Title: Service Charters
1Service Charters
- Nome del progetto
- Nome del relatore
2A Public Service is
- Provided by a public body
- In the general interest
- Universal
- All citizens
- equal access
- same price
3A Service Charter is
- A public document
- Stating the basic rights of the citizen
- and principles governing the provision of
services to users - in a public office
- A statement, not a legal document!
4A Service Charter
- clearly identifies the Court, the Courts
purpose, its client base and its services. - establishes channels of communication between the
Court and its clients. - set out the agencys client service standards and
client rights and responsibilities. - sets ways to obtain feedback and handling client
enquiries and complaints. - is developed in consultation with clients, staff
and other key stakeholders - is periodically monitored and reviewed
5Key Words
- Service
- Transparency
- Accountability
- Measurability
- Communication
- Participation
- User-friendliness
- Learning and improving
6What in?
- Basic Informations about the Court
- Services Provided
- Service Standards
- Channels of Communication
- Citizens rights and responsibilities
- Citizens feedback and complaint
71) Who we are?
- a title that clearly identifies the document as a
Client Service Charter - Basic info about the Court
- Name of people working in
- Vision Statement
- Who are the clients (actual or potential)
- Who are the stakeholders
8Clients Vs. Stakeholders
- Stakeholders those who have an interest in the
successful operation of the Court - community groups
- other government agencies
- business groups
- people with additional or diverse needs
- Clients those to whom Court directly provides
services (internal external) - Citizens
- Lawyers
- Judges
- Employees
- Prisoners
Exercise try map the Clients and Stakeholders of
your Court
92) What we do?
- Mission Statement
- Statement of purpose of the Charter
- List of services provided
- the date of Charter publication and
- the date of the next review
- A Mission Statement is .
103) How we do it?
- Guaranteed standard ? Target standard (your
promises ? your objectives) - Two sets of Standards
- the quality of the relationship with the client
- the quality of the services provided
- The quality of the delivery
113a) Standards of relationship
- explain clearly what the client needs to do to
achieve a result - explain what are their rights and
responsibilities - guarantee staff manner and interpersonal skills
friendliness, helpfulness, respect, sensitivity
to the clients individual needs, identifying
themselves, explaining, listening carefully to
the client
12Improve your standards of relationship!
133b) Quality of Services (QoS)
- Basically, a service is an answer to a question.
- Helpful (e.g. prompt referrals, availability of
help in emergencies) - Clear (e.g. of letters, forms and publications,
processes and other product information) - Understandable (by people with disabilities)
- Accurate (e.g. of advice, information, payments
or filled order) - Complete and
- Appropriate (e.g. fit to clients needs and
circumstances).
143d) Quality of delivery (QoD)
- continuity
- equal access
- affordable costs
- social, cultural and environmental acceptability.
153c) When we do it?
- The timeliness of service delivery.
- Define how much time a client will wait for a
service to be delivered - Quantitative standard
- responding to client contacts (e.g. letters,
emails, phone messages) - processing (e.g. registration, applications)
- emergency service (e.g. help where no appointment
has been made) - telephone service (e.g. time to get through to a
staff member, phone appointments) - complaint resolution.
164) How to find us?
- Clearly state all channels of Communications
between Court and Public - how to give feedback on the charter itself
175) Clients rights and responsibilities
- the right to review and appeal
- the right to lodge a complaint
- the right to privacy and confidentiality
- the right to have informations
- the right to access services, facilities and
information in a manner which meets their needs.
- to treat Court staff with courtesy
- to attend scheduled meetings punctually
- to respond to requests for information by the
agency accurately, thoroughly and in a timely
manner - to abide by any legal requirements and other
obligations that clients are to meet in order to
be eligible for services sought.
186) Be open to Feedbacks and Complaints
- A service charter must contain information on the
feedback and complaints processes and make clear
- that the agency welcomes feedback (complaints,
compliments and suggestions) - how to make a complaint, including relevant
postal and email addresses, and phone and fax
numbers. Include options (e.g. in person, comment
card, on-line feedback form, by phone, letter, a
TTY phone number for people who are deaf, hearing
or speech impaired) - how to give feedback specifically about the
Charter itself - that the feedback and complaints handling process
is accessible, easy to use and free - that the Court records data on complaints,
compliments and suggestions and this is - used to help improve client service
- that using the agencys complaint handling system
does not prevent the client from using appeal
mechanisms at any time and should list contact
details for these services
and sometimes youll get Compliments!
19Part 2 How to develop a Service Charter
Learning
202.1 Consultation Process
- In preparing a service charter, Court
Administrator should consult with clients, staff
and other key stakeholders in relation to - selecting service standards for inclusion in the
Charter - setting service guarantees
- determining the amount and level of detail in a
charter - deciding how performance against the Charter
standards and commitments will be measured and
monitored
Client Stakeholders Talk to and Meet with
212.2 Charter format and style
- make it readable and understandable by
everybody - plain language style of presentation
- avoid legal jargon
- a concise, straightforward and user-friendly
presentation - accessible formats
- languages other than Ukrainian
- accessible websites
- braille
- audio tape
- large print
- a design that meets the needs of a wide client
base (i.e., good contrast between text and
background use of colour size of text and no
background images under text)
222.3 Launch and publicity
- a high-profile launch by the Minister or
appropriate dignitary - a media campaign and an ongoing communications
strategy - communication and distribution of the Service
Charter to all staff, clients and stakeholders - distributing the charter to all client contact
points - placing it on the Courts Web site.
233. Maintenance and review
- A Service Charter is a living document of a
living organisation - Learning lessons is a way to improve your
service, and the Charter itself
24Ask yourself
- What have we learned since the first SC?
- What have we improved in the while?
- Does it still reflects reality?
- the Courts approach to client service
- the needs and priorities of the clients and key
stakeholders - Is the current content accurate?
- Is the format, design and availability what
client needs? - What was the feedback collected?
- Do we have to make changes to the complaint
handling processes?
25Monitor
- Standard
- Clients feedback and complaints
- Feedback on the SC
- Performance
- Response
- Review
and report !!!
26A Service Charter is a learning process
- About your Courts service
- About the needs of your clients and stakeholders