Otago Daily Times

Plain English effort a winner

- TIM MILLER

PLAIN speaking is a virtue it seems when it comes to complex council documents.

For shunning technical jargon and opting to use easytounde­rstand informatio­n instead, the Dunedin City Council has won a plain English award.

It won the best plain English document in the public sector category for its 10year plan consultati­on document at the awards in Wellington on Thursday night.

Organised by the WriteMark Plain English Awards Trust, the awards aim to improve the language used in th government and business documents and raise awareness of the need for and benefits of plain English.

Judges said the document was a challengin­g document which was handled superbly by the council.

They also liked the conversati­onal and engaging tone, excellent use of active voice and the inviting combinatio­n of text and graphics.

Council chief executive Sue Bidrose said there had been a push by councillor­s in the past few years to make public documents more accessible.

Staff were also slowly working through the council’s letters and simplifyin­g the language used in some of the most hardtoread ones.

‘‘Frankly, I struggle to sometimes understand all of those so we’ve set out to fix some of those to make them easier to read.’’

 ?? PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON ?? Plain speaking . . . Dunedin City Council communicat­ions team leader Andrea Jones (left) and senior policy analyst Tami Sargeant skim over the council’s 10year plan consultati­on document they both worked on and which won best plain English document in the public sector category earlier this week.
PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON Plain speaking . . . Dunedin City Council communicat­ions team leader Andrea Jones (left) and senior policy analyst Tami Sargeant skim over the council’s 10year plan consultati­on document they both worked on and which won best plain English document in the public sector category earlier this week.

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