Tags (All lower case. Use " " for multiple word tags):
Does anyone really have just four top priorities for their own area / neighbourhood / arbitary grouping of wards? I certainly don't. And so I wouldn't have a clue where to begin answering this survey in any meaningful way. Nor how to assess the results it produces.
But - confession time - I did do it, sort of. I looked at one area which had twelve priorities, another with only six, and a third which went for thirteen. I found that the survey wouldn't let me tick more than four priorities. So, to read the survey, I tried one and ticked a box at random. And then clicked more pages in growing disbelief at the quantity of equal ops information it asks. But clicked through too hastily and - oops! - found I'd finished the survey! Sorry Highgate. Or was it Bruce Grove?
I'm sure the questions are put together with the best of intentions. And at least I could only find one typo. Everyone can have their say regardless of any "gender reassingment".
In another posting I quoted from Professor Mark Moore. Could I again invite people to read his very sensible comments beginning with the observation that: "What citizens might expect and want from government might be three quite different things". And this doesn't mean being customers or clients who want 3 different types of services for themselves.
© 2024 Created by Hugh. Powered by
© Copyright Harringay Online Created by Hugh