.co.uk stands on the shoulders of these three sites. It is
facilitated by changing attitudes towards open government data and the recognition that concerned citizens
are building tools that stimulate local democratic engagement and foster informed participation in local
debates.
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3.5. Hull's Web Survey This dissertation considers the impact of citizen produced websites on the relationship between the
citizen and state. Having considered four case studies this consultation provides an insight into the digital
outlook in Hull, a city without any citizen produced websites.
3.5.1. Demographics and internet habits
There were 1,847 responses to the survey. 510 over the telephone, 938 through the website and
399 via face to face questionnaires. This provides a balanced sample between online users and their offline
counterparts. The average age of respondents was 40 for women and 41 for men. Amongst face to face
respondents the average age was lower and telephone users provided the eldest group as can seen in
Figure 5 (Web Q.20, Telephone Q.26, Face to Face Q.26).
Figure 5: Average Age
In general, the same questions were asked of all participants but the survey was designed to gather
context specific data too. Consequently, for those accessing the survey offline amongst offline participants
the question was asked why they had not used the internet. Figure 6 shows that almost 1 in 2 respondents
stated it was because they did not use the internet, a quarter favoured human interaction while a third
group felt the internet would be unsuitable for meeting their needs (Telephone Q.5, Face to Face Q.6).
45
38 36
49
43
32
300300 Web Face to Face
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Female
Male
Page | 33
Telephone Face to Face Total
Don't use the internet 39% 45% 42%
Prefer human interaction 27% 20% 24%
Didn't think I could access it online 15% 10% 13%
8 minor reasons 19% 25% 21%
Figure 6: Why didn’t you use hullcc.gov.uk?
Those who did not use the internet accounted for 378 of the 1,847 people polled. Although 22% of
them had no interest in ever changing that and only 23 were interested in training it does suggest that a
sizeable majority of the 'digitally excluded' would go online given the right circumstances (Telephone Q.6,
Face to Face Q.9). Those who used the internet were asked to identify all the ways got online. 85% of
respondents used broadband and usually connected in their homes but the survey supported suggestions
that being connected on the move is increasingly important with 26% of respondents using mobile
broadband, a mobile dongle or public wifi. Furthermore, amongst face to face respondents 28% of internet
users did so through their mobile phones (Web Q.1 and Q.2, Telephone Q.11, Face to Face Q.11 and 12).
Figure 7 shows the result of a question identifying the preferences of respondents when contacting
the council. Despite the level of internet access, digital forms of communication such as using the internet
or sending an email accounted for less than a quarter of responses. Unsurprisingly the vast majority of
those completing the survey through the call centre identified the telephone as their preferred method
alongside 42% of those polled face to face making this the most popular method. Unexpectedly only 7% of
responses indicated that they preferred personal, face to face interaction when contacting the council (Web
Q.12, Telephone, Q.4, Face to Face, Q.4).
Page | 34
Telephone Web Face to Face Total
Telephone 93% 15% 42% 43%
Depends 0% 42% 9% 23%
Email 1% 22% 8% 13%
Internet 2% 13% 18% 11%
In person 3% 4% 18% 7%
By post 1% 2% 4% 2%
Other 0% 1% 2% 1%
Figure 7: What is your preferred means of contacting the council?
In order to establish the level of skill possessed by those taking the survey we asked individuals to
identify their level of comfort with using the internet on a scale from tentative and reluctant user through
casual and regular usage to the category of 'I-couldn't-live-without-it'. Figure 8 demonstrates the outcome
of this question with three quarters of respondents identifying themselves as either being unable to live
without the internet (29%) or regular users (48%). Whilst only 4% of people described themselves as
tentative or reluctant users the survey had already filtered those respondents who were not internet users.
That figure accounts for some 20% of the original 1,847 respondents and, had the question been asked
prior to their removal, it may well have increased the significance of this category (Web Q.4, Telephone
Q.10, Face to Face, Q.13).
Figure 8: What kind of internet user are you?
48%
29%
19%
4%
Regular user I couldn't livewithout it
Casual user Tentative andreluctant user
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
Page | 35
3.5.2. Council interaction
To establish the main reasons people contact the council we asked participants to select the
purpose of their last interaction with Hull City Council. 44% of people had contacted the council looking for
information, including 61% of web users. As Figure 9 shows, the focus was on reporting or requesting
something over the phone whilst face to face respondents were most likely to pay for something or log
some feedback. These figures indicate that whilst Hull residents go online to find information they prefer to
use other channels to transact with the council (Web Q.7, Telephone Q.1, Face to Face Q.1).
Figure 9: What was the main purpose of your visit?
As a follow up we offered a selection of 23 different areas of the council and asked them to choose which
one they wanted to contact. Figure 10 shows the top 5 which between them account for 58% of enquiries.
Whilst housing, rubbish and council tax related concerns were the dominant issues on the telephone those
visiting the website were considerably more likely to be looking for information about leisure facilities whilst
a similar amount of face to face and web visitors wanted to know about housing and jobs (Web Q.8,
Telephone Q.2, Face to Face Q.2).
26%
30%
24%
5%
15%
61%
2% 2% 6%
2%
28% 27%
8% 11%
14% 11%
28%
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
300300
Web
Face to Face
Page | 36
Telephone Web Face to Face Total
Housing 25% 12% 13% 16%
Rubbish 32% 4% 9% 13%
Jobs 4% 12% 12% 10%
Leisure Facilities 0% 17% 3% 10%
Council Tax 19% 4% 8% 9%
Figure 10: What service area were you interested in?
3.5.3. Website Satisfaction
In order to assess the
experience of using the website we
asked participants whether they had
achieved success in visiting the website.
Those visitors who said they had were
asked to rate their experiencing using a
Likert scale from 'very difficult' to 'very
easy'. As Figure 11 shows, an
overwhelming majority of people found
it easy or very easy. Those who couldn't
achieve what they had wanted were asked about what they did instead. The findings suggested that 1 in 20
of all visitors to hullcc.gov.uk leaves the site disappointed and takes no further action, 1 in 20 of all visitors
contact the council call centre whilst 1 in 50 of those who can't achieve anything will write a letter to the
council (Web Q.9, Telephone Q.14-16, Face to Face Q.16-18).
With visitors to the website this question was developed using another Likert scale to rate 11
specific areas of the website. The breakdown is provided at Figure 12 but in total, 59% of all responses were
satisfied or very satisfied whilst 17% were either dissatisfied or very dissatisfied.
Very dissatisfied Dissatisfied Neither Satisfied Very satisfied
7% 10% 24% 41% 18%
Figure 12: Summary of hullcc.gov.uk being rated from very dissatisfied to very satisfied
Verydifficult
Difficult Neither Easy Very easy
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
300300
web
FacetoFace
Figure 11: How did you find the process of obtaining that information?
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However, the nuances behind those percentages suggest 'satisfied' is not synonymous with 'without room
for improvement'. Whilst 64% of people were satisfied, or very satisfied, with the 'look and feel' of the site,
23% of people were at the other end of the spectrum in their rating of the site's navigation. Furthermore,
although 63% responded positively in terms of 'finding what I want', 22% had a negative opinion of the
site's search functionality (Web Q.13).
The survey also asked for participants to identify areas of the site to improve. Of 1,508 responses,
32% said that the site was fine as it was. Figure 13 provides a breakdown of all responses and the
proportions attributed by each access channel to the different areas. Of those who completed the survey
online seven areas were criticised by more than 1 in 4 respondents (Web Q.14, Telephone Q.13, Face to
Face Q.21).
Figure 13: Which of these areas would you like to see the council develop or improve?
32%
27%
23%
22%
21%
19%
18%
16%
15%
9%
8%
8%
7%
6%
6%
42%
28%
9%
28%
37%
30%
30%
29%
28%
27%
24%
23%
11%
11%
10%
11%
35%
19%
24%
16%
16%
6%
5%
8%
10%
6%
8%
8%
It's fine as it is
Search
Structure
Look and feel
Content
More transactional services
Subscription to relevant information
Geographical information
Customer accounts
Greater use of audio or video
Blogs
Use of social media
Contribute your own content to the site
Do not visit
Other
Total Telephone Web Face to Face
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Moreover, there was only limited enthusiasm for the council to explore the use of 'web 2.0' tools
and services such as greater use of audio or video, councillor and officer blogs or the ability for visitors to
contribute their own content to the site (whether as a comment or an image). In terms of social media
usage a breakdown of the popularity of different sites can be seen in Figure 14 Facebook was the most
widely used site with 55% of web users having an account but less than 1 in 4 of them wanted to council to
have a presence in that environment. In general the interest in these services was low with only 3 of 16
different 'web 2.0' services or functionality used by more than 1 in 5 of those consulted (Web Q. 16). A note
of caution is provided about the fluidity in the use of online tools by the decision of the local newspaper to
close the fourth most popular service, ThisIsYourMail, shortly after this research was completed.
