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Dorset Council consults and engages on a wide range of topics and issues relating to the services it provides for its residents. Committed to listening to residents and communities when developing and shaping our services, we conduct formal and informal activities and have direct and indirect conversations on a regular basis.
We want to ensure we formalise these activities, both statutory and non-statutory, be more consistent as a council in how we plan and approach our communities, and to ensure we are using accessible methods to allow them to engage with us in a way that best suits them.
By doing so, we can develop a better understanding of the aspirations, needs and concerns of the residents of Dorset, and ensure we take these into account in our decision-making and service delivery.
Building relationships and having ongoing dialogue leads to richer and more valuable understanding which can help better shape services based on what we have heard from our communities. This process also facilitates building a level of consistency and trust between the council and our residents.
This policy sets out a basic level of principles that consultation and engagement taking place throughout Dorset Council will adopt.
Guidance for staff on consultation is given in the Dorset Council Consultation Protocol document. The protocol is also supported by a toolkit which contains practical advice, templates and useful information for officers carrying out consultation and engagement activity.
This policy applies to all consultation and engagement work undertaken or commissioned by
Dorset Council with
This may range from a statutory consultation to informal engagement work.
The policy is applicable to external consultation by Dorset Council but excludes internal consultation within the organisation itself. For example please note that consultation in relation to employee pay and conditions is a separate process and led by Human Resources.
Consultation on planning applications, the Local Plan and Traffic Regulation Orders are also out of scope for this policy.
Our vision as Dorset Council is:
Consultation and engagement are the involvement and participation of people in decision-making. For Dorset Council, these activities help us to establish and to build more streamlined and effective services by having increased community involvement and a clearer voice in shaping local service provision.
Consultation is a formal process, and, in some cases, the council will have a statutory duty and be bound by legislation to consult before making changes to policy or service provision.
Consultations have a clear remit and start and end points.
However, consultation still forms a distinct part of an ongoing period of engagement and is part of a formal decision-making process.
Failure to follow specific principles and conducting a consultation incorrectly may lead to judicial review.
In short, consultation is the dynamic process of dialogue between individuals or groups, based on a genuine exchange of views with the objective of influencing decisions, policies or programmes of action.
Engagement is a broader, more exploratory process that can be used and embedded in many areas of council work.
At the heart of engagement is developing relationships and building the opportunities for ongoing dialogue between public bodies and the community. It can involve a range of activities and different levels of public involvement.
Ongoing engagement can support a greater level of understanding of more complex issues and the decision-making process.
It should be a standard part of council practice to engage residents and service users to gather ideas, opinions, and feedback on how we work to enable us to be more responsive.
An activity is only a consultation if there is scope for consultees to influence a decision.
Both consultation and engagement form part of a continuum on ‘ladder of participation’ (Arnstein, 1969) which the Consultation Institute has streamlined into four key parts: Information-giving, Consultation, Co-production and Supporting Citizen Power.
In short, engagement is Developing and sustaining a working relationship between one or more public body and one or more community group, to help them both to understand and act on the needs or issues that the community experiences.
At Dorset Council we have defined the wider range of activities as we work with our residents. These are:
Co-design and Co-production are important methods increasingly used throughout the council to ensure services are created to meet residents’ needs.
Dorset Council first and foremost wants to understand the needs of residents and provide the best possible services.
Section 3 of the Local Government Act 1999 sets out a Duty to Consult representatives of a wide range of local persons. We must consult representatives of council taxpayers, those who use or are likely to use services provided by the authority, and those appearing to the authority to have an interest in any area within which the authority carries out functions.
Authorities should include local voluntary and community organisations and local businesses in consultation.
As well as having a duty to consult, good consultation and engagement can have a number of benefits. As Dorset Council, we aim to:
Engagement activities should be embedded as part of an ongoing dialogue and engagement with our residents.
Engaging well can increase levels of trust, perceptions of openness, encourage inclusive practices and can lead to collaboration.
It can also mean difficult decisions are accepted more readily as people have been informed or involved throughout the process
As stated, consultation is a discrete activity that forms part of the process that is bound by specific legislation and principles.
These are covered in the next section.
Consultations should be conducted where there is scope for residents to influence a decision.
This may be a statutory duty (i.e., written in law) or where there is a legitimate expectation by consultees that they would expect to be consulted.
When we consult we follow a number of key principles.
