Baltimore Sun

It’s time to ‘BeHEARD,’ Baltimore

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The Baltimore Sun has partnered with the Schaefer Center for Public Policy at the University of Baltimore to promote BeHEARD Baltimore, an online opinion panel for city residents age 18 or older that could help shape public policy in the future.

Those who sign up at beheardbal­timore.com (click on “Join Now!”) will be sent, via email, an average of two surveys a month on a variety of topics affecting the city; they can be completed on any internet-enabled device — phone, tablet or computer. The results will be compiled into reports by the Schaefer Center and shared with city leaders, as well as The Baltimore Sun and other news partners, and on the BeHEARD Baltimore website.

The web panel is intended, according to the Schaefer Center, to provide “an independen­t source for informatio­n on what residents think about important policy issues and current events.” Several efforts have already been made to put it together. But earlier attempts to launch the initiative never quite got off the ground, with too few participan­ts to make it work. The hope is that now, when so many of us are living our lives online, will provide an ideal time to relaunch and recruit panelists.

Signing up on the site takes a few minutes; you’ll be asked to pinpoint your neighborho­od, to generally describe your household and yourself — including your age, income and political party affiliatio­n — and to provide an email address. The informatio­n will be kept confidenti­al, and your contact informatio­n will not be sold, shared or rented. Responses will not be linked to you, either; they’re reported in the aggregate, according to the Schaefer Center, whose staff members on the project have at least a decade of experience each in survey writing and analysis.

The current survey is about coronaviru­s informatio­n sources and the handling of the outbreak by federal, state and city officials, as well as its impact on Baltimore residents. It took about 8 minutes to complete and asked about the taker’s assessment of the city’s response to the pandemic and the performanc­e of the mayor, governor and president; along with their experience with testing, if any, and the stay-home restrictio­ns we’ve all been living under. A couple of open-ended questions let you dig a little deeper into your concerns about the pandemic and its effects on your family, as well as the positive consequenc­es you’ve experience­d (some of ours: more time outdoors, greater appreciati­on of family and friends, no commute).

You can leave the panel at any time and skip any survey you’re sent. The Schaefer Center, a neutral public policy research center that conducts surveys throughout the year, says each of these will take 10 minutes or less to answer. Twenty minutes a month seems a small price to pay to make your voice heard and to potentiall­y change the city for the better.

Of course, it only works if there’s broad participat­ion from every corner of the city — the so-called “Black Butterfly” and the “White L,” and everywhere in between. Every person matters, from the well-to-do retirees in Roland Park to those working several jobs to make ends meet in West Baltimore and beyond. Folks in the latter category likely have the least amount of time to spare, but they also might be the most important people to hear from and the most likely to be affected by the city’s public policy and social support program decisions in the future. So we’re calling on community groups and neighborho­od associatio­ns to spread the word to make this work.

For more informatio­n, go to beheardbal­timore.com or call 410-837-6188.

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