Users of a service Proportion of those using a service
who wanted the council to do so too
Facebook 55% 23%
Youtube 36% 24%
Discussion Forums 22% 60%
ThisIsYourMail 18% 39%
Blogs 15% 51%
Twitter 15% 36%
MySpace 14% 33%
Wiki 13% 39%
Subscriptions 11% 67%
Flickr 10% 41%
Comments 8% 66%
Linked-In 7% 46%
Aggregation 7% 55%
Bebo 7% 54%
Friendfeed 4% 71%
Yammer 4% 65%
Figure 14: Usage of social media tools
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3.5.4. Analysis
The survey demonstrates that there is significant awareness and usage of the internet. 55% of all
respondents have Facebook accounts, 85% of those accessing the internet do so from their homes, 81% of
those completing the survey use the internet with only 4% of those suggesting that usage is reluctant and
tentative. Furthermore, 55% of all respondents have Facebook accounts and 36% of them use Youtube.
This does not mean that the entire population of the city is actively using the internet. The survey
demonstrated that 20% of respondents do not use the internet and of those, 22% had no interest in getting
online. In addition, only 23 were interested in receiving training. Even amongst those who used the internet
regularly it appears that there are not high expectations of the council website. Despite a 2 star review from
SOCITM (2010) a majority of visitors declared themselves to be satisfied, or very satisfied, with the council's
web presence. Furthermore, when asked how the site could be improved, 32% said it was fine as it was.
Users were clearly more interested in the site working well rather than adding ‘bells and whistles’
Nevertheless, the reaction of 25% of responses demonstrates that a desire for the council to
achieve its digital potential exists in the city. Whilst some residents believed that the use of emergent web
tools would detract from the delivery of services they represent an opportunity to add the functionality
which 1 in 4 people felt was missing. For some of those participants they wanted to be able to contribute
their own content and have access to a more relational and responsive means of communicating with the
council suggesting that there is an appetite for greater transparency and openness from Hull City council.
In other parts of the country local digital experts have taken it upon themselves to add those tools
when the council has failed to deliver it but in Hull this has not happened. This suggests that the internet is
not widely understood as offering an opportunity for democratic participation with only 24% of those
surveyed identifying the internet as their preferred access channel.
Perhaps if the council took five years to deliver a new website and spent almost £3m this would
motivate local residents as it did in Birmingham. Certainly this consultation has provided the council with
the opportunity to ensure that citizen produced activity does not take place for the wrong reasons. With
over 300 people leaving their contact details and wanting to be involved in developing the website this
provides the platform for co-production.
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3.6. Conclusion The research presented in this chapter has considered four separate case studies alongside the
prevailing digital attitudes of the people of Hull. In examining those case studies it has seen that citizens
outside of government, whether acting within non-governmental organisations, as part of frustrated
communities, or entirely alone have had various motivations. FixMyStreet.com wanted to have better
online services, BCCDIY.com grew out of dissatisfaction at the actions of a local authority, OpenlyLocal.com
promotes transparency in support of democracy whilst ArmchairAuditor.co.uk is an open sourced and
collaborative approach to the sharing and interrogation of open government data.
Those citizen produced websites have not always met with favourable responses from 'the state'
but in the 18 month period covered by this research significant changes have taken place. Not only has the
coalition government used crowd sourcing websites to gather ideas on how to save money or which laws to
repeal but all councils have been mandated to start publishing government data. In Hull, the council has yet
to do so and this could explain the absence of citizen produced activity. In some parts of the country these
collaborative, transparent and open source ideas have had an impact in the way local people engage and
interact with their public services. Does the fact that it has so far bypassed Hull an indication that citizen
produced websites are of only minimal importance to the future of public service delivery? In the following
chapter this question will be addressed as conclusions are presented, recommendations made and further
research opportunities identified.
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4. Conclusion & Recommendations At the start of this dissertation three research questions were proposed in order to test the
hypothesis that 'citizen produced websites are increasingly important to public service provision and are
consequently reshaping the relationship between citizen and state'. This concluding chapter will present the
conclusions formed on the basis of exploring those questions before providing some recommendations and
highlighting opportunities for future research.
4.1. Conclusion
4.1.1. Doing It Ourselves
This dissertation has looked at recent developments in Britain that have taken place as a result of
different individuals deciding that rather than leave the delivery of public services to the state, they 'do it
ourselves'. FixMyStreet.com is a site, initially funded by central government, which to all intents and
purposes delivers a seamless public service. BCCDIY.com comes from the opposite end of the spectrum
where a community of disillusioned locals developed something to make a point and to demonstrate that
the nature of participation could no longer be considered as simple as attendance at a ward forum.
OpenlyLocal.com was born at almost the same time with the aim of promoting local democracy and
providing access to elected members and their work. Over time it has become one of the leading resources
for local residents and a champion of transparency and openness in local government. The final site,
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk sees the relationship between citizen and state coming full circle. Although Adrian
Short is an independent activist who has built a website he has done so with data designed to be reused at
the behest of central government. Such websites are not commonplace but the open source approaches
underpinning them all mean that the potential exists for numerous localised duplicates to appear as and
when data is published or concerned citizens hope to make a difference in their communities.
However, the evidence from Hull shows that citizen production is not happening everywhere
making it premature to celebrate the existence of a national network of concerned citizens building
websites motivated by higher ideals. Such a network is improbable, and unnecessary. Of the sites
considered in this research two of them, FixMyStreet.com and OpenlyLocal.com are sites built to cover the
entire nation. By pooling the functionality and information related to specific issues these sites are useful to
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anybody in the country. Moreover, BCCDIY.com has spawned a similar approach for council websites. Stef
Lewandowski is currently working on DIYCouncil.com which takes the principles underpinning BCCDIY.com
and applies them to all council websites across the country meaning that citizen produced websites do not
need to be produced by a local resident to have local resonance. ArmchairAuditor.co.uk presents a different
model. Adrian Short's website is not a national window onto local government spending but he has
published the technical information that makes it work on an open source basis. This means that the
machinery can be picked up and put down anywhere, by anyone subject to the release of local data. Until
Hull City Council begins to publish open data it would be unfair to conclude that the absence of citizen
produced websites in Hull is down to a lack of active citizenship amongst the city's population.
4.1.2. Brave New World
The 2010 general election raised questions about the nature of representative government with
large numbers of people wanting to effect change to the first past the post system so that their votes might
exert greater control. Following their coming to power the coalition have committed to reconsidering the
nature of democracy in Britain. Whilst they have formally confirmed that there will be a referendum they
have also advocated the use of crowd sourcing to encourage wider participation in the democratic process.
Furthermore, the publication of raw data has demonstrated that the government wants to give raw data to
the public so that they can do things with it. This is not a coalition innovation but they have moved swiftly
to build on Labour’s foundations.
Whilst this may be motivated by political ideology and issues of transparency it would be naïve to
ignore the fact that the economic condition of the country has provided the perfect conditions for
government to look for members of the public to do things for themselves. Prior to the election we heard
the idea that large government institutions would be replaced by a ‘Big Society’ empowering local
communities and individuals (BBC, 2010a). Coupled to rhetoric concerning an impending ‘Age of Austerity’
the new government has made a clear statement about identifying ways of doing more for less. Through
FixMyStreet.com, BCCDIY.com and OpenlyLocal.com, sites which precede the election, people were already
getting involved with service delivery but they have had to find ways of accessing information that was not
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readily available. ArmchairAuditor.co.uk, on the other hand, is exactly the kind of ‘Big Society’ contribution
anticipated when government published that data.
The individuals involved with these sites are sharing what they’ve done and welcoming the
contributions of others to identify ways to save the public purse some money. Sometimes these people
have an axe to grind, sometimes they’re public servants but, in the case studies we have considered, they
have all been concerned citizens. However, for residents of Hull these sites have had a minimal impact. Are
citizen produced websites a niche movement whose significance is overstated? Indeed, further questions
must be asked about civil society groups without an electoral mandate, about the exclusion of those who
are not digitally enabled and about the potential for those who shout loudest to exert a disproportionate
influence.