Any consultation is carried out in accordance with the Gunning principles; these are four fundamental principles for carrying out consultation, summarised below:
Gunning principles:
The Government has also set out their own standards that should be adopted when engaging and consulting with stakeholders. You can find more detail on the Government principles here. They are that consultations should:
The Consultation Institute has developed its own Charter containing seven principles as shown in the image, and listed below
The process must have an honest intention. The Consultor must be willing to listen to the views advanced by consultees, and be prepared to be influenced when making subsequent decisions.
All those who have a justifiable right to participate in a consultation should be made reasonably aware of the exercise
Consultees must be able to have reasonable access to the exercise.
This means that the methods chosen must be appropriate for the intended audience and that effective means are used to cater for the special needs of ‘seldom heard’ groups and others with special requirements.
Many Consultations are highly public, and rightly so. Consultation submissions will be published unless specific exemptions apply.
Consultees rightly expect full transparency of the governance arrangements applicable to a consultation and the decision-making process which will follow.
For consultation to succeed, and to encourage a measure of trust between the parties, it is important to provide for reasonable disclosure of relevant information.
Consultors are under a duty to disclose information which could materially influence the nature and extent of consultees' responses. But note that the Data Protection Act 1988 applies to information of a “personal nature”
Information and viewpoints gathered through Consultation exercises have to be collated and assessed, and this task must be undertaken promptly and objectively
Participants in a consultation exercise have a proper expectation that they will see both the output and the outcome of the process.
Except in certain closed or internal consultations, the assumption should be that publication in a form accessible to the consultee would follow within a reasonable time after the conclusion of the exercise.
Public Sector Equality Duty requires local authorities to have ‘due regard’ to the impact of changes on those with protected characteristics under the Equality Act 2010;
Consultations that are outside of statutory requirements should still be undertaken in accordance with this policy.
Engagement activities are less bound by law and statutes; however, the council will consider any relevant legislation in conducting these activities such as the Equality Act (2010) and the Data Protection Act (2018).
At Dorset Council, when we engage with our residents and communities at any level, we aspire to work to the key principles and best practice, but also to our own standards.
Our activities should be proportionate to the type and scale of the potential impact of the proposal and decision being taken.
They may also depend on resourcing and the needs of the participants.
The activities we conduct will be informed by data and be evidence-led; we will also use best practice guidelines on how to effectively engage with different people and groups at various stages of the process.
The Dorset Council central consultation team supports colleagues in undertaking Consultation and Engagement.
When conducting any type of consultation or engagement activity, Dorset Council has its own standards that we will adhere to.
These bring together the key principles and best practice, including the Gunning principles, Government principles, the Consultation Institute Charter and other requirements into a clear set of Dorset Council Principles:
Within Dorset Council we have a shared responsibility to conduct effective consultation and engagement.
Our activities should align closely with our priorities as Dorset Council and the Council Plan (2020 – 2024) which sets out our vision to make Dorset a great place to live, work and visit.
Our consultation and engagement activities help us work towards this vision by helping us to listen more effectively and giving us a better understanding of the needs of local people.
Consultation and engagement helps us to respond by planning, testing, and delivering better services, and ensures that we are accountable and transparent in any decision-making we undertake.
Our activities ensure that our residents and communities have an opportunity to engage with us in a way that suits them and where they feel listened to.
Dorset Council is also developing other community focused strategies which will closely inform how the council involves and engages with the community and places them at the heart of everything we do.
When we conduct consultation and engagement activity, a thread of our work is assessing the impact that our proposals are likely to have on different groups or people in Dorset. An EQIA helps us to consider the actual or potential impact of our activities and decisions on people, particularly those with protected characteristics.
During the course of any consultation or engagement activity we will comply with the GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018 when handling personal data. You can find more information on Dorset Council’s information governance and data protection here .
The Consultation Institute : The Institute promotes and supports best practice in public and stakeholder consultation in the public, private and voluntary sectors
Local Government Association (LGA) New Conversations 2.0 The Local Government Association have produced a resource – New Conversations 2.0 – that can support the basic aspects of consultation and engagement.
While responsibility for consultation within Dorset Council is spread across the organisation, the activity is supported by Dorset Council’s central Consultation and Engagement team. The team provide support and advice to the wider council. The team will be involved in any statutory consultation delivered by the council.
The central team have produced a Consultation Protocol which guides staff through the consultation and engagement process.
The team can be contacted: consultation@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk
This policy was last reviewed in 2023.
The next review date is 2025.