South Africans urged to support the 2016 Community Survey
South Africans are being urged to open their doors to fieldworkers - more than
10 000 of them - going into communities to gather information from 1.3-million
households for Statistics South Africa’s 2016 Community Survey, an essential tool in
service delivery.
From 7 March to 22 April the fieldworkers will gather data on the number of
people in South Africa, where they live, their standard of living, and more.
The survey was launched on Monday 29 February with a call to citizens to
show their support: “Open up your doors and allow the team to come in. South
Africa counts because you count.”
The launch was held in Mamelodi East near Pretoria, at the Ikageng
Community Hall, one of 330 venues around the country where the fieldworkers are
being trained.
The Community Survey is Stats SA’s second-largest information-gathering
exercise after the national census. Last held in 2007, the survey’s main objective is
to provide demographic and
socioeconomic data at municipal level, to improve
government planning.
The basic information it gathers includes people’s level of education, the
dwellings they live in, statistics on income and ownership of household goods,
access to electricity and piped water, and types of toilets. Data is also collected on
fertility, cause of death, migration, home ownership and much more.
High-tech survey tools
This year, digital technology will boost the efficiency and size of the survey.
Instead of filling out households’ information on paper, fieldworkers will be able to
capture it on electronic devices. This “computer-assisted paper interview”, or Capi,
method will allow over a million dwellings to be surveyed, up from 300 000 in 2007.
And it cuts the cost per dwelling from R2 000 to R200 - a tenfold decrease.
Inbuilt controls in the electronic questionnaire will also improve the quality of
the data collected. Geographic navigation
capabilities will ensure that fieldworkers
gather information from the right areas, as selected for the survey.
The technology will also speed up the release of the survey results. Census
2011 results were only available a year after the raw data was collected. The 2016
Community Survey results will be released by the end of June - two months after
all the households have been surveyed.
The speedy delivery of the results will be especially useful for the upcoming
municipal elections, to be held countrywide later this year. The survey