What is clear is that these questions will not go away. The very idea of ‘citizenship’ is coming under
scrutiny in today’s increasingly globalised culture where societal and communal boundaries are blurred. A
local authority understands citizenship to be narrowly defined according to geographical space and their
area of activity. However, the public may expect to find public transport timetables or NHS information
through a local authority's website alongside signposting toward events in neighbouring boroughs or
counties. The examples of FixMyStreet.com and OpenlyLocal.com (and DIYCouncil.com) demonstrate this
non-parochial attitude and indicate that much of what a council does is the same as any other when it
comes to putting it online. This means that developers in one part of the country are building things that
can be used by anybody anywhere. Furthermore, by opening the code to other volunteers it means a useful
addition can be made for one location that can be applied elsewhere as in Lichfield’s mobile interface.
ArmchairAuditor.co.uk is focused on one location but provides a platform that can be applied anywhere, by
anyone.
Their activity has taken place for free, in support of good governance and motivated by the
altruistic attempt to benefit both citizen and state. As such it is the very definition of ‘active citizenship’.
However, such activity is a challenge to local authorities who have hitherto enjoyed complete control over
their message, their content and their exposure to risk. In general local authorities have not been effective
at providing transparent insights into their inner workings, nor have they provided opportunities for the
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public to engage with the council by presenting stories in interactive ways such as blogs, videos or podcasts.
Furthermore, the example of Tameside Council restricting Twitter accreditation to traditional news outlets
suggests that they do not regard those responsible for hyperlocal blogs as valid contributors to discussions
of the political sphere (Guardian, 2010).
Our representative democracy is not made redundant through this technological advance but it
does provide the opportunity to facilitate other modes of participation. For example, the 'crowd-sourcing'
of ideas, feedback and criticisms during the drafting of policies can heighten participation in the policy
design process and, through highlighting this via a council's digital presence (whether on its website or
elsewhere), involve a wider audience. Rather than simply being the purview of legislators or officers these
ideas can provide open and collaborative policy design.
BCCDIY.com demonstrates that should a council fail to meet expectations there are competent
individuals willing to lead their peers and produce viable alternatives. Whilst this is less likely to happen
with hospitals or rubbish collection the Free Schools proposal of the coalition government which allows
motivated groups of people to challenge existing educational structures by forging their own public services
is an example of direct democracy couched within a representative model of trusteeship (Conservatives,
2010).
4.1.3. The principle of ‘WITH’
The communication revolution has made it possible for citizens to take control of their public
services where they are absent or in need of improvement. The relationship between citizen and state has
been altered by a technological revolution that has enabled people to self-organise, share experience and
maintain geographically dispersed networks of practice and expertise. The capacity for people to put
together a website and present multiple sources of data in easy to access and simple to understand ways
has taken the ownership and control of knowledge away from the historic seats of power. Instead, normal
citizens have become the curators of government with sites such as the ones discussed in this dissertation
springing up to cover a myriad of purposes.
Such behaviour is a threat to the autonomy of local authorities and the continued acceptance of
our current framework of governance. Whilst public service provision will continue with, or without, these
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citizen produced websites, they are turning notions of democracy and participation on its head. The
contributions of these ‘active citizens’ demonstrates that widening democratic participation is not only
about deliberative forms of governance or consensus but can be achieved by providing people with the
tools to report problems, share ideas, contribute to hyperlocal media, access a statistical dashboard or
comment on the external supplier their council uses. Whether those within the public sector embrace it or
not, these websites indicate that the relationship between citizen and state can no longer be understood
through the lens of the adversarial model of principal versus agent. Leadbeater (2008) suggests that the
collaborative and transparent culture being created by the web can be reduced to 'the principle of WITH'.
When it comes to Britain’s governance the public are up for the same, how willing are we to embrace it
too?
4.2. Recommendations, or 'what does this mean for service delivery?' This dissertation has concluded that citizen produced websites may not yet be fundamental to
public service provision but that they do suggest a significant reshaping of the relationship between citizen
and state. The following recommendations for local authorities are made in light of these findings.
Embrace open source. Not only would this save on the licensing costs of expensive software but it
would invite the adoption of an ideology that is based on inviting other people to contribute to a shared
outcome and to solve problems by working alongside people beyond geographical boundaries.
Explore collaboration and harness the wisdom of crowds. It is a cliché to suggest that many hands
make light work but we have seen that when it comes to digital delivery of services it has some merit.
BCCDIY.com was developed from scratch in a fortnight by a group of volunteers coming together to think
about what they wanted from a council website. Furthermore, by sharing the things that are generally very
similar from place to place it means that the contributions of one can be applied to many quickly and easily
improving services and saving money.
Stop reinventing the wheel. Some of the case studies discussed in this dissertation would not have
been possible without content already provided by the council. However, FixMyStreet.com,
OpenlyLocal.com and ArmchairAuditor.co.uk provide tools that can be added into existing council services
with ease. Rather than investing significant time and resources in a bespoke solution or a commercial
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product, work with these developers to co-produce one site that works even better. There is nothing to lose
by standing on the shoulders of others.
Go, Go open data. The government produces significant amounts of data. Nationally this has been
recognised in the provision of over 3,500 datasets at data.gov.uk. The initial expectation of government for
councils to publish all external spending over £500 represents the first step in a process that shows no signs
of abating. So far only 23 councils have begun to publish open data and eight of those have done so with
licensing arrangements that are not truly in keeping with the spirit of the open data agenda. Most of what
happens within a council could be made available to the public through a Freedom of Information Request,
why not save them the trouble?
Think Big Society. There is a danger that if councils follow these recommendations, embrace open
source software, open their data and invite people to collaborate that nobody will respond. Not every
resident is going to make something and not all local people are going to visibly interact with it. In fact, the
1:10:89 principle of co-production suggests that you might never know about the majority of people
choosing to spectate and finding the benefits in the creativity of another. However, not all members of the
public attend public meetings; limited numbers respond to public consultation and turnout at elections is
low. Citizen produced websites might not be produced by large numbers of people. However, if 1% of your
community want to make something, and 10% of them want to discuss what that something means and
recommend how it might be improved then local authorities have to be ready to respond. As the ‘Age of
Austerity’ bites, the success or otherwise of the Big Society project will depend on how successful local
authorities are at cultivating relationships with their concerned citizens whether they have already been
active such as those involved with the case studies, or have yet to wake up such as those in Hull.
4.3. Further Research 12 months ago three of the four case studies considered in this dissertation did not exist. The rate
of change in technology is staggering and this is matched by the speed with which data activists are
transforming the way members of the public understand information. The last year has also seen significant
change at the heart of national government and locally the impact of spending cuts looms large.
Understandably, therefore, local government has not been at the forefront of emerging innovation. This
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dissertation sits within the debate between democracy on one side, the impact of technology on another
and the role of private citizens on the third.
This dynamic would benefit from further research in three areas. Firstly, the impact of open data on
local authorities. By January Hull City Council and the other 410 councils that have yet to publish spending
data will have taken their first steps into sharing open data. Using the 23 early adopters as a starting point
this represents an opportunity for longitudinal research to test the consequences of open data and explore
what happens to the relationship between councils and their public when these innovative ideas become
part of mainstream local governance.
Secondly, Stef Lewandowski’s follow up project to BCCDIY.com, DIYCouncil.com is still in an
embryonic stage and is very much his solo project. The quality of information it displays and the
functionality it offers reflect that it was produced in 30 hours of spare time effort. If the project takes off
and more people offer to participate then this would provide another case study detailing the development
and impact of citizen produced websites. Indeed, on his website he says ‘it would be great…if we can get
something academically significant or publishable from this project’ (DIYCouncil.com).
Finally, a significant area of discussion and research is the emerging nature of the coalition
government’s Big Society. This dissertation was written as that idea began to take shape and it would be
interesting to look more closely at the role played by technology in conjunction with ordinary members of
the public to safeguard the vulnerable and identify the priorities as the public sector deals with the impact
of sizeable spending cuts. This dissertation argues that the ideas and attitudes exhibited by the concerned
citizens towards delivering public goods and services represent a successful approach that should be
adopted and encouraged by local authorities. The emergence of Big Society offers an opportunity to
consider whether that is an accurate assessment.
