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abbyyanow

User Profile Image abbyyanow
Member since : May-27-2009 (Verified)
1 Ideas, 1 Comments, 25 Votes

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 9 months ago

Ideas Posted

In order to create a program of dynamic public engagement, elected officials and government staff need training in the process and skills required to be successful – and this is a great opportunity to develop such trainings.

In order to support effective public engagement, leaders from federal, state and city government need to learn best practices for engaging the public, to understand:

* Facilitative leadership: they are the conveners of a process, whose purpose is to gather wisdom from many people. They need to identify and include the stakeholders who have a stake or interest, to help solve a problem that no one agency can solve by themselves. Government officials shouldn’t feel the need to have all the answers.

* The need for ongoing support and guidance: it’s not enough to convene a meeting of several hundred people. Citizens bring their skills and energies, and a willingness to work with government. They need ongoing support and resources to carry out action plans – people to help them identify their purpose and goals, help with, or training, on effective facilitation of meetings, funding for materials or professional assistance.

* Bringing citizens together to help solve problems raises their expectations. If the conveners - state, federal or local government – cannot deliver the resources or can’t stay engaged in the implementation, then it’s better not to convene citizens in the first place.

Here are some issues to address in a training on “How to conduct public engagement:”

* Who’s involved in sponsoring the event? Who else needs to be involved? How do we get their buy-in?
* How do we get the right people in the room? Who are the “right” people? How do we get the non-mainstream people, or people who feel marginalized, to participate?
* How do we build bridges and trust before the event?
* What do we need to address so that people don’t shrug their shoulders and dismiss the event as “another misguided effort” by the politicians?
* What is our responsibility to participants? Are we raising expectations that we can’t fulfill?
* What resources do we need in order to support the outcomes that the participants generate? What organizations need to be included as sponsors in order to provide those resources?
* What kind of support and guidance should we commit to providing if we’re going to hold such a summit?
* What are the components of an engaging meeting or summit? How do we make it participatory? What kinds of activities should we steer away from?
* How do we get people to engage with one another? How do we build community in such an event?
Displaying 1 - 25 of 4205 Ideas

Comments Posted

abbyyanow 9 months ago
I agree with the need for a clear definition of what "public engagement" is, and what is isn't.
Having a government official speak is not public engagement. Elected officials should be invited
to participate in these public meetings - to come, to stay, sit at a table with the public,
discuss with others - not give a speech, not come for 10 min. and leave, not have priority over
other participants.