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Doesn't look like the report is up at this minute, but here is
announcement. If it isn't up in a week, I'll repost an announcement
when it is released.

Steven Clift
http://dowire.org


See:
http://www.eurocities.org/telecities/ecitizenship/


"e-Citizenship for All" benchmark survey results presented in Tallinn

EUROCITIES and Deloitte present the findings of the 2nd annual "e-
Citizenship for All" benchmark survey, which shows the progress being
made by European cities with regard to internet access and online
services.

 Tallinn (Estonia), 22 April 2005 - At the EUROCITIES Knowledge
Society Forum – TeleCities spring conference in Tallinn, supported by
the City of Tallinn, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu’s public sector group
presented the findings of its second European benchmark survey into
eCitizenship for All 2004, an annual joint initiative of EUROCITIES
Knowledge Society Forum - TeleCities and Deloitte.

The survey investigated the status of eCitizenship and eGovernment
within European cities focusing on four key challenges: Re-
engineering of Local Public Administration, eLearning and Inclusion,
eSecurity and eDemocracy and Community Building. A total of 102
European cities from 23 European countries, including 18 cities in
new EU member states, participated in the survey.

The survey revealed that eGovernment is now a permanent agenda item
of local councils. Some 80% of participating cities have developed an
eGovernment policy, including the delivery of services
electronically. Cities recognize the need to focus on cost reduction
and efficiency by analysing the real needs of citizens and businesses
and computerising simple and frequently used services. The current
survey shows that the demands of citizens and businesses represent
the most important drivers for improvement of electronic services.
The increasing focus of cities on the demands of their citizens
demonstrates that cities are adopting a more ‘outside-in’ approach to
eGovernment, as opposed to focusing on issues such as cost reduction
and responding to legislative requirements only.

Key findings:

- Meeting citizens demands: In 2003, primary reasons for implementing
eGovernment were cost reduction and responding to legislation.
eGovernment now finds itself increasingly on the agenda of local
councils. Most cities have programmes, projects or taskforces defined
or in place, and some had even created specific senior positions for
eGovernment. The current focus of cities is to meet demands of
citizens and businesses, with 79% of survey participants citing this
as their most important driver of change.

- Drivers of change: eGovernment could reduce external (user) costs
by simplifying complicated procedures, typically involving the
business community, such as licence and planning applications and tax
reporting. Following the satisfaction of the demands of citizens and
businesses, the streamlining of internal processes (61%), the
increase of productivity (59%), the improvement of performance (59%)
and cost reduction (50%) are seen as the most important drivers of
change.

- Outsourcing: Outsourcing did not appear to be popular among
participants, despite some of their stated objectives. Cities
outsourcing eServices or considering outsourcing them were mostly
those respondents whose services were at an advanced level.

- Re-engineering of Local Public Administration: The survey showed
that the implementation of eGovernment was being driven by citizens’
demands, internal efficiency, effectiveness and productivity. The
response to citizens’ demands is a positive shift. It indicates that
cities are adopting a more responsive ‘outside-in’approach towards
eGovernment.

- eLearning and Inclusion: Life-long learning remained a political
issue. In most respondent cities (70%) this was a topic on the
political agenda with involvement from a wide constituency of
interested and motivated parties. Different approaches have been
adopted with a third of cities having a written eLearning strategy, a
large number of strategies addressing specific target groups and
having a dedicated organisation and resource for eLearning. The
initiatives to provide life-long learning opportunities concentrated
more on promoting eLearning (67%) than providing it in the homes
(37%) or to the community (50%).

- eSecurity: Analysis of the eSecurity survey data indicates certain
security precautions are in place with 88% of participants deployed
anti-virus software and in excess of 70% using firewalls.

- eDemocracy and Community Building: More than 90% of respondents
were in agreement with elected representatives being contactable by e-
mail; citizens receiving electronic communications on policy matters
and elected representatives to modernise their working practices.
However, 57% of participants didn’t expect on-line consultation to
raise public expectations and could lead to frustration. 43% had no
view on whether all European citizens should be able to vote on-line
and 53% suggested that elected representatives couldn’t cope with the
number of e-mails they receive.

Commenting on the results of the survey, Chris Newby, Chair
EUROCITIES Knowledge Society Forum – TeleCities and Councillor,
Liverpool City Council: “I believe that the eCitizenship for All
survey is a clear example of the unprecedented efforts that cities
are undertaking to achieve good governance within the context of
public sector modernisation. The survey shows that eCitizenship is
becoming a meaningful agent of transformation embedded in the culture
of the public sector. Its potential goes far beyond early
achievements.” Richard Drewes, Deloitte’s European survey leader,
added : “The knowledge base created through this process represents a
valuable and unique tool for European cities to benchmark themselves
against each other and provide scope for bilateral learning and
knowledge sharing in the light of the European Commission’s new and
comprehensive ICT strategy.”

Tőnis Palts, Mayor of Tallinn and host of the event shared the
experience from Tallin: “Our success story is based on technology,
talent and tolerance. Tallinn is a multi-cultural city of thousands
of enterprising and forward-thinking people who have worked hard to
make us one of Europe’s most innovative centres. People can listen to
the city council’s sittings in real-time through the internet and
obtain information on every item in process. It helps improve the
quality and transparency of the public services.”

Summing up, Hans Bossert, Deloitte Chairman Global Public Sector,
commented: “In recognition of the importance of eGovernment in
raising the efficiency of the public sector, we support the aims of
the European Commission. To achieve this, governments must apply
principles of good governance, strive for continuous improvement of
performance and deliver maximum value for citizens and communities.”




Eurocities Sub-Networks & Committees - Friday, April 22, 2005
News Link - http://www.eurocities.org/telecities/ecitizenship/

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