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Page | 54
Appendices
Appendix 1: Web Survey
Appendix 2: Telephone Survey
Appendix 3: Face to Face Survey
Appendix 4: Survey Data
APPENDIX 1: ONLINE SURVEY
Page | 55
Hull City Council website consultation
We would like your views on our website and the information and services you access through it. We also want to understand more
about the people who use it.
This survey will take around 10 minutes to complete and includes the opportunity to become involved in further consultations about
our website. 1. Where do you normally access the internet? Please tick all that apply At home At work/school
On a public computer Via mobile
Elsewhere
please state
2. Which methods do you use to connect to the internet? Please tick all that apply I use a broadband connection I use a mobile phone/smartphone
I use a dial-up connection I use a public Wi-Fi connection
I use a mobile network dongle Other
please state
3. How did you hear about www.hullcc.gov.uk? I knew the site previously Family/friends told me about it
I used a search engine A council officer suggested I use it
I saw the address on a form/in a leaflet Through my local library
I saw the address on other council advertising
I work for the council
I followed a link from another government website
Unsure/Can't remember
I followed a link from elsewhere Other
I guessed at the address Please state
4. What kind of internet user are you? Tentative and reluctant user (very basic skills, very rare usage)
Casual user (basic skills, use as and when it's necessary)
Regular user (range of skills, and comfortable using the internet on a regular basis)
I couldn't live without it
5. How often would you say you contacted Hull City Council either for information or to
request a service? Every day Every few months
At least once a week Only in emergencies/very rarely
Every month
APPENDIX 1: ONLINE SURVEY
Page | 56
6. In the last year, how often have you visited www.hullcc.gov.uk?
Every day Very rarely
At least once a week Never
Every few months 7. What was your main purpose in visiting hullcc.gov.uk, was it to...
pay something make a complaint/provide feedback
book something find information
report something just browse
request something Other (please state)
apply for something 8. What service were you interested in? Adult and further education Leisure facilities (such as gym
membership, libraries) Benefits Parking
Community safety Planning
Councillors and democracy Public transport
Council tax (but not council tax benefit) Roads and streetlights
Electoral register Rubbish and recycling (such as missed bin collection)
Environmental health (such as food standards, health inspection)
Schools information
Events and what's on (such as theatres and halls)
Social care and health
Licensing Trading standards
Housing (but not housing benefit) Youth activities
Jobs Other (please state)
9a. On your last visit to www.hullcc.gov.uk did it provide what you were looking for?
Yes Can't remember
No 9b. On a scale of 1-5 where 1 is very difficult and 5 very easy, how easy was it to do what you
wanted? 1 Very difficult 2 Difficult 3 Neither easy nor difficult 4 Easy 5 Very easy 9c. Given that the website did not provide a solution, how did you resolve your problem? Did
you ring 300300 write an email to the council
make no further effort write to the council through the post
contact a councillor directly I can't remember
visit a Customer Service Centre (CSC) do something else
visit a library Please state
10. On a scale of 1-5, where 1 means very unlikely and 5 very likely, how likely would you be to
use www.hullcc.gov.uk for the same purpose in future? 1 Very
unlikely 2 Unlikely 3 Neither
unlikely nor likely
4 Likely 5 Very likely
APPENDIX 1: ONLINE SURVEY
Page | 57
11. Using the same scale, how likely would you be to use www.hullcc.gov.uk instead of
300300 for a different purpose in future? 1 Very
unlikely 2 Unlikely 3 Neither
unlikely nor likely
4 Likely 5 Very likely
12. What is your preferred way of contacting the council?
By post Over the telephone
By email Via the internet
Depends why I need to contact you Other (please state)
In person 13. Please rate the following areas on a scale of very dissatisfied to very satisfied
Very Dissatisfied
Dissatisfied Neither Satisfied Very satisfied
First impression of our website
Look and feel
Getting around the site/navigation
Search
Finding what I want
Mapping
Booking things
Reporting
Applying
Paying
Final impressions
Please specify 14. Which of the following areas would you like to see the council develop or improve? Please
tick as many as apply Structure of website (for example the names by which we refer to services and service
areas) Better content (for example the way in which pages are written, or the information they
contain) Design (for example the layout of the pages and the colour scheme)
Search facility (for example the results it returns)
More transactional services (for example reporting missed bin collections, applying for licences, paying and booking)
Customer accounts to enable you to log and track service requests, store payment details, receive information on your areas of interest etc.
Information on your chosen areas of interest sent to you (for example by email or text without visiting the site)
Ways to access information through social media and networks (Twitter, Facebook and similar services)
Blogs (from council officers, elected members and other contributors)
Geographical information ('Find my nearest' function)
Greater use of audio or video
Contribute your own content to the site (pictures, comments, news, events)
It's fine as it is
Other
Please state
APPENDIX 1: ONLINE SURVEY
Page | 58
15. What specific additional services would you like to access through www.hullcc.gov.uk?
Please tell us. 16. Which of these do you use and which would you like to see Hull City Council make
more use of in future? Please tick all that apply
Currently use
Would like to see HCC use
Aggregator sites
Bebo
Blogs
Discussion Forums
Friendfeed
Linked-In
Myspace
Subscription services
This Is Your Mail
User Generated Content
Wikis
Yammer
Youtube
Anything else please specify
17 Is there anything else you would like to suggest or comment on?
APPENDIX 1: ONLINE SURVEY
Page | 59
About You
To help us process and understand the answers we have received from these questionnaires, we would like to ask you a few more
questions about who you are. This is because the council is committed to ensuring that all its services are delivered fairly.
These remaining questions will help us understand more about the
people who have completed the questionnaire and identify and explore the differences in view between groups of people.
You do not have to fill them in but if you do, the information you provide will be kept confidential and will be stored securely. 18 Which of the following are relevant to you? This question will help identify the profile of
visitors to our website. Please tick all that apply I live in the area I'm looking for information for myself
I work in Hull I'm looking for information in relation to work
I work for Hull City Council I'm looking for information on behalf of a friend or family member
I'm planning to visit Hull Prefer not to say
I'm planning on moving to Hull Other
I'm a local councillor in Hull Please state
19. What is your postcode? This will help us to understand if people who live in your area have
different views to people who live in other areas of the city 20. What is your gender identity? Male Female
21. What is your date of birth? (mm/yyyy) 22. Are your day-to-day activities limited because of a health problem or impairment which has
lasted, or is expected to last at least 12 months? (Please include conditions such as dyslexia or epilepsy). Please select one option.
Yes limited a lot
Yes limited a little
No
23. Does this health problem, or impairment, impact upon your use and enjoyment of the
internet? 24. Could you give us some more detail? (For example, do you use a mouse? Do you use
assistive technologies such as a screen reader or magnifier? Do you need to change the website (text size, colour scheme) so that you can use it properly?)
APPENDIX 1: ONLINE SURVEY
Page | 60
25. Which of the following best describes your ethnic background?
White English/Welsh/Scottish/Northern Irish/British
Asian or Asian British Indian
White Irish Asian or Asian British Pakistani
White Gypsy or Irish Traveller Any other Asian background (please state)
Any other white background (please state)
Mixed/multiple ethnic group white and Asian
Black or black British African Mixed/multiple ethnic group white and black African
Black or black British Caribbean Mixed/multiple ethnic group white and black Caribbean
Any other black or black British background (please state)
Any other mixed/multiple ethnic group background (please state)
Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi Arab
Asian or Asian British Chinese Any other ethnic background (please state)
Please state
26. Would you like to be involved in any further consultation about our website? If so, could
we take some contact details for use in the future? We don't mind what you give us whether telephone, email, postal address or all of them. And it's important to remember that we will not use this information for any other purpose.
Name Address 1 Address 2 Town Postcode Contact number E-mail address
APPENDIX 2: TELEPHONE SURVEY
Page | 61
Hull City Council website consultation We would like your views on our website and the information and
services you access through it. We also want to understand more about the people who use it.
This survey will take around 10 minutes to complete and includes the opportunity to become involved in further consultations about
our website.
1. Earlier today you contacted 300300 and agreed to be surveyed. Is now a convenient time?
What was your main purpose in calling 300300 earlier? Was it to...
pay something make a complaint/provide feedback
book something find information
report something just browse
request something Other (please state)
apply for something 2. What service were you interested in?
