Tell Us What You Think!
Tell Us What You Think!
Dunedin (Tuesday, 20 May 2014)
– Letters will be sent out this week to 4,500 Dunedin
residents, inviting them to take part in the DCC’s annual
Residents’ Opinion Survey DCC Acting General Manager
Services and Development Nicola Pinfold says, “The ROS
provides a host of useful information and helps us gauge the
views of residents who may be less likely to tell us what
they think in other ways, such as the Annual Plan
process.”
Last year, the residents randomly selected
from the electoral roll were invited to complete the ROS
online using a unique code, rather than receiving a hard
copy of the questionnaire. A hard copy was made available on
request.
This was successful in raising the response
rate and cutting costs so the same approach is being taken
this year.
The survey is also open to all residents
online at www.dunedin.govt.nz/ros and will be sent to all
members of the Dunedin Peoples’ Panel. To ensure the
statistical validity of the ROS results, the responses from
the people who were selected are used as the The Survey is
open until 18 June. A reminder letter and hard copy of the
questionnaire will be sent to those who haven’t responded
about two weeks after the initial letter, a practice that
has proved successful in increasing the response rate. The
results are expected to be publicly available in late July.
Responses from residents who independently chose to
complete the Survey online are analysed separately but still
provide the DCC with valuable feedback about how it can For
the second year, all respondents will have the opportunity
to enter a draw to win a prize.
Each prize is worth about $150 and three winners will be drawn who will be able to choose from a range of prizes, including vouchers, swim passes or a donation to a charity Ms Pinfold says, “We have been using this Survey for 20 years and it has become a key tool for us to assess how well we are doing, and ultimately guiding our planning and decision-making. ROS focuses on how well we deliver our services, and asks questions about residents’ perceptions of our performance. Some of the results are used as official measures of the Council’s performance for audit purposes. But equally importantly, the feedback is used by staff and the Council to guide our thinking about how we might best deliver services to better meet the needs of Dunedin’s residents.“
The Survey, which costs about $40,000,
will be undertaken by independent research company Key
Research.
Ends