Addressing the challenges of opening up local public data

Michael Grimes
22 April 2010

On Monday the Local Public Data Panel held a workshop in Birmingham with local council officers, bloggers and activists to address the challenges of releasing local data for anyone to use.

The aim of the workshop was ‘to generate ideas and understanding about what is needed to drive the local public data initiative at a local level’.

When people get their hands on raw data they can develop tools and services that the custodians of that data either don’t have the time and skills to do or would never have dreamed of anyway. DayNurseriesUK, for example, has built a tool for people to find full-day child care, and Adrian Short has built a tool for people in Sutton find their election candidates.

Releasing data also enables members of the public to point out errors, such as an incorrectly mapped bus stop, which - if fed back effectively - enriches that data to the benefit of society. Although there will always be people who want to point the finger, it creates a wonderful opportunity for citizens and state to work collaboratively on issues of social concern.

Obstacles though are complex and numerous: risk aversion, personal agendas (such as job retention), concerns about quality control and fear of how the data might be used are just some of the challenges that need addressing. But challenges they are, and everyone on Monday seemed more than happy to confront them.

By the end of the day we had come up with a list of things we think are needed (this list is from my personal notes and not the official record of the meeting):

  • Data disclaimer for everyone to use;
  • Clarity and guidance on the release of data;
  • More clarity on ‘derived data’ (what it is, etc);
  • Training;
  • Repeats of this sort of workshop event;
  • Business case;
  • Stories of good stuff being done, that everyone can relate to, and presented accessibly;
  • Research on usage and numbers;
  • Budgetry incentives;
  • New legislation, or better use of existing legislation, to encourage the opening up of data;
  • Untangling of overlapping and seemingly contradictory legislation;
  • A statutory right to data.

I have set up a blog for those involved to collaborate on this work: http://localdata.citizenshipfoundation.org.uk.

Posted by Michael Grimes, 10:55 am

Filed under: Digital Engagement, How To, Open data

Hyperlocal election reporting, story sourcing and libel avoidance: Talk About Local unconference 2010

Michael Grimes
19 April 2010

There has been a concerted effort over the last couple of years to encourage local people to get their voices heard and to take control of local issues.

As a result of this burgeoning ‘hyperlocal news‘ movement, more and more blogs and community websites are springing up: people are finding and reporting on local stories that mainstream media wouldn’t be interested in, challenging and engaging with local civic organisations, and motivating their communities by virtue of being relevant.

With this comes a set of new challenges for them: what do they do when faced with the threat of crippling – though often baseless – legal action; how can they get the most meaningful response from their elected representatives; what tools are available for sourcing stories and enabling engagement; etc.

On Saturday I attended Talk About Local’s second unconference, this time held in Leeds. The last one - in Stoke-on-Trent - was full of enthusiastic people wanting to do great things; now people are finding their feet, a solid sense of purpose and determination has set in, and the enthusiasm to share knowledge and experience is as strong as ever.

I joined three discussions during the course of the day: one on finding stories, one on covering the General Election and one on legal issues.

[What follows is a lightly edited version of posts from my personal blog.]

Finding stories

A brainstorm of the room (and subsequent discussion) came up with an abundance of ideas for finding local stories:

  • Speak to people on the streets, in the community, cafes, pubs etc;
  • Cycle around the area;
  • Read up on local history, for example using:
  • Attend council meetings (the agendas might be boring but the meetings can be lively);
  • Read the minutes of council meetings;
  • Attend other local meetings (eg NHS, Police and Fire authority meetings);
  • Attend inquests;
  • Read Freedom of Information requests;
  • Read planning applications;
  • Read news feeds (eg RSS feeds via Google Reader);
  • Scan community websites;
  • Subscribe to email forums, discussion groups etc;
  • Use Wikisplash, a new guide for helping journalists find UK stories;
  • Read the births, marriages and deaths columns of local papers;
  • Request press releases from local organisations;
  • Attend Family Courts (it’s hard to find out what’s on beforehand, but courtserve.net might help);
  • Walk a dog.

It was also mentioned that the government is apparently looking to publish outcomes of magistrates’ court cases online in the future, which would be very useful to local bloggers.

The baton then passed to Tom Steinberg, who went into a bit more detail about how online tools can support the sourcing of news, and how to filter out stuff that interests you from the overwhelming amount of information available.

