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INFORM + LISTEN WORKSHOPS 16 th June – 25 th June 2014. Welcome. Introductions House Keeping Toilets Emergency procedures Breaks Name tags Snax. BIG. A. Thank You. f or working with us today. Trialling a new way of working.
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INFORM + LISTEN WORKSHOPS 16th June – 25th June 2014
Welcome Introductions House Keeping Toilets Emergency procedures Breaks Name tags Snax
BIG A Thank You for working with us today
Trialling a new way of working As part of our partnership focus we are reviewing our process with you - our customers, Treaty partners and interested parties: throughout the programme duration; to share the diversity in views; and develop concepts and ideas. From the beginning.
Today’s Session: Share + Tell About YOU+ USand our collective EXPERIENCE Be constructive Openly listen to others Interact and participate Remain open minded Be respectful and honest Look for the insights
Our A part of Story Session 1Working with You for Wildlife, Research and Collection
“I have generally found their process fair and reasonable but would like to discuss [a number of] issues with them more… ” University
Back of the envelope assessment 2013 Not an accurate reflection of details
We made some assumptions Not an accurate reflection of details
And then we heard… “DOC publicly stated ambitions to work in partnership to achieve more conservation for NZ. The issues we have encountered in the permitting process do not reflect the behaviour of good working partnerships” Community Group
“…DOC does not make it easy for researchers to undertake research… this seems at odds with the new partnerships focus at DOC…” “The current speed of the DOC permitting process is impractical for carrying out research in NZ” Researchers …and…
“…Any savings they make with charging a fee automatically are far out weighed by the annoyance this process causes.” Anon. …plus…
Unravelling the complexitiesWhy is the process so difficult? Surely it is an easy fix? Over the last 60 years the wider system and internal processes has seen layers and layers and layers of law, policy and risk assessment applied. • The Wildlife Act is 60 years old and can be interpreted broadly and narrowly • Up to 300 policy documents could be applied to an application • A standard permit may involve 60+ interactions among staff and customers • Predominantly manual systems make coordination, consistency and integration difficult. • It is not always clear how/when and why Treaty partners are consulted.
Living Treaty partnershipsThe role of Iwi in the permitting process Whanau, hapu, iwiare recognised guardians of our natural world through the Wildlife Act and Treaty settlements. The Department has a unique role within Government in giving effect to Section 4 of the Conservation Act. Outside In has also been designed to: • Strengthen relationships through meaningful engagement • Provide greater national consistency while still allowing for local iwi needs • Recognise the relationship between Matauranga Maori and western science when assessing permit applications
Designing our future with you Representation only
You Time for To Share Session 2Tell us your Story
Individually Tell us about your experience when you have been applying and managing your authorisations from DOC. Task 1 - DRAW: What was your experience when: You identified you needed an authorisation – what was the trigger? How/Where did you go to find out what you needed to do? What happened once you submitted your application? Your experience after you received your authorisation? BEFORE FIND AFTER DURING Task 2 – POST ITS: For each stage, WRITE • 3 things you liked or supported about the experience • 3 things you didn’t like/would like changed about the experience
Group Discussion: Share your stories Each participant is to share with the table: Your introduction: Name, company, position, outline of involvement with permits Share and describe your story. When sharing likes and dislikes, explain – WHY you chose to express these areas
Can your group create a “map” that demonstrates the common customer experience when applying for a permit? Can you agree on the top likes/dislikes and identify 3-5 points per team on each bullet: ‘liked’ about the current experience; and disliked/would change about the experience Group Challenge
Establish a NEW Session 3 Prspective
Individually WRITE ON POST-ITS: What would you like to see in a future permissions system? NUMBER your post-its in order of priority starting with 1 as your highest priority area Parameters include: No amendment or review of the Wildlife Act Iwi engagement must remain an integral part of the process
Can your group prioritise all post-its into four areas. The challenge is to have an even number of post-its in each category Group Challenge Must haves Like to haves Don’t need Neutral/indifferent
What’s Next Session 4
How will we use your information today?The lenses of User Centric Design We are after: Valuable Sustainable Robust Desirable for You Developed with you: Useful Usable Transparent Accessible • Possible • for Us • Viable Financially Credible Effective Integrated Technically Cost vs Benefit Supports govt objectives
Designing future opportunities for your involvement Input through website 1:1 Interviews Feedback Forms Design workshops Prototype testing Feedback Forms
BIG A Thank You for working with us today