(Let the resident explain the reason for their call and then choose the relevant option on the basis of what they say. If you do not think it easily fits into one of these options choose 'Other' and enter the resident's response)
Adult and further education Leisure facilities (such as gym membership, libraries)
Benefits Parking
Community safety Planning
Councillors and democracy Public transport
Council tax (but not council tax benefit) Roads and streetlights
Electoral register Rubbish and recycling (such as missed bin collection)
Environmental health (such as food standards, health inspection)
Schools information
Events and what's on (such as theatres and halls)
Social care and health
Licensing Trading standards
Housing (but not housing benefit) Youth activities
Jobs Other (please state)
3. How often would you say you contacted Hull City Council either for information or to
request a service? Every day Every few months
At least once a week Only in emergencies/very rarely
Every month 4. What is your preferred way of contacting the council? By post Over the telephone
By email Via the internet
Depends why I need to contact you Other (please state)
In person
APPENDIX 2: TELEPHONE SURVEY
Page | 62
5. If you didn't visit www.hullcc.gov.uk to access this information or service was this because
you... don't use the internet tried the website but found it difficult to
use didn't think that the information/service
could be accessed online were not at a computer and saw
something that needed dealing with immediately so rang 300300
prefer the human touch previously had been frustrated by the website
tried the website first and the information/service is not available
Other (please state)
tried the website first and could not find the information/service
6. What are the barriers to your usage? I don't feel comfortable using the internet I have never used the internet and don't
want to in the future The cost of internet access Other (please state)
7. Would you be interested in hearing about any training the council is running or alternative
ways to access the internet? Yes No
In that case, please could I take your contact details? We will not use this information for
any other purpose. Name Address 1 Address 2 Town Postcode Contact number 9. Could we ask you a few more questions about your internet usage habits? This is to help
us improve the service we offer through our website Yes No
10. What kind of internet user are you? Tentative and reluctant user (very basic skills, very rare usage)
Casual user (basic skills, use as and when it's necessary)
Regular user (range of skills, and comfortable using the internet on a regular basis)
I couldn't live without it
11. Which methods do you use to connect to the internet? Please tick all that apply I use a broadband connection I use a mobile phone/smartphone
I use a dial-up connection I use a public Wi-Fi connection
I use a mobile network dongle Other
please state
12. In the last year, how often have you visited www.hullcc.gov.uk? Every day Very rarely
At least once a week Never
Every few months Why have you never visited hullcc.gov.uk before?
APPENDIX 2: TELEPHONE SURVEY
Page | 63
13. How did you hear about www.hullcc.gov.uk?
I knew the site previously Family/friends told me about it
I used a search engine A council officer suggested I use it
I saw the address on a form/in a leaflet Through my local library
I saw the address on other council advertising
I work for the council
I followed a link from another government website
Unsure/Can't remember
I followed a link from elsewhere Other
I guessed at the address Please state
14. On your last visit to www.hullcc.gov.uk did it provide what you were looking for? Yes Can't remember
No 15. On a scale of 1-5 where 1 is very difficult and 5 very easy, how easy was it to do what you
wanted?
1 Very difficult 2 Difficult 3 Neither easy nor difficult 4 Easy 5 Very easy 16. Given that the website did not provide a solution, how did you resolve your problem? Did
you
ring 300300 write an email to the council
make no further effort write to the council through the post
contact a councillor directly I can't remember
visit a Customer Service Centre (CSC) do something else
visit a library Please state
17. Thinking about the reason you contacted 300300 today.
On a scale of 1-5, where 1 means very unlikely and 5 very likely, how likely would you be to use www.hullcc.gov.uk for the same purpose in future?
1 Very unlikely
2 Unlikely 3 Neither unlikely nor likely
4 Likely 5 Very likely
18. Using the same scale, how likely would you be to use www.hullcc.gov.uk instead of
300300 for a different purpose in future? 1 Very
unlikely 2 Unlikely 3 Neither
unlikely nor likely
4 Likely 5 Very likely
APPENDIX 2: TELEPHONE SURVEY
Page | 64
19. How can we improve www.hullcc.gov.uk? Please say yes or no to each suggestion. Structure of website (for example the names by which we refer to services and service
areas) Better content (for example the way in which pages are written, or the information they
contain) Look and feel (for example the layout of the pages and the colour scheme)
Search facility (for example the results it returns)
More transactional services (for example reporting missed bin collections, applying for licences, paying and booking)
Customer accounts to enable you to log and track service requests, store payment details, receive information on your areas of interest etc.
Information on your chosen areas of interest sent to you (for example by email or text without visiting the site)
Ways to access information through social media and networks (Twitter, Facebook and similar services)
Blogs (from council officers, elected members and other contributors)
Geographical information ('Find my nearest' function)
Greater use of audio or video
Contribute your own content to the site (pictures, comments, news, events)
It's fine as it is
Other
Please state
20. Is there anything we can do to encourage you to use www.hullcc.gov.uk again?
21. What specific additional services would you like to access through www.hullcc.gov.uk?
Please tell us. 22. Is there anything else you would like to suggest or comment on?
APPENDIX 2: TELEPHONE SURVEY
Page | 65
About You To help us process and understand the answers we have received
from these questionnaires, we would like to ask you a few more questions about who you are. This is because the council is
committed to ensuring that all its services are delivered fairly.
These remaining questions will help us understand more about the people who have completed the questionnaire and identify and
explore the differences in view between groups of people.
You do not have to fill them in but if you do, the information you provide will be kept confidential and will be stored securely.
23. Could we ask you a few more questions along those lines?
Yes No
24. Which of the following are relevant to you? This question will help identify the profile of
visitors to our website. Please tick all that apply I live in the area I'm looking for information for myself
I work in Hull I'm looking for information in relation to work
I work for Hull City Council I'm looking for information on behalf of a friend or family member
I'm planning to visit Hull Prefer not to say
I'm planning on moving to Hull Other
I'm a local councillor in Hull Please state
25. What is your postcode? This will help us to understand if people who live in your area have
different views to people who live in other areas of the city 26. What is your gender identity?
Male Female
Is there anything further about your gender identity you would like to tell us?
27. What is your date of birth? (mm/yyyy)
28. Are your day-to-day activities limited because of a health problem or impairment which has
lasted, or is expected to last at least 12 months? (Please include conditions such as dyslexia or epilepsy). Please select one option.
Yes limited a lot
Yes limited a little
No
29. Does this health problem, or impairment, impact upon your use and enjoyment of the
internet? Yes No
APPENDIX 2: TELEPHONE SURVEY
Page | 66
30. Could you give us some more detail? (For example, do you use a mouse? Do you use assistive technologies such as a screen reader or magnifier? Do you need to change the website (text size, colour scheme) so that you can use it properly?)
31. Which of the following best describes your ethnic background? White English/Welsh/Scottish/Northern
Irish/British Asian or Asian British Indian
White Irish Asian or Asian British Pakistani
White Gypsy or Irish Traveller Any other Asian background (please state)
Any other white background (please state)
Mixed/multiple ethnic group white and Asian
Black or black British African Mixed/multiple ethnic group white and black African
Black or black British Caribbean Mixed/multiple ethnic group white and black Caribbean
Any other black or black British background (please state)
Any other mixed/multiple ethnic group background (please state)
Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi Arab
Asian or Asian British Chinese Any other ethnic background (please state)
Please state
32. Would you like to be involved in any further consultation about our website? If so, could
we take some contact details for use in the future? We don't mind what you give us whether telephone, email, postal address or all of them. And it's important to remember that we will not use this information for any other purpose.
Name Address 1 Address 2 Town Postcode Contact number E-mail address
APPENDIX 3: FACE TO FACE SURVEY
Page | 67
Hull City Council website consultation We would like your views on our website and the information and
services you access through it. We also want to understand more about the people who use it.
This survey will take around 10 minutes to complete and includes the opportunity to become involved in further consultations about
our website.
Q1 What was your main purpose in visiting the CSC today? Or: Thinking about the last time you visited a CSC, rang 300300, or visited the council website what was the main purpose of your visit?
Please select one option. Pay something ............................................................................................................................
Book something ..........................................................................................................................
Report something .......................................................................................................................
Request something ....................................................................................................................
Apply for something ...................................................................................................................
Make a complaint/provide feedback ........................................................................................ Find something ...........................................................................................................................
Just browsing ..............................................................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q2 What service area were you seeking assistance with? Please select one option
Adult and further education .......................................................................................................
Benefits ........................................................................................................................................
Community safety .......................................................................................................................
Councillors and democracy .......................................................................................................
Council tax (but not council tax benefit) ..................................................................................
Electoral register .........................................................................................................................
