Cieza maintains its position and continues to surpass municipalities such as Murcia, Cartagena, and Molina de Segura in terms of transparency, according to the latest Dynamic Transparency Index evaluation.
Councilor for Transparency Miguel Gual tells us that work in this department has not ceased since the beginning of this term. Proof of this is that after obtaining the top regional ranking from Transparency International, work continues to update and add indicators "that demonstrate this government team's willingness to lead an Executive of real change."
Cieza ranks third in the region according to an assessment by Dyntra, an independent company that develops a collaborative platform that aims to measure public information from governments, public administrations, political parties, elected officials, and various social actors in a dynamic, efficient, transparent, and open manner.
According to Dyntra, Cieza City Council meets 107 indicators out of the 157 that can be assessed by the platform, demonstrating the degree of accuracy with which it measures the city councils' commitment to transparency toward citizens.
For this assessment, Dyntra has created indexes in an open and transparent community, tailored to the needs of each level of government and/or group being assessed. The initiative aims to open up information to citizens and civil society in the face of the new challenges posed by today's information society, utilizing the efficient use of information technologies and applied knowledge in the fields of political science, social science, and open government.
In the words of Transparency Councilor Miguel Gual, this data is welcome as it is "an independent assessment, based on public data managed by a broad and representative community, expert and involved in the implementation of participatory models for measuring and analyzing public bodies. Let's remember that Dyntra is the world's first collaborative platform working on the measurement and management of open government in organizations and for civil society."
Gual concludes by saying, "There's still much to be done, but these successes reinforce our goal of completing the necessary information as soon as possible."