Making Citizen Engagement Work in Our Communities

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Making Citizen Engagement Work in Our Communities Presented by: Gordon Maner and Shannon Ferguson TODAY S LEARNING OBJECTIVES Understand what Civic Engagement is and its value to governance Understand the city council s and the city s role in the engagement process Hear and exchange best practices to encourage and increase constituent participation Learn to apply concepts to practical situations 1

OPERATING AGREEMENTS R-E-S-P-E-C-T BE HARD ON ISSUES, NOT EACH OTHER MAKE NO EXTRA NOISE OBSERVE THE VEGAS RULE SUSPEND YOUR DISBELIEF RENT IDEAS, BUYING NOT REQUIRED S---T---R---E---T---C---H CULTIVATE CURIOSITY BE FLEXIBLE HAVE FUN! Table Talk What are two questions related to citizen engagement your table would like answered by the end of the day? 2

Table Talk Share examples of when your city engaged citizens to address a challenge? What worked well? What did not work well? PURPOSES OF ENGAGEMENT To involve those who are affected by a decision in the decision-making process To promote sustainable decisions by providing information needed to involve citizens in a meaningful way Communicates to citizens how their input affects the decision Education of citizens Ownership Identify future leaders 3

WHY ENGAGE CITIZENS? Leads to good government Essential to fulfilling your purpose as representative of community If you do not find a way to productively convene people, they will find a way to do it without you WHY ENGAGE CITIZENS? Opportunity to work collaboratively with constituents Builds trust So people understand why things are happening Public policy alone cannot solve community problems 4

6 CHARACTERISTICS OF THE REALITY FACING LOCAL GOVERNMENTS TODAY 1. Problems are complex and difficult to solve 2. No one agency, including government, can solve the problems 3. Local government does not have the financial resources to solve problems 4. Citizens have lost confidence in all institutions 5. The monopoly is dead 6. Everything takes an exponentially longer period of time to accomplish Defining Engagement and the Spectrum of Public Engagement 5

SHOUT OUT What do you see as some of the challenges of having citizens involved? CHALLENGES The public often thinks that local government officials: Have better knowledge to make decisions and solve problems Have ignored us in the past Have already made up their minds what they want to do Will not be influenced by the views of the community Are selectively deaf and unscrupulous 6

CHALLENGES Local government officials often think that community members: Cannot grasp complex issues Are easily influenced by the media Have views that are shaped by narrow interests. Are mostly apathetic Don t appreciate constraints of public processes Would rather blame than problem-solve CHALLENGES The voluntary associations people are most likely to join are decidedly homogeneous Civic participation in some circumstances actually turns people off of politics Many groups do not pursue the kinds of goals that would be necessary for promoting democratic citizenship 7

SPECTRUM OF PARTICIPATION SPECTRUM OF PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT INFORM CONSULT INVOLVE COLLABORATE EMPOWER 8

SPECTRUM OF PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT INFORM Presentations Fact Sheets Open Houses Websites Social Media SPECTRUM OF PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT CONSULT Public Comment Focus Groups Surveys Public Meetings 9

SPECTRUM OF PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT INVOLVE Workshops Decision Poling Visioning SPECTRUM OF PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT COLLABORATE Citizen Advisory Group/Committee Consensus Building Deciding with Officials 10

SPECTRUM OF PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT EMPOWER Citizen Juries Ballots Delegated Decisions GROUP ACTIVITY Line up along the wall where you re most comfortable engaging citizens? 11

Getting the Right People Involved in the Decision Making REFLECTION Think about who is involved in your community. Please record. 12

KNOW WHAT YOU WANT KNOW WHO YOU WANT IT FROM 13

GROUP DISCUSSION Reflecting on your list of those currently involved; Who is missing and who should be involved? Please record. Are the two lists the same? WHAT KIND OF PARTICIPANTS? 14