Environmental health (e.g., food standards, health inspection) ..........................................
Events and what's on (e.g., theatres and halls) .....................................................................
Licencing ......................................................................................................................................
Housing (but not housing benefit) ............................................................................................
Jobs ..............................................................................................................................................
Leisure facilities (e.g., gym membership, libraries) ...............................................................
Parking .........................................................................................................................................
Planning .......................................................................................................................................
Public transport ...........................................................................................................................
Roads and streetlights ...............................................................................................................
Rubbish and recycling (e.g., missed bin collection) ..............................................................
Schools information ....................................................................................................................
Social care and health ...............................................................................................................
Trading standards .......................................................................................................................
Youth activities ............................................................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
APPENDIX 3: FACE TO FACE SURVEY
Page | 68
Q3 How often do you contact Hull City Council either for information or to request a service? Please select one option.
Every day .....................................................................................................................................
At least once a week ..................................................................................................................
Every month ................................................................................................................................
Every few months .......................................................................................................................
Only in emergencies/very rarely ...............................................................................................
Q4 What is your preferred way of contacting the council? Please select one option.
By post .........................................................................................................................................
By email .......................................................................................................................................
Depends why I need to contact you ........................................................................................
In person ...................................................................................................................................... Over the telephone .....................................................................................................................
Via the internet ............................................................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q5 Do you use the internet?
Yes (go to Question 9) ...............................................................................................................
No (go to Question 6) .................................................................................................................
Q6 What are the barriers to your usage?
I don't feel comfortable using the internet ...............................................................................
The cost of internet access .......................................................................................................
I have never used the internet and don't want to in the future ............................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q7 Would you be interested in hearing about any training the council is running or alternative ways to access the internet?
Yes ................................................................................................................................................
No (go to Q23) ............................................................................................................................
Q8 Please could I take your contact details so that the council can let you know of any training or access initiatives they are running? We will not use this information for any other purpose.
Name Address 1 Address 2 Town Postcode Contact number Go to Q23
APPENDIX 3: FACE TO FACE SURVEY
Page | 69
Q9 Why didn't you visit the council website (www.hullcc.gov.uk) to access this information/service? Please tick all that apply.
I didn't think that the information/service could be accessed online ...................................
I prefer the human touch ...........................................................................................................
I tried the website first and the information/service is not available ...................................
I tried the website first and could not find the information/service ......................................
I tried the website but found it difficult to use .........................................................................
I was not at a computer and saw something that needed dealing with immediately so rang 300300 ................................................................................................................................
I was not at a computer and was near a Customer Service Centre ...................................
Previous bad experience of the website .................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q10 Would you be happy to answer some questions about your internet usage habits so that we can improve the service offered through our website (www.hullcc.gov.uk)?
Yes ................................................................................................................................................
No (go to Q23) ............................................................................................................................
Q11 Where do you usually access the internet? Please tick all that apply.
At home ........................................................................................................................................
At work .........................................................................................................................................
Through a public computer .......................................................................................................
Via mobile internet ......................................................................................................................
Elsewhere ....................................................................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q12 Which methods do you use to connect to the internet? Please tick all that apply.
I use a broadband connection ..................................................................................................
I use a dial-up connection .........................................................................................................
I use a mobile network dongle ..................................................................................................
I use a mobile phone/smartphone............................................................................................
I use a public Wi-Fi connection ................................................................................................ Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q13 What kind of internet user are you? Please select one option
Tentative and reluctant user (very basic skills, very rare usage) ........................................
Casual user (basic skills, use as and when it's necessary) .................................................
Regular user (range of skills, and comfortable using the internet on a regular basis) ....
I couldn't live without it ...............................................................................................................
Q14 In the last year, how often have you visited our website (www.hullcc.gov.uk)?
Every day .....................................................................................................................................
At least once a week ..................................................................................................................
Every few months .......................................................................................................................
Very rarely .................................................................................................................................... Never (please explain) (go to Q19) ..........................................................................................
APPENDIX 3: FACE TO FACE SURVEY
Page | 70
Q15 How did you hear about our website (www.hullcc.gov.uk)?
I knew the site previously ..........................................................................................................
I used a search engine ..............................................................................................................
I saw the address on a form/in a leaflet ..................................................................................
I saw the address on other council advertising ......................................................................
I followed a link from another government website ...............................................................
I followed a link from elsewhere ...............................................................................................
I guessed at the address ...........................................................................................................
Family/friends told me about it..................................................................................................
A council officer suggested I use it .......................................................................................... Through my local library ............................................................................................................
I work for the council ..................................................................................................................
Unsure/Can't remember ............................................................................................................
Other .............................................................................................................................................
Q16 On your last visit to our website, did it provide what you were looking for?
Yes ................................................................................................................................................
No (go to Q18) ............................................................................................................................
Can't remember (go to Q19) .....................................................................................................
Q17 On a scale of 1-5, where 1 is very difficult and 5 very easy, how easy was it to do what you wanted?
1 2 3 4 5 n/a
Q18 Given that the website did not provide a solution, how did you resolve your problem? Did you
ring 300300 ..................................................................................................................................
make no further effort .................................................................................................................
contact a councillor directly ....................................................................................................... visit a Customer Service Centre (CSC) ..................................................................................
visit a library .................................................................................................................................
write an email to the council .....................................................................................................
write to the council through the post ........................................................................................
I can't remember .........................................................................................................................
do something else (please specify) .........................................................................................
Q19 Now thinking about our earlier example of the last time you contacted the council. On a scale of 1-5, where 1 is very unlikely and 5 is very likely, how likely are you to visit our website for the same purpose in the future?
1 2 3 4 5 n/a
Q20 And, on the same scale, how likely are you to visit our website for a different purpose in the future?
1 2 3 4 5 n/a
APPENDIX 3: FACE TO FACE SURVEY
Page | 71
Q21 How can we improve our website (www.hullcc.gov.uk)? Please tick all that apply.
Structure of website (for example the names by which we refer to services and service areas) ..............................................................................................................................
Better content (for example the way in which pages are written, or the information they contain) ................................................................................................................................
Look and feel (for example the layout of the pages and the colour scheme) ...................
Search facility (for example the results it returns) .................................................................
More transactional services (for example reporting missed bin collections, applying for licences, paying and booking) ..................................................................................................
Customer accounts to enable you to log and track service requests, store payment details, receive information on your areas of interest etc. ....................................................
Information on your chosen areas of interest sent to you (for example by email or text without visiting the site) .............................................................................................................
Ways to access information through social media and networks (Twitter, Facebook and similar services) ..................................................................................................................
Blogs (from council officers, elected members and other contributors) .............................
Geographical information ('Find my nearest' function) .........................................................
Greater use of audio or video ...................................................................................................
Contribute your own content to the site (pictures, comments, news, events) ...................
It's fine as it is ..............................................................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q22 Is there anything else you would like to suggest, or comment on?
APPENDIX 3: FACE TO FACE SURVEY
Page | 72
About you
To understand the answers we receive from this questionnaire, we would like to ask a few more questions.
These questions will aid us in exploring the views expressed by
different groups of people and will help to ensure we deliver all our services fairly.
You do not have to fill them in but if you do, the information you
provide will be kept confidential and will be stored securely.
Q23 Would you be happy to answer a few more questions?
Yes ................................................................................................................................................
No (go to end of the survey) .....................................................................................................
Q24 Which of the following are relevant to you? Please tick all that apply.
I live in the area ...........................................................................................................................
I work in Hull ................................................................................................................................
I work for Hull City Council ........................................................................................................
I'm planning to visit Hull .............................................................................................................
I'm planning on moving to Hull ................................................................................................. I'm a local councillor in Hull .......................................................................................................
I'm looking for information for myself .......................................................................................
I'm looking for information in relation to work .........................................................................
I'm looking for information on behalf of a friend or family member .....................................
Prefer not to say .........................................................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q25 What is your postcode? This will help us to understand if people who live in your area have different views to people who live in other areas of the city. Please write in the space provided below.
Q26 Are you? Please select one option.
Male ..............................................................................................................................................
Female .........................................................................................................................................
Other .............................................................................................................................................
Please provide any further information about your gender if you wish
Q27 What is your date of birth? Please write in the space below (mm/yyyy)
Q28 Are your day-to-day activities limited because of a health problem or impairment which has lasted, or is expected to last at least 12 months? (Please include conditions such as mental health issues or problems related to ageing). Please select one option.
Yes limited a lot ...........................................................................................................................
