|
Case Study 10Case Study 10: Openness versus Orderliness SCENARIO Furthermore, any quantification of the likely revisions to ONSīs already published figures would depend on the second organisationīs fraud enquiries which were themselves sensitive and confidential. If you were the Director in charge of the ONS release, how would you handle the process of notifying stakeholders and users of the requirement to publish revised figures in due course? Would you:
QUESTION SUGGESTED RELEVANT PRINCIPLES In this case, the following principles are relevant : Code of Practice
SUGGESTED RELEVANT PROTOCOLS
QUESTION SUGGESTED RECOMMENDATIONS The ONS decided, at the time and in the circumstances, to notify only government users about the need to issue revisions at some point in the future. Non-government users were not informed until the scale of the revisions became known. The Statistics Commission came to the conclusion, subsequently, that ONS should have notified everyone equally about the impending revisions, without favour. ONS defended its actions on the grounds that the market-sensitive principle took precedence over the equality of access principle. ONS also justified its actions on the grounds that any public announcement of impending revisions would have to include a public explanation - an action that might have compromised the separate enquiry into administrative fraud. |
| contact us | site index | help | home | about nisra | news | publications & statistics | links | census crown copyright | freedom of information | ||

about NISRA
