cllr mark wright introduction

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Improving citizen involvement through e-democracy in Bristol Cllr Dr Mark Wright Executive Member for Efficiency and Value for Money

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Cllr Mark Wright, Bristol City Council, opens the Your Local Budget Bristol Event and describes the budget engagement work going on in Bristol.

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1. Improving citizen involvement through e-democracy in Bristol Cllr Dr Mark Wright Executive Member for Efficiency and Value for Money 2. Be informed Get involved 3. Broaden input into local decision-making Raise understanding of local issues Help people to raise issues themselves Early engagement on issues Create ongoing links with citizens Take advantage of new ways to engage people online Why e-democracy? 4. Developing a range of tools Crowd sourcing websites Greater use of social media E-bulletin / Twitter account ASK Bristol Discussion Forum You tube videos Webcasting Neighbourhood e-forums E-petitions Online surveys Consultation Finder Interactive voting 2010 2000 5. 6. A quick tour Of the tools 7. 8. 9. E-petitions Since 2004 Opportunity for citizens to raise issues (bottom-up) Used by citizens, groups and councillors Onus on citizen to promote their petition active citizenship Biggest mass online participation in e-democracy weve seen in Bristol stadium petition 90k+ signatures from over 215 e-petitions so far (Jan 2010) 10. BCFC Football stadium E-petitions site used by supporters of a new football stadium for Bristol City FC New stadium threatened by planning problems Biggest and fastest growing e-petition weve seen 29,914 signatures to date and still growing 11. Webcasting local democracy 12. Webcasting local democracy Webcasting since 2007 Webcast meetings of high public interest Meetings webcast live and viewable for 6 months Typically webcast over 20 hours a month Improves accessibility and understanding of local issues and democracy at work Watch and comment 13. Online Public conversations One direction were moving in Discuss the issue with the public at an early stage Develop understanding of issues Facilitate discussion between citizens Citizens can publicly air their views or use private comments form 14. 15. 2010 innovations 16. Map based crowd sourcing Citizens easily pin point area Make a suggestion / Comment / upload photos Spatial patterns emerge An engaging experience Used 3 times by Bristol 925 comments 17. Ideas for Bristol NESTA funded project Sign-in with FB and Twitter account Share Walk through wizard informed consultees 3,654 unique visits 128 ideas, 377 users, 955 votes 5 week consultation Broadened involvement 18. Neighbourhood Forums / Hyper local sites 19. Greater Bedminster Neighbourhood Partnership April 2007 1 of 4 e-forums (NP) in city 251 members Local politicians active members Community moderators A lively forum 20. The future is hyper-local Extend community websites to our 14 NP areas Recruiting community moderators and content providers Broad appeal: events, community news, not just NP business Strong social media presence: Flickr, Twitter, Facebook Community run Encourage more hyper-local sites 21. The importance of social media 22. 480,000 Facebook members in Bristol 80% of all under 30 years We cant afford to ignore this? 23. Feeds, widgets and e-bulletins 2010 moved into social media / letting our content travel Feeds Widgets Twitter account: consultations, e-petitions, citizen ideas, webcasts Facebook page Trying to exploit the viral potential of our tools Social media activism 24. How e-democracy could develop in the future 25. Cllr Dr Mark Wright Thank you for listening www.askbristol.com www.twitter.com/askbristol www.facebook.com/askbristol