Yes limited a little ........................................................................................................................
No (go to Question 30) ..............................................................................................................
APPENDIX 3: FACE TO FACE SURVEY
Page | 73
Q29 Which of the following impairment groups do you identify with? Please tick all that apply.
Mobility impairment ....................................................................................................................
Mobility impairment (wheelchair user) .....................................................................................
Personal assistance user ..........................................................................................................
Learning difficulty (inc. Dyslexia)..............................................................................................
Blind or partially sighted ............................................................................................................
Deaf or hard of hearing ..............................................................................................................
Mental health ...............................................................................................................................
Living with HIV/AIDS ..................................................................................................................
Living with cancer .......................................................................................................................
Living with MS .............................................................................................................................
Hidden impairment (e.g., epilepsy) .......................................................................................... Autistic Spectrum Disorder .......................................................................................................
Motor Skills Impaired .................................................................................................................
Prefer not to say .........................................................................................................................
None of these ..............................................................................................................................
Other (please state) ...................................................................................................................
Q30 Which of the following best describes your ethnic background? Please select one option
White English/Welsh/Scottish/Northern Irish/British..............................................................
White Irish ....................................................................................................................................
White Gypsy or Irish Traveller...................................................................................................
Any other white background (please state in the box below) ..............................................
Black or black British African ....................................................................................................
Black or black British Caribbean ..............................................................................................
Any other black or black British background (please state in the box below) ...................
Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi ..........................................................................................
Asian or Asian British Chinese .................................................................................................
Asian or Asian British Indian .....................................................................................................
Asian or Asian British Pakistani ................................................................................................
Any other Asian background (please state in the box below) ..............................................
Mixed/Multiple ethnic group white and Asian .........................................................................
Mixed/Multiple ethnic group white and black African ............................................................
Mixed/Multiple ethnic group white and black Caribbean ...................................................... Any other mixed/multiple ethnic group backgroun (please state in the box below) .........
Arab ..............................................................................................................................................
Any other ethnic background (please state in the box below) .............................................
Q31 Would you be interested in taking part in any further consultation the council may hold around the use of its website?
Yes (go to Question 32) .............................................................................................................
No (end survey) ..........................................................................................................................
Q32 Please can I take whichever contact details work best for you. We will not use this information for any other purpose
Name Address 1 Address 2 Town Postcode Contact number Email address
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 74
Where do you usually access the internet?
Multiple Choice Question Total 300300 Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Home
802 241 1043
Work/School
348 72 420
Public computer
97 57 154
Mobile
86 47 133
Elsewhere
12 3 15
1345 420 1765
Which methods do you use to connect to the internet?
Multiple Choice Question Total 300300 Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Broadband 235 806 231 1272
Mobile/Smart phone 5 94 76 175
Mobile dongle 49 108 12 169
Public Wi-Fi 10 95 26 131
Dial-up 10 33 15 58
Other/Unknown 0 28 1 29
74 358 130 562
How did you hear about hullcc.gov.uk?
Single Choice Question Total 300300 Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Previous user 14 399 36 449
Search engine 62 274 69 405
I work for the council 11 102 6 119
Link from elsewhere 2 59 14 75
From a form or leaflet 31 20 7 58
Friends or Family 16 5 27 48
On council adverts 12 11 11 34
Library 2 27 3 32
Other 7 13 5 25
Link from government website 1 16 6 23
Council officer 12 4 4 20
Unsure 8 7 5 20
Guessed address 6 1 3 10
184 938 196 1318
What kind of internet user are you?
Single Choice Question Total 300300 Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Regular user (range of skills, and comfortable using the internet on a regular basis) 130 494 97 721
I couldn't live without it 45 321 77 443
Casual user (basic skills, use as and when it's necessary) 102 102 77 281
Tentative and reluctant user (very basic skills, very rare usage) 17 21 21 59
294 938 272 1504
How often do you contact Hull City Council?
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 75
Single Choice Question Total 300300 Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Only in emergencies or very rarely 184 304 178 666
Every few months 159 262 124 545
Every month 106 162 48 316
At least once a week 55 146 16 217
Every day 6 53 5 64
510 927 371 1808
In the last year how often have you visited hullcc.gov.uk?
Single Choice Question Total 300300 Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Every few months 61 223 79 363
At least once a week 29 239 13 281
Very rarely 91 82 92 265
Every month 0 223 0 223
Never 110 0 79 189
First visit 0 96 0 96
Every day 3 55 6 64
291 918 263 1472
Why didn't 300300 callers use the website?
Single Choice Question
Total 300300 callers who didn't use the website
Percentage of 300300 callers (110 responses)
Percentage of all callers (510 responses)
Percentage of callers that identify as web users (294 responses)
300300 meets their needs better 16 15% 3% 5%
Had never visited hullcc.gov.uk, or knew about it 71 65% 14% 24%
Others 23 21% 5% 8%
110
510 294
What was the main purpose of your visit
Single Choice Question Total 300300 Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
find information 131 573 111 815
report something 154 17 35 206
request something 123 17 45 185
Other 60 65 32 157
pay something 27 52 57 136
just browsing n/a 97 31 128
apply for something 9 69 37 115
make a complaint/provide feedback 1 16 47 64
book something 5 32 17 54
510 938 399 1847
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 76
What service were you interested in?
Single Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Trading standards 1 1 - 2
Licensing 3 1 4 8
Electoral register 2 12 2 16
History - 20 - 20
Parking 7 4 11 22
Planning 4 19 2 25
Youth activities - 16 9 25
Community safety 1 7 18 26
Social care and health 5 22 4 31
Adult and further education - 26 17 43
Environmental health (such as food standards, health inspection) 13 12 18 43
Public transport 6 12 27 45
Roads and streetlights 15 10 20 45
Councillors and democracy 3 36 10 49
Schools information 1 34 21 56
Benefits 14 28 17 59
Events and What's On 0 116 29 145
Council tax (but not council tax benefit) 95 35 33 163
Leisure facilities (such as gym membership, libraries) 2 159 10 171
Jobs 20 112 49 181
Other (please state) 27 104 59 190
Rubbish and recycling (such as missed bin collection) 164 42 37 243
Housing (but not housing benefit) 127 110 52 289
On your last visit to hullcc.gov.uk did it provide you with the information you were looking for?
Single Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Yes 130 619 136 885
No 22 213 32 267
I wasn't looking for anything in particular
106
106
Can't remember 16
24 40
168 938 192 1298
How easy, or difficult did you find it to get hold that information?
Single Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Very difficult 1 9 2 12
Difficult 2 32 9 43
Neither 10 151 21 182
Easy 59 255 57 371
Very easy 58 172 46 276
130 619 135 884
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 77
What did you do instead?
Single Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Do something else 4 90 3 106
Ring 300300 13 28 23 64
Make no further effort 1 40 14 55
Write an email 1 18 3 22
Visit a library 0 19 1 20
Visit a CSC 1 8 4 13
Talk to a Councillor 0 4 5 9
I can't remember 2 0 3 5
Use the post 0 2 2 4
22 209 58 298
How likely are you to use www.hullcc.gov.uk for the same purpose in the future?
Single Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Very unlikely 98 42 33 173
Unlikely 33 40 23 96
Neither 51 116 48 215
Likely 65 342 67 474
Very likely 47 398 54 499
How likely are you to use www.hullcc.gov.uk for a different purpose in the future?
Single Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Very unlikely 109 42 34 185
Unlikely 34 57 26 117
Neither 48 173 59 280
Likely 62 417 65 544
Very likely 41 249 57 347
What is your preferred way of contacting the council?
