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Do you know your consulta­tions from your elbow? It occured to me (quite late, alas!) that I haven’t really explained *what* I’m trans­lating here! So here’s a quick run down on consulta­tions, what they are, and what you can do about them.

What is a consulta­tion?

  • A consulta­tion is basic­ally an idea. It could be a good idea, or a bad idea, or an idea with promise, but it is still an idea that someone (prob­ably a govern­ment person) had about how to improve the lives of people in these Great British Isles.
  • As a rule, they will talk to their colleagues and their bosses, and collect more ideas together with as much proof as they can find about how the idea might just work. The result will be in the form of a consulta­tion paper.
  • No matter how long or short the paper, keep asking your­self one ques­tion as you read it — do I agree with this?


Where can I find these consulta­tion papers?

  • Check out this Directgov list of central govern­ment depart­ments. If a depart­ment is running a consulta­tion, it should be on their website. Some depart­ments have a consulta­tion link right off the home page. If you can’t find it, check the public­a­tions area.
  • So if you’re inter­ested in say, health, you can go to the Department of Health website and click on the consulta­tions link in the top right corner.
  • Consultations all have an expiry date, so the ones you are inter­ested in are the live or active consulta­tions, not the closed ones.


What do I do now I’ve found one?

  • Read it! Keep the ques­tion — do I agree with this? in mind while you’re reading.
  • If you find bits you don’t under­stand, or you disagree with, or you think are okay but could be done much better your way, write them down.
  • This is the part where we at Simply Understand want to save you the hassle of wading through the ancient and indirect language the writers like to use. They mostly do this because they’re academics or lawmakers. These are both wonderful breeds of human being, but a bit… wordy, and often fond of keeping things vague!


I read it, I read it! I don’t have to do anything more, do I?

  • I’m afraid so, old chap. A consulta­tion usually lasts about 12 weeks. Before that 12 weeks is up, you need to tell the people who wrote the paper what you think.
  • This is what consulta­tion is all about — you getting your point across to the people who just want you to say “yes, alright, that’s fine” and let them get on with it. Well it’s not alright, and it’s not fine, and you are abso­lutely entitled to have your say.
  • Write to them at the address they give (usually at the begin­ning or the end of the paper), email them, contact your union if you have one and tell them what you think, contact your MP. Then spread the word to everyone else you know who might care!

There are some other strange creatures you might encounter along the way. Here’s a quick guide:

  1. Impact Assessments — these are where the people who wrote the consulta­tion paper take an educated guess about how much their idea is going to cost to make real, and what affect it’s going to have on you, the voter.
  2. Executive Summaries — this is a shorter version of the consulta­tion paper. Not gener­ally easier to read, unfor­tu­nately, but other­wise not as over­whelming, but will miss key details.
  3. Charts and tables — never take these for granted. Are they giving you enough data so you can under­stand what they really mean?
  4. Appendices — many consulta­tions will hide some of their content in appen­dices, and may not auto­mat­ic­ally put them at the end of the docu­ment, so you might have to go hunting.

If anything’s not clear, let me know. Good luck and happy consulting!

The Department of Health has started a consulta­tion on how we’re going to work out what people need when they go into health or social care, such as a home for the elderly, assisted living programmes, long term illness, that sort of thing. If you are a carer, you work in social care, or you cared for by the health or social care services, it’s in your interests to read and reply to this consultation.

To start you off, I’d like you to read my unof­fi­cial trans­la­tion! It’s eight pages long, so a lot less weighty to read, and hope­fully contains inform­a­tion you can use to either reply to the consulta­tion directly, or to help you under­stand the offi­cial line.

Publish at Scribd or explore others: Health & Medicine How-To Guides & DIY care elderly

As always, if there’s anything you don’t get, or anything I’ve got wrong, let me know through comments or email. I under­stand some people have had prob­lems with my using ScribD so if you do, down­load my Common Assessment Framework for Adults — a trans­la­tion directly.

You might find my guide on how to have your say through consulta­tions useful as well.

Simply Understand started nearly a year ago with the not-so-simple idea of making a small corner of the UK’s demo­cracy more, well, democratic!

Everyone know how much of a struggle it can be to get your story heard by govern­ment institutions. Consultations are supposed to be one way for us to get through, but so often they’re so complic­ated and over­whelming. Sure, some­times they deal with complic­ated subjects, but no matter how complic­ated they are, don’t we all have a right to under­stand and contribute to them?

With that in mind, today Simply Understand’s been given it’s first chance at a 100% genuine, offi­cial consulta­tion makeover! The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills are consulting on Credit cards and store cards. Their 100 page original consulta­tion has been reduced to just 10. You can:

The first step?

Is this the first step on the road to making all govern­ment consulta­tions easier to under­stand? It could be, but only if it actu­ally works. And that means more people replying, more people down­loading and more people listening and understanding. And if you read it through, and there are bits you don’t under­stand — well, I think that’s helpful too, and you should tell them that. Because if you can’t under­stand it now, how’s it going to help anyone?

Pass it on!

Email, Messenger, Facebook, Twitter, Digg, heck even Myspace it, or just print it out and give it to people (double sided to save paper). The more people see this, the more chance we’ve got to encourage more easy to under­stand consultations!