  • Google Alerts will send you email or RSS updates of anything you ask it
    • be creative when you’re putting in search terms
  • FixMyStreet alerts for local problems.
  • WhatDoTheyKnow lets you subscribe to alerts for when someone asks a Freedom of Information request of your council. (Even though the council may not answer, the more people subscribe the less easy it is for the issue to be ignored.)
  • TheyWorkForYou feeds: rich data about the work of individual MPs.
  • PlanningAlerts notifies you of local planning applications (although it’s currently limited to what it can do with postcodes due to action by Royal Mail).
  • Flickr enables people to geotag photos, which means you can subscribe to a feed letting you know of new ones near to you.
  • OpenlyLocal has a Google gadget for accessing local council data, and a Ning application (although sadly Ning is phasing out its free service). I think Chris said he’s also just made available some javascript for forthcoming local council meetings, which you can use on your sites.

For the more technically minded, most of the services listed above make it easy to develop your own tools for re-using their data.

Freedom of Information requests

Tom (as Director of MySociety, the organisation behind WhatDoTheyKnow) was asked to clarify the issues around submitting Freedom of Information Requests. His advice:

  • Be faultlessly polite in all your correspondence. The people reading your correspondence are rarely those responsible for the information you seek;
  • If you don’t get a response from an organisation, follow through the sanctioning process with the Information Commissioner. Make it clear that you are doing so and that you know what is expected of the organisation legally;
  • Be careful not to get labelled as ‘vexatious’. Although there is no hard and fast line about how you become labelled as ‘vexatious’, don’t give anyone the chance do so: once they’ve blacklisted you they will never reply to you again. So be minimalist in your approach.

Election coverage

We heard that whereas it used to be the case (in broadcast journalism at least) that each political party had to be given exactly the same coverage, that is no longer the case. If a party has no history of election success, you are apparently within your rights not to cover them.  Just make sure to list all the candidates who are standing.

Independent reporters should have no extra restrictions for reporting on polling day, although it might be worth trying to get press accreditation.

‘Declaration of Financial Interest’: guideline is apparently now for MPs to make that public, so you can ask if they will give you the same statement that they give to others: they might well see it as in their interest to, particularly in light of the MPs’ expenses scandal.

Some election sites
  • TheStraightChoice: uploaded election leaflets
    1. Get your readers to upload theirs
    2. Show them interesting stuff that happened as a result;
  • ElectionChampion: a game to find the election billboards that are springing up around the country;
  • Democracy Club: ‘working to build the definitive guide to where all candidates stand on major issues, nationwide’;
  • yournextmp.com
    • The goal is that after the election what the winners said will be compared with their voting record over the next five years.

Legal issues

Problems faced by people in the room had included: unfounded but effective demands to have comments removed from websites; moral dilemmas about balancing legal rights to publish with social implications for individuals; the threat of crippling court fees.

Some tips from the room:

  • Make interaction/commenting guidelines clearer;
  • Always check your story with more than one source;
  • Consider removing first-post moderation: if you moderate comments you are legally responsible for their content. Instead add a ‘report this comment’ button and ensure you have a tight take-down policy;
  • Ensure you have clear terms and conditions are on your site, and review them regularly.

Please remember:
This post is a report of information gleaned at an event, which I may unintentionally have misunderstood or misrepresented. Please do not presume anything here is accurate: check against a reliable source first.

Listening online

Michael Grimes
7 April 2010

We are trying to get better at engaging with people online, in order to offer our audience the best and most appropriate information and support that we can.

Like many organisations now, we are aware that our website is not where most people will be talking about us or our line of work. Therefore we need to be listening and engaging constructively with online activity.

This post is really a note to myself of the listening techniques I employ, but as it might be useful to others it seemed a good idea to publish it here.

What I look for

I used to search for a number of keywords covering the breadth of the organisation, but have now slimmed it down to a very specific few:

  • “citizenship foundation”
  • “citizenship teaching”
  • “citizenship education”
  • “digital engagement”
  • “digital inclusion” OR “digital exclusion”

Gathering

Of course the usefulness of this might diminish a little when more newspapers put their content behind paywalls (see Murdoch to limit Google access), but it should remain possible to see at least a headline.

Responding

I won’t go into depth about how I respond to what I ‘hear’, but elsewhere I published a flowchart on how to ‘Manage your online reputation‘ (external link), based heavily on one produced by the US Air Force. You might find it useful.

My flow chart for managing online reputations

Posted by Michael Grimes, 3:04 pm

Filed under: Uncategorized

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