Coordinamento dei Difensori civici: Fabrizio di Carlo eletto Presidente

Date of article: 22/02/2017

Daily News of: 23/02/2017

Country:  Italy - Lombardy

Author: Regional Ombudsman of Lombardy

Article language: it

Nella seduta del 14 febbraio scorso il Coordinamento dei Difensori civici delle Regioni e delle Provincie autonome di Trento e Bolzano ha eletto Presidente l’Avv. Fabrizio di Carlo, Difensore civico della Regione Abruzzo.

Fabrizio di Carlo succede a Lucia Franchini, Difensore civico della Regione Toscana che presiedeva il Coordinamento dal marzo 2013.

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New Chief Executive confirmed for the Local Government Ombudsman

Date of article: 21/02/2017

Daily News of: 22/02/2017

Country:  United Kingdom - England

Author: Local Government Ombudsmen for England

Article language: en

Nigel Ellis has been appointed the new Chief Executive Officer of the Local Government Ombudsman (LGO).

Formerly the LGO’s Director of Operations, Nigel has taken up the role following an external recruitment campaign and replaces Michael King who in January became the new Local Government Ombudsman and chair of the Commission for Local Administration.

Nigel Ellis said:

“I am delighted with this opportunity to help ensure the LGO remains an effective and efficient organisation that puts things right for people who have suffered as a result of poor public services, while using our insight to help prevent injustices to others.”

Michael King, the Local Government Ombudsman, said:

“Nigel has been instrumental in designing and delivering the positive changes that we have made at LGO over recent years, and I very much welcome the depth of experience and continuity that his appointment gives the organisation for the next phase of our development.”

Nigel Ellis takes up the position with immediate effect. As Chief Executive Officer, he will also be the Accounting Officer for the Commission for Local Administration in England, and hold the statutory position of Commission Secretary under the Local Government Act 1974.

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“Pranks” on teachers

Date of article: 13/02/2017

Daily News of: 22/02/2017

Country:  Czechia

Author: Czech Public Defender of Rights

Article language: en

After being alerted of this phenomenon several times, the Ombudsman started an inquiry on her own initiative into the procedure of the Council for Radio and Television Broadcasting (hereinafter the “Council”) in the case of a competition announcement by a radio station, which invited listeners to make videos of “pranks” – meaning, in this particular context, videos showing teachers in unexpected and embarrassing situations staged by students.

The Council originally maintained that the matter was beyond its mandate as it was not competent to supervise YouTube, i.e. the website where the students posted their videos. The Council changed its position following my notice, accepting that while it could not monitor video content published on YouTube, it was competent to assess whether the radio station’s competition announcement was appropriate.

It is worth noting that the school ombudsman condemned the challenge; the ombudsman considers such pranks cruel and socially problematic. In the ombudsman’s opinion, the pranks, if also incentivised with reward and publicity, seriously compromise family and school education and are remarkably prone to escalate into cyberbullying.  Equally alarmed by the matter was Mgr. Kamil Kopecký, Ph.D., editor-in-chief of the E-bezpečí (or E-safety) project, www.e-bezpeci.cz. In his editorial published on 28 February 2016, Mr Kopecký mentions (quote) that he is “certain that without the campaign broadcast by a commercial radio station, students would not come up with creating videos that humiliate and insult teachers on such a massive scale.” The Ombudsman is convinced that the views of the school ombudsman and the expert on cyberbullying deserve attention.

Following her request, the Council evaluated the facts of the competition announcement and informed her that it found violation of the law as the challenge targeted children and juveniles without being moderated by explaining that the goal of the “prank” should not be to place teachers in humiliating situations and videoing them under such conditions. The Council concluded that the broadcast challenge was capable of affecting mental and moral development of children and juveniles, because in pursuit of high viewing numbers and hence a chance for winning the competition, students could bring teachers into situations that are undesirable on school grounds and with respect to the teacher-student relationship and were capable of causing psychological harm to teachers. The Council requested that the operator of the radio station ensure remedy; this, however, was impossible because the competition had already ended. However, the Council promised to monitor similar broadcasts more carefully in the future, following which the Ombudsman closed the inquiry.

 

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