Auditors and Effective Community GovernanceAuditors can use Effective Community Governance to frame the context of their overall government auditing practice, from performance auditing, to auditing the reliability of performance information, to encouraging better results-based governance practices. Auditors can also use the Effective Community Governance Model and related community improvement themes as criteria to assess:
Relevant, Reliable Performance MeasuresWhy were the San Jose sewer cleaning crews only cleaning clean sewers? Because they were primarily rated on the miles of sewers they cleaned, so they skipped dirty sewers, which slowed down them down as they tried to rack up lots of cleaning mileage. That's an example of how important it is to ensure that performance measures are relevant. There are many possible criteria for the relevance of performance measurement, such as timeliness and relationship to an organizations goals or objectives. Effective Community Governance provides examples of two important criteria that can be used for relevance. A relevant set of measures should include:
For example, a change from only focusing on output measures to more relevant measures of results in San Jose sewers made a key difference, leading to a new goal and service strategy to obtain results, not just sewer cleaning mileage. A program that demonstrates both a results-orientation and relevance to citizen priorities is the City of Santa Monica Sustainability Plan. City sustainability staff engaged people with a wide range of interests in a major update of the plan, shifting its focus from just the environmental sustainability of the city government to a broader focus on sustainability in the whole community. That led to new indicators of sustainability based on eight goal areas identified through the engagement process. To make measurement results-oriented, the city developed a two-pronged grading system to assess the performance of the city and community in working towards benchmarks in their sustainability goal areas. First, a letter grade for each of their eight goal areas is assigned by analyzing all of the indicator data for that goal area. Next, a grade for effort made towards the goal by the city government is assigned. The city developed the grading system in cooperation with citizens, and the grades have become reliable indicators of progress across time. Auditors who test and help improve the reliability of government performance data support effective governance by helping to increase citizen confidence in reported government performance information, which can increase citizen engagement and use of performance data. Criteria and tools for testing reliability are available at the Auditor Roles in Performance Measurement website. Performance Management and Accountability for Results Two major Effective Community Governance improvement themes relate directly to performance management and accountability for results:
Checklists to Help Develop Criteria and Assess Practices
Examples of Performance Management and Accountability for Results
Effective Governance Practices Auditors can evaluate how well their government implements and supports effective governance practices, as suggested by the Effective Community Governance Model and related ideas. A fundamental principle of effective governance is that citizens are not just passive customers of services, but they can be engaged in many roles to improve their community. A community that gives citizens opportunities to play many roles can gain many ways to take advantage of citizens' ideas, skills, resources, and energy. A government or nonprofit organization strengthens citizen engagement in governance when it supports citizens in engagement roles.
Improvement Themes Provide Basis for Assessing Advanced Governance Practices
The presence of these themes in a community, and a government's support for these themes, provide a good barometer for whether the following "Advanced Governance Practices" of the Effective Community Governance Model: 1. Community Problem Solving: Aligns "Engaging Citizens" and "Getting Things Done."
2. Organizations Managing for Results: Aligns "Measuring Results" and "Getting Things Done."
3. Citizens Reaching for Results: Aligns "Engaging Citizens" and "Measuring Results."
4. Communities Governing for Results: Aligns all three core skills.
An auditor can use the improvement themes as criteria for assessing the use and effectiveness of advanced governance practices. The chart below provides a key to which themes should be present for the effective use of each of the four advanced governance practices.
In depth case studies and examples of communities and organizations using the four Advanced Governance Practices are in the book Results That Matter.
For briefer examples of government and non-profit organizations using the four Advanced Governance Practices, see the Model in Action. |