WHAT KIND OF INPUT? City Council and Levels of Engagement 15

4 REALLY BIG QUESTIONS 1. Is it relevant? 2. Is it timely? 3. Can we actually do something about it? 4. Is it politically expedient? ENGAGEMENT PROCESS Steps in the process: Electoral process Learning how to do what you promised Realities on the ground and how to meet your goals Elevating governing to the level of campaigning Civic Engagement is a means to elevate governing. 16

VENDING MACHINE BARN-RAISING 17

VENDING MACHINE VS BARN-RAISING STRATEGIES TO RAISE THE BARN FOR THE BROADER COMMUNITY 1. Visioning 2. Developing Community Leadership 3. Working through Mediating Institutions 4. Empowering Neighborhoods 5. Adopting Different Leadership Roles 6. Discovering Citizenship 18

CORE VALUES FOR ENGAGEMENT Seek out and facilitate the involvement of those potentially affected by or interested in a decision Seek input from participants in designing how they participate Provide participants with the information they need to participate in a meaningful way Communicate to participants how their input affected the decision CORE VALUES FOR ENGAGEMENT Based on the belief that those who are affected by a decision have a right to be involved in the decision-making process Includes the promise that the public's contribution will influence the decision Promotes sustainable decisions by recognizing and communicating the needs and interests of all participants, including decision makers 19

SHOUT OUT In what ways do citizens engage in your community and why? LEVELS OF ENGAGEMENT First Level -direct selection by the Council Second Level -smaller focused issues-based Third Level - broad citywide involvement 20

FIRST LEVEL OF ENGAGEMENT Board & committee appointments Shout out! What are some of the boards and committees you appoint to? Shout out! What sorts of things do you expect from your board appointees? SECOND LEVEL OF ENGAGEMENT Geographic Interest Stakeholder Group 21

THIRD LEVEL OF ENGAGEMENT Broad city-wide involvement Extending reach to the broader community GROUP DISCUSSIONS Level 1: What successes and challenges have you had in appointing people to boards and committees or getting the right people engaged? What made those appointments good as opposed to not so good? Diversity of appointments? Level 2: When did you involve geographic, interests or stakeholder groups? Was the outcome successful or productive and why or why not? Level 3: Discuss examples of when you had county-wide engagement. Was it productive and successful; why or why not? 22

Engaging Youth Engaging and Getting Young People Involved in Local Government 23

Who are These Young People? Millennials Generation Y Those born between 1980-2000 18-35 year olds Make up 24% of American population Make up about 22% of Georgia s population In 2012, 49.1% of Georgia s population was under age 35 School-age that can be influenced later down the road Characteristics Racially and ethnically diverse Milestones hitting 5-7 years later than Baby Boomers Coming out of the recession Looking for jobs Student debt Technology savvy Idealists somewhat naïve at this age; optimists 24

What do they Contribute? 21% of Millennials say that helping their community or others in need is the most important aspect of their life Philanthropic, volunteer recruitment Want to make a difference and succeed Voting 54.9% of the voting age population in America Taking part in co-production Entrepreneurs, business incubators, non-profits, etc. Due to government reputation and political polarization? Moving Forward Young people need to take a more active role in local government and need to have a bigger voice to represent this large portion of the population Need to vote and take advantage of communicating with their local officials Usually the last to go through the education system, can help in that aspect What is working and what is not 25

Success Stories 20% are naturally going to be on board, 20% are naturally going to resist, it is finding the 60% that you need to work with Youth involvement writing competition Some influential person in their life already involved with government natural circumstance Naturally involved have found an issue, good or bad, that deals with them directly What Can You do? Allow young people to be a part of the decision-making process Advisory boards Commissions Public policy making Economic development Be active on social media Since this is where young people are getting their information from, make it readily available 26

What Can You DO? Restore a community property let them invest Keeping citizens coming back To raise their family, work, etc. Co-produce, charity events, recruit volunteers, have work days, etc. Writing competitions Go into the schools, speak, get names and job descriptions out there, these kids will vote later in life What Can You do? This promotes culture of youth action Not only does this help community development, but also their individual development Work on overall community feel Move away and return Active voice in economic development Can raise a family Aware of governmental happenings Chances to volunteer 27

