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THE NCLM LOCAL LEADERSHIP FOUNDATION AT WORK

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Title: THE NCLM LOCAL LEADERSHIP FOUNDATION AT WORK


1
Citizen Informed Performance Measurement
  • THE NCLM LOCAL LEADERSHIP FOUNDATION AT WORK
  • NCLM ANNUAL Conference
  • October 13, 2008

2
CIPM Demonstration Project
  • Funded by the NCLM Local Leadership Foundation
  • Supported by grants from the Alfred P. Sloan and
    Z. Smith Reynolds Foundations
  • Partners
  • League of Municipalities
  • School of Government, UNC-Chapel Hill
  • Fountainworks, Inc.

3
CIPM Project Participants
  • Mentor Cities
  • Concord
  • Durham
  • Edenton
  • Knightdale
  • Marion
  • Salisbury
  • Mentee Cities
  • Matthews
  • Winston-Salem
  • Pinetops
  • Laurinburg
  • Stallings
  • Hickory

4
What is CIPM?
  • Citizen-informed performance measurement (CIPM)
    is a management tool that incorporates solicited
    feedback from citizens into the design of
    performance measures.
  • Several large cities have pioneered efforts to
    implement CIPM, including New York City,
    Baltimore and Chattanooga. A nine city
    demonstration project was conducted in Iowa.

5
How is CIPM Different?
  • Performance measures developed by professional
    staff often focus on workload, inputs, outputs,
    efficiency, and effectiveness. They do not
    always pay as much attention to the outcomes
    expected by citizens.
  • By tracking those aspects of service delivery in
    which citizens express interest, public officials
    can have greater confidence that their management
    decisions are influencing public services in a
    manner that the citizens value.

6
Using CIPM
  • Citizen-informed measures should augment, not
    replace, existing measures.
  • Municipal officials can allocate resources in
    order to balance performance between staff and
    citizen measures.
  • Some measures can be reported to the public and
    others can be used internally.

7
Why Implement CIPM?
  • Make decisions with better knowledge of how
    decisions respond to citizen interests
  • Report on performance in a way that citizens can
    appreciate
  • Facilitate communication between staff and
    elected officials
  • Educate citizens on resource needs

8
CIPM Process
  • Definition of the Scope of Work (Week 1)
  • Analyses of the Selected Service Area (Week 2)
  • Focus Group Design and Preparation (Weeks 3-7)
  • Solicitation of Citizen Input (Week 8)
  • Analysis of Citizen Feedback (Week 9 or 10)
  • Development of CIPM (Week 11 or 12)

9
CIPM Process
  • Definition of the Scope of Work
  • Determine which staff members should be on the
    team
  • Identify the specific service to be addressed
  • Develop a project schedule
  • Identify the profile for the citizen focus group
  • Collect and review existing data concerning
    performance in the given service area

10
Selected Services
  • Concord Recreation
  • Durham Streets
  • Edenton Public Works
  • Knightdale Recreation program for
    year-round students
  • Marion Public Safety
  • Salisbury Community Character

11
CIPM Process
  • Analyses of the Selected Service Area
  • When was the last time we changed how this
    service was provided?
  • What led to those changes?
  • How does the manner in which this service is
    provided respond to what we understanding the
    citizens to want?
  • Does the manner in which this service is provided
    support expressed council goals?
  • What are the alternatives to our current method
    of service provision?

12
CIPM Process
  • Analyses of the Selected Service Area
  • How do we think citizens would react if these
    alternatives were implemented?
  • The project team develops and refines hypotheses
    about how citizens view the selected service.
  • Citizens a primarily concerned about streets in
    their own neighborhood
  • Citizens want us to take care of major
    structural problems rather than on appearance and
    comfort.
  • These hypotheses will be tested through the focus
    group process.

13
CIPM Process
  • Focus Group Design and Preparation (2 meetings)
  • Design (Meeting 1)
  • Create a profile of the categories of citizens to
    be represented on the 12-15 person focus group.
  • Select a means for recruiting citizens.
  • The demonstration project used market research
    firms to recruit focus group at a cost of around
    1,500 per focus group.
  • You could use the same techniques as market
    research firms to recruit citizens at a lower
    cost, but with a greater time commitment.
  • You also could recruit from civic groups or
    citizen advisory panels, but these groups may not
    provide the same unbiased input.

14
CIPM Process
  • Focus Group Design and Preparation (two meetings)
  • Design continued (Meeting 1)
  • Select exercises for focus group.
  • High level exercises that address broad
    perceptions of services.
  • Priority setting exercises.
  • Conduct training about facilitation.
  • Preparation
  • Conduct a mock focus group session using city
    staff as citizens
  • Analyze the results to identify ways that
    exercises could be improved.

15
CIPM Process
  • Solicitation of Citizen Input
  • 1215 citizens meet for 2½ hours to discuss the
    selected service area
  • Citizens take part in structured exercises
    designed to provide useful information about
    service preferences
  • Staff serve as facilitators
  • If the focus group is held in the evening, you
    may need to provide food to the participants.
  • The demonstration project also provided a 75
    financial incentives to the citizens who
    participated. This is a standard amount for
    private sector focus groups, but a lower amount
    could be offered.

16
CIPM Process
  • Example of Analysis of Citizen Feedback
  • Value Feeling safe while walking in my
    neighborhood at night
  • End Result Neighborhoods are well lit
  • Activities Streetlight installation and
    maintenance

17
CIPM Process
  • Examples of measures based on citizen input
  • Numbers of streets, streetlights, outages
    (workload)
  • Hours spent on streetlight repair (input)
  • Number of streetlights repaired (output)
  • of streetlights functioning at X lumens
    (effectiveness)
  • Cost per streetlight repair (efficiency)
  • Percent of street miles lit to X lumens (outcome)
  • Percent of citizens polled who say their
    neighborhood is lit well enough to feel safe
    walking at night (outcome)

18
Input from CIPM Participants
19
Questions?
  • Karl Knapp
  • Director of Research and Policy Analysis
  • North Carolina League of Municipalities
  • kknapp_at_nclm.org
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