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Dutch Case: Informal Pro-active Approach Reducing administrative burden and simplyfing procedures at the citizen level Dispa Copenhagen,10 May 2012 Saskia Groenewegen Dutch Institute for Public Administration Legal, cultural and administrative context in NL General administrative law act • Scope: All administrative authorities • Regulates the way administrative authorities are required to take administrative decisions, handle objections, appeals and complaints regarding their decisions, in the relation toward citizens • Encompasses general provisions and principles for administrative authorities Dutch polder model • Consensus decision-making and multi-stakeholder arrangements in policy-making Dutch Institute for Public Administration The Dutch Policy Context for IPAM • Both private sector and government spend millions in hours and costs on complaint, objection and appeal procedures and there is a significant increase of subsidized legal aid up to € 400 mln per year • Cause of 11% of the total amount of administrative burdens for citizens • Part of citizens’ top ten most pressing bottlenecks in government services, citizens contentment 4,8 • Public service delivery and realisation of the ‘compact government’ 3 Dutch Institute for Public Administration • National implementation of IPAM for decision-making processes and in case of complaint handling and objection procedures • Solution for miscommunication, poor behaviour, unclear rules, disputes with and between citizens leading to significant increase of acceptance of government decisions and citizens contentment • NEW POLICY since 2009 – – First intervention by telephone , pro-active solution driven approach Informal dialogue, including in person discussion on what is the best way to handle the problem Dutch Institute for Public Administration Current status & goal • Goal: nation wide implementation in all government decision-making processes including complaint handling and objection procedures • Within the next four years in a minimum of 50% of all decision-making processes IPAM should be offered • At the moment 220 administrative authorities in 16 government domains Dutch Institute for Public Administration IPAM (1) 1. Through verbal contact find the problem beneath the objection/complaint, discuss together what the best approach of this issue is and subsequently what this means for the objection or complaint that was submitted (telephone call or informal meeting) • Characteristics: quick and direct personal contact, serious and respectful treatment of the citizen, on an equal basis • A means to compensate the negative consequences of juridification of the administration Dutch Institute for Public Administration IPAM (2) 2. During the preliminary phase in decision making (before government decision is made) that has negative consequences for a certain person, the citizen concerned is contacted: • to test that the information on which the decision will be based is correct and complete and • in order to motivate a decision to be made and • to explore alternative solutions with the citizen Investment in quality of decisions, investment in underlying relationship between government and citizen and to avoid future objection procedure where possible. Dutch Institute for Public Administration IPAM (3) • Redesign of the work process taking into account perspective of citizen • Simplification of procedures Dutch Institute for Public Administration Choice drivers for IPAM • Willingness and space to negotiate • Preservation of on-going relationship between parties involved • Conflict has emotional elements • Legal framework/proceedings do not provide final solution to the problem • Problems in communication • Speedy process and solution is desired Dutch Institute for Public Administration Choice drivers against IPAM • At least one party is incapable of defending their own interests • Key players do not wish to cooperate • Prevention of precedent • Legal issue at stake: ruling by judge is required • Too many parties involved and absence of adequate representation • No negotiating space whatsoever • Political administrative sensitivity Dutch Institute for Public Administration Development of governments and public service delivery Bureaucratic Kafka’esque • • • Arbitrary Random Coercive Open & participative • • • • • Rules-based Administrative Top-down Gov-centric One-size-fits-all • • • • • Transparent & responsive Innovative Both bottom-up & top-down User-centric & Personalised Relationship- and behaviour-based Dutch Institute for Public Administration Results Reduction of cost for the government of approximately 20% An increase of citizen satisfaction of 40% An increase in employee satisfaction of 20% Informal procedure preferred and leads to a solution in 50%60% of the objection cases and in 80-90% complaint cases On average authorities experience a return on investment after 6 months Dutch Institute for Public Administration Kafka Brigade (1) First aid for bureaucratic breakdown • The Kafka Brigade is called into action when citizens and public servants become tangled in a web of dysfunctional rules, regulations and procedures • Mission is to tackle the bureaucratic dysfunction and red tape which prevents people from accessing the services they need, and which constrains and frustrates public service staff. • Kafka Field Labs, Kafka Thermometer, Kafka Button, Kafka Stocktakes, Kafka Coach, etc Dutch Institute for Public Administration Kafka Brigade (2) • The Kafka Brigade is an independent, not-for-profit action research team, comprising a network of action researchers from Amsterdam and the Hague (Publiq Zenc NL), Boston (USA), Northern Ireland and Wales (UK). Dutch Institute for Public Administration System change • Pilots are evolving to a national system change • Administrative law • Court proceedings involving government organisations • National policy on a change of processes within public service delivery Dutch Institute for Public Administration International interest • Workshop IPAM for ReSPA, Montenegro in December 2011(ROI) • European Public Service Award 2010 • United Nations Public Service Award 2011 Dutch Institute for Public Administration Dynamics and challenges Dutch municipalities • * top runners and innovators within IPAM project • * broadest variety of government domains • Challenges: when to stop, lawyers, multi-party involvement, handling expectations, change management within the organizations Dutch Institute for Public Administration Bottlenecks and challenges • Project is based only on a training OR • - coaching on the job • - telephone-buddies • - meetings amongst pilot members during the pilot • Involvement of management • Coordination of pilot and adjustment of procedures • Cooperation between project leader and project members Dutch Institute for Public Administration Quote Alex Brenninkmeijer, National Ombudsman The Netherlands “Up to a point it is fair to say that following statutory procedures slavishly can be detrimental to good relations. A legalistic approach can result in unnecessary escalation.” Dutch Institute for Public Administration Services ROI • Workshop in The Hague 10, 11 and 12 October for international participants • Tailor-made services in host country • Combination of IPAM and Kafka Brigade More information: Mariette Baptist-Fruin, [email protected], T 00-31 703763660 Dutch Institute for Public Administration