43
Scrutiny in the Spotlight workshop Role of the Networked Councillor in Scrutiny Catherine Howe, Public-i November 2013

Scrutiny in the spotlight: Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

  • View
    187

  • Download
    3

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Scrutiny in the spotlight: Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process. Presentation for the CfPS conference in Wales (November 2013)

Citation preview

Page 1: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Scrutiny in the Spotlight workshop

Role of the Networked Councillor in Scrutiny

Catherine Howe, Public-iNovember 2013

Page 2: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

What’s the plan?

Explore what we mean by networked councillor

Discuss some of the tools which they might use

Talk about what this means for scrutiny Gaze into the future a bit

Page 3: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Self Publication: Disintermediation of the Media

Virtual Community and Social Networking: Wide scale use of Networked Power

Collaborative Culture: Creating a sharing economy

Radical Openness: Disruption of the democratic relationship

Networked Technology: Smart Cities and new streams of information

Customization, Making and Self-Service: Disruption of manufacturing and the industrial economy

Technology or Social Change?Any of these disruptions might be a point of entry for how someone

thinks about digital

Page 4: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

So what is a Networked Councillor?

Page 5: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

An effective community leader in a digital and networked world

Page 6: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

The range of networked behaviours

Communicative Tell people what you have done

We have developed a model of Networked Councillor behaviours

Collaborative Discuss with people what you are doing

Co-productive Agree with people what you could do together

Page 7: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Digital tools are important.

Networked thinking is essential.

Page 8: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Here and Now

There and Then

One to One

Page 9: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Broadcast

Page 10: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Networked

Page 11: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

This is a whole system change but in a democratic system the elected

representatives are crucial

Page 12: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

We need to create Networked Councillors.

This needs more than just showing them how to use Twitter.

Page 13: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

We limit ourselves by simply considering changes to the way we communicate

Page 14: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

What kind of tools are we talking about?

Page 15: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Good uses for content creation on a range of devices

Smart phones Quick video/audio interviews Photography Twitter

iPad/tablets Twitter Creating pictures, video and audio Email, blog reading Light editing of video, audio, pictures

Laptop Blogging, writing, editing Full editing of media (pictures, video, audio) Detailed work – spreadsheets, etc. Responding in detail to emails, blogs (commenting)

Page 16: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Some examples of online tools & their uses

Blogging

Can be updated regularly and posts (like this one) don’t have to be long

Allows residents to comment on issues – and for councillors to respond

You can go into detail and combine different media (words, pictures, video)

Audience can include anyone (you don’t need an account to read and is easy to publicise)

http://www.cllrandrewwallis.co.uk/unrestricted-filming-at-cornwall-council-meetings/

Great for showing the full range of your views

Page 17: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Facebook

Allows quick sharing of media content (any content)

Can connect to much wider group, who often are unlikely to use other social media

Great for managing large number of friends

Can run pages (public) and profile (public or private) separately

Facebook algorithms make some aspects of using it abstruse

Privacy issues for some – in particular keeping private/public separate

https://www.facebook.com/Alison.Her

Great for finding people and being social

Page 18: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Twitter

Great for quick responses and conversations

Share links to content (news, blog posts, videos)

A social tool – for talking with others, not for broadcast

Audience is smaller than than Facebook

Great for helping to build links with individuals and organisations (through reciprocity)

https://twitter.com/jasonkitcat

Great for finding people and sharing news

Page 19: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

LinkedIn

Shows network of connections

Demonstrates skills and experience (good for digital footprint)

Establishes links with business community

Audience is professional and (mostly) employed

Difficult to see full profiles

You have to pay for full access

uk.linkedin.com/pub/councillor-webb/1a/23/393

Best for managing your formal network

Page 20: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

4,489 live viewsCoveritLive interactive chat had 3,981 page views & 242 comments#ccwebcast trended on Twitter

“I strongly believe that these numbers prove that by enabling people to take an active role in the debate, by marrying up

the available technology with transparency and democracy - a direct line into the

Chamber - we can encourage more people to take an interest in local politics.”

Matt Bond, Communications Specialist Cornwall Council

Webcasting

Page 21: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Connect Social

Gives councillors identity on webcasting Shows their democratic record – allowing you to trace their activity Audience is completely open Can integrate other social media activity

Designed to provide a single place to connect to your content

Page 22: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process
Page 23: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

People struggle more with the social skills than the technical

ones

Page 24: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

It’s not just help with the technical skills –

It’s about understanding culture and behaviour online

How do I deal with conflict?

How public do I have to be? What can I talk about?

Do I have to have a Facebook page?

What does it mean when some one ‘RT’s me?

Page 25: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

What do you already use social media for either personally or professionally?Do you have any networked councillors?What is there role in the scrutiny process?

Table questions

Exploring the skills in your council

Page 26: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

And how are these tools used in scrutiny?

Page 27: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

There is the opportunity for the public to contribute to the agendaThe format follows a topic rather than a formal committee structureThe process can involve many different people from different networksOpenness is at the heart of the scrutiny processIt can work well with other digital democracy projects such as open data

Scrutiny is a great place to startIdeal for more open democracy?

Page 28: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

There are many ways to use social media in scrutiny in a meaningful

way

New approaches to evidence

Embed open government principles

Work more responsively

Extend the reach of the process

Open up the agenda setting

Page 29: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Examples of Networked Councillor qualities in Scrutiny

Open by default Comments from the public are

encouraged during meetings via social media and other channels

Digitally native Minutes of meetings and related papers

available online - meetings are either webcast or live tweeted and widely

disseminated online

Co-productive Decisions are shaped with active

citizens who continue to participate actively in the outcome

NetworkedDecisions are communicated via relevant

networks rather than being simply disseminated centrally

Page 30: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

What is the role of information in scrutiny?

Open data

Page 31: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

How do we define ‘evidence’?

Page 32: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Blogging in Scrutiny

Emma is using her blog to explain the budget process in non-council language

Page 33: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Twitter updates around scrutiny

Both officers and members are using twitter to highlight what is happening in scrutiny

Page 34: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Webcasting in action in a highly sensitive scrutiny case

http://www.coventry.public-i.tv/core/portal/webcast_interactive/114228

Webcasting a difficult issue makes it clear you are being open

Page 35: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Using an online community forum to engage people in Party Houses Scrutiny

Going to people’s own spaces can involve a much more diverse group of people

http://bhccresidentcommunity.ning.com/BHscrutiny/partyhouses

Page 36: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Tough Choices Devon

http://www.toughchoices.co.uk/

Text here??

Page 37: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

CityCamp

http://citycampbtn.org/

Text here??

Page 38: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

NHS Citizen

Total hits over both days: 2234 (1650 live, 584 archive)

Page 39: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Margaret Hodge

Text here??

Page 40: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Good Scrutiny award winners

Text here??

Page 41: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Decide on a topic that you want to work on – it could be anything that is topical in your council or even better in the local communityWhat would a ‘networked scrutiny’ process look like?What tools would you use?What bits of the process would you change?Who would be involved?What is stopping you??

Table questions

How could you use these ideas in the future

Page 42: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Social media and the digital realm can be challenging.

It is the poorer for the absence of our democratic processes

Page 43: Scrutiny in the spotlight:  Networked Councillors and the Scrutiny process

Catherine [email protected]

Thank you for your time