Conclusion Young people need to be a part of the solution, not a part of the problem need to stop sitting on the sideline By involving young people in government, this will contribute to a balanced, representative, and democratic community that will ultimately benefit all Georgians Young trees eventually make a forest what it is WHO IS ENGAGING YOUTH? How? SHOUT OUT 28

Social Media PARTICIPANT STORIES What was your objective? What level of participation (1 st, 2 nd, 3 rd?) Who did you involve? What did they do? What were the results? What would do differently if you did the same thing again? 29

The Social Media Revolution 2017 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwa8-43ke-q How is your city (and how are you) using social media to engage citizens? 30

Social Media What is your level of engagement? Personally? Professionally (as an individual)? Within your organization or local government? Your elected officials? What social media platforms are you using in all three areas? 31

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Why use social media in public sector communications? If you don t tell your story, someone else will for better or for worse. Having a website is not enough in this digital age. Your stakeholders want to engage in discussions and to make inquiries in real time. The public demands rapid sharing of important information. We live in a fast-food world of instant gratification. 34

Why use social media in public sector communications? Nearly every US Federal agency & US Armed Forces have embraced at least one social platform. 70% of local governments 1 and 96% of all law enforcement agencies 2 now engage in some form of social media activity. ( 1 Public Relations Journal 2014; 2 International Association of Chiefs of Police s Center for Social Media) Analytics help officials glean their constituents attitudes toward policies and decisions. It s virtually FREE! 90% of those local governments surveyed reported other uses beyond normal, day-to-day communications with constituents: Economic development Emergency management Political engagement Service operations 35

Every mistake you make on social media could have serious consequences, but not participating is a mistake in itself. Personal Professional Local Government Elected Officials 36

Best Practices Keep them separate! Personal Professional In your personal accounts, always be mindful that you represent a public entity. You are held to a higher standard. Local Government Transparency of processes Collaboration among members Innovation by leadership Participation of citizens Quality of life 37

Elected Officials Transparency of processes Connect people to services Answer questions Celebrate success stories and lift up the community Good Practices from Our Cities 38

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Social media is powerful! DCA s Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8) Waiting List for rental subsidy 7-day preliminary app period Facebook post ran for 7 days Spent only $200to promote the post; targeted post within Georgia only Almost 2,000 Likes; 4,300+ Shares; and 1,200 comments In just 7 days, DCA received 85,000+ applications for fewer than 2,000 available vouchers Social Media Myths Social media replaces your website. Your citizens don t care about social media. You have to be on everysocial network. It s all about numbers. It s ok to ignore or delete negative comments and feedback. 44

Tie your social media in to your other communication efforts. When in doubt, ask(someone younger). When in doubt, don t. Behave the way you want others to. Think before tagging. Picture quality and content is paramount! Avoid poor grammar and spelling errors. DON T WRITE IN ALL CAPS! Be a friend to get a friend. Develop a social media policy. 45

CIVIC ENGAGEMENT REQUIRES LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MOVE FROM: Directive to facilitative leadership. Monologue to dialogue. Customer service to collaboration and co-creation. Distrust to trust. Entitlement to ownership Civic Engagement is Good Governance Strategies Partner with diverse community groups to hold public conversations on public problems Provide opportunities for all types of residents to participate in public policymaking Use social media to target and engage all residents Help underrepresented groups gain the experience they need to sit on boards and commissions Reduce barriers to civic participation, including transportation and language obstacles 46

Course wrap-up RESOURCES The Spectrum Group Carl Vinson Institute of Government International City-County Management Association (ICMA) http://icma.org/en/icma/newsroom/member_news/article/105562 /2015_Community_Goals_Citizen_Engagement National Civic League www.ncl.org 303-571-4343 National Issues Forum www.nifi.org 800-443-7843 47

What s something you will do or do differently to better engage your city s citizens? 48