Single Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Telephone 475 144 168 787
Depends 2 393 34 429
Email 3 208 32 243
Internet 11 120 70 201
In person 16 39 72 127
By post 3 26 15 44
Other 0 8 6 14
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 78
Please rate the following areas on a scale of very satisfied to very dissatisfied (online question only)
One answer per row Very Dissatisfied Dissatisfied Neither Satisfied Very satisfied Subtotal N/A Grand Total
First impression of our website 46 79 190 451 163 929 9 938
Look and Feel 43 99 194 444 144 924 14 938
Getting around the site/navigation 73 138 150 390 174 925 13 938
Search 84 116 185 358 156 899 39 938
Finding what I want 58 103 176 388 190 915 23 938
Mapping 52 82 240 306 116 796 142 938
Booking things 31 29 173 175 82 490 448 938
Reporting 32 34 172 153 62 453 485 938
Applying 35 29 168 165 68 465 473 938
Paying 29 22 162 137 81 431 507 938
Final Impression 55 96 154 385 225 915 23 938
538 827 1964 3352 1461 8142 2176 10318
Which of the following areas would you like to see the council develop or improve? (online question only)
Of which
Multiple Choice Question Number Structure Content Design Search Transactionality Account Subscription SocMed Blogs Map AV UGC It's Fine Other
Structure 283
164 168 185 126 113 73 57 55 122 55 54 7 9
Content 273 164
165 185 124 104 86 61 66 121 64 61 12 10
Design 284 168 165
174 130 106 74 59 52 121 63 63 12 10
Search 343 185 185 174
141 115 92 62 56 142 60 61 11 14
Transactionality 262 126 124 130 141
145 88 55 63 133 53 51 12 8
Account 218 113 104 106 115 145
82 57 53 108 48 47 10 10
Subscription 253 73 86 74 92 88 82
50 47 78 42 45 8 10
SocMed 96 57 61 59 62 55 57 50
44 54 42 43 10 5
Blogs 104 55 66 52 56 63 53 47 44
56 44 42 15 4
Map 229 122 121 121 142 133 108 78 54 56
58 58 12 5
AV 106 55 64 63 60 53 48 42 42 44 58
47 12 5 User Generated Content (UGC) 106 54 61 63 61 51 47 45 43 42 58 47
10 7
It's Fine 265 7 12 12 11 12 10 8 10 15 12 12 10
1
Other 46 9 10 10 14 8 10 10 5 4 5 5 7 1
2868
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 79
How can we improve hullcc.gov.uk? (300300 and face to face question only)
Multiple Choice Question
Total Responses (300300)
Total Responses (Face to Face) Total
Structure of website (for example the names by which we refer to services and service areas) 10 55 65 Better content (for example the way in which pages are written, or the information they contain) 13 37 50 Look and feel (for example the layout of the pages and the colour scheme) 12 37 49
Search facility (for example the results it returns) 13 44 57
More transactional services (for example reporting missed bin collections, applying for licences, paying and booking) 13 14 27 Customer accounts to enable you to log and track service requests, store payment details, receive information on your areas of interest etc. 2 7 9
Information on your chosen areas of interest sent to you (for example by email or text without visiting the site) 3 12 15
Ways to access information through social media and networks (Twitter, Facebook and similar services) 0 18 18
Blogs (from council officers, elected members and other contributors) 0 13 13 Geographical information ('Find my nearest' function) 1 18 19
Greater use of audio or video 0 23 23
Contribute your own content to the site (pictures, comments, news, events) 1 6 7
It's fine as it is 144 81 225
Other 30 19 49
Have not visited, do not visit hullcc.gov.uk 96 33 129
No Response 0 167 167
338 232 570
Currently Use Total users who would like HCC to use a service
Aggregator Sites 79 37
Bebo 69 33
Blogs 165 70
Discussion Forums 262 125
Facebook 614 118
Flickr 113 40
Friendfeed 40 27
Linked-In 77 32
MySpace 144 44
Subscription 125 66
ThisIsYourMail 188 65
Twitter 161 49
UGC 97 51
Wiki 148 48
Yammer 35 22
Youtube 397 83
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 80
Which of the following are relevant to you?
Multiple Choice Question Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Live in the Area 450 668 276 1394
Work in Hull 186 338 161 685
Work for HullCC 21 165 8 194
Planning to visit 1 30 13 44
Planning on moving 2 14 3 19
Local councillor 0 4 0 4
Information (for myself) 79 336 106 521
Information (for work) 8 153 11 172
Information (for friend) 8 82 28 118
Other 9 18 14 41
Postcodes represented
Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
AB31 0 1 0 1
BB8 0 1 0 1
BD7 0 1 0 1
BD8 0 1 0 1
BL9 0 1 0 1
BN2 0 1 0 1
BT7 0 1 0 1
CR3 0 1 0 1
CV3 0 1 0 1
CV4 0 1 0 1
DE23 0 1 0 1
DH4 0 1 0 1
DH9 0 1 0 1
DL10 0 1 0 1
DL14 0 1 0 1
DN1 0 0 1 1
DN11 0 1 1 2
DN14 0 2 0 2
DN15 0 1 0 1
DN17 0 1 0 1
DN18 0 6 4 10
DN19 0 1 0 1
DN21 0 1 0 1
DN3 0 1 0 1
DN32 0 1 0 1
E17 0 1 0 1
EH55 0 1 0 1
EI1 0 1 0 1
EX17 0 1 0 1
FY8 0 1 0 1
G26 0 1 0 1
G40 0 1 0 1
G43 0 1 0 1
HP3 0 1 0 1
HU1 2 23 9 34
HU10 1 12 7 20
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 81
HU11 4 10 4 18
HU12 3 20 6 29
HU13 3 4 16 23
HU14 0 3 8 11
HU15 0 8 15 23
HU16 2 9 3 14
HU17 1 24 3 28
HU18 0 4 1 5
HU19 0 3 1 4
HU2 14 14 4 32
HU20 0 2 0 2
HU3 49 63 26 138
HU4 25 45 14 84
HU5 93 156 37 286
HU6 67 78 25 170
HU7 54 85 31 170
HU8 58 73 20 151
HU9 79 98 21 198
IS17 0 1 0 1
KY1 1 0 0 1
LA2 0 1 0 1
LE1 0 1 0 1
LE2 0 1 0 1
LN11 1 0 0 1
LN2 0 2 0 2
LS20 0 0 0 0
LU6 0 1 0 1
ME3 0 1 0 1
ME5 0 1 0 1
NG24 0 1 0 1
NG34 0 1 0 1
NN9 0 1 0 1
Non UK 0 9 0 9
OX2 0 1 0 1
PO12 0 1 0 1
S41 0 1 0 1
SA48 0 1 0 1
SE6 0 1 0 1
SK7 0 1 0 1
SS2 0 1 0 1
TN39 0 1 0 1
W6 0 1 0 1
WD24 1 0 0 1
WF2 0 1 0 1
WV3 0 1 0 1
YO12 0 1 0 1
YO15 0 2 1 3
YO16 0 3 0 3
YO23 0 1 0 1
YO25 0 4 0 4
YO30 0 1 0 1
YO42 0 1 0 1
YO43 0 3 0 3
YO7 0 1 0 1
YO8 0 1 0 1
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
Page | 82
Gender
Total 300300
Total Web
Total Face to Face Total
Female 322 507 165 994
Male 147 394 169 710
469 901 334 1704
Average Age
300300
Face to Face
Female 45 36 Male 49 32
Age and Gender
Total 300300
Total 300300 Male
Total 300300 Female
Total Web
Total Web Male
Total Web Female
Total Face to Face
Total Face to Face Male
Total Face to Face Female Total
Total Male
Total Female
Under 21 17 3 14 57 18 39 82 47 35 156 68 88
21-30 69 17 52 166 59 107 72 36 36 307 112 195
31-40 94 28 66 156 61 95 39 25 14 289 114 175
41-50 107 30 77 147 77 70 43 21 22 297 128 169
51-60 90 30 60 124 64 60 23 7 16 237 101 136
61-70 44 15 29 56 33 23 19 5 14 119 53 66
71-80 30 17 13 10 6 4 5 4 1 45 27 18
81-90 9 2 7 4 2 2 3 1 2 16 5 11
Over 90 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0
461 143 318 720 320 400 286 146 140 1467 609 858
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY DATA
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QUESTIONS FOR 300300 and OFFLINE participants only:
Why didn't you use the website?
Total 300300
Total Face to Face Total
300300 easier/quicker 9 0 9
didn't think that the information/service could be accessed online 76 40 116
Dissatisfied with previous experience 7 8 15
don't use the internet 200 178 378
Didn't know about the site/don't visit hullcc.gov.uk 17 0 17
Other (please state) 27 52 79
prefer the human touch 138 81 219 tried the website but found it difficult to use 2 6 8
tried the website first and could not find the information/service 3 8 11
tried the website first and the information/service is not available 15 13 28
were not at a computer and saw something that needed dealing with immediately so rang 300300 16 14 30
was not at a computer and was near a CSC 0 8 8
510 399 909
What are the barriers to your usage?
Total 300300
Total Face to Face Total
I don't feel comfortable using the internet 75 20 95
I have never used the internet and don't want to in the future 56 28 84
Other (please state) 20 13 33
The cost of internet access 46 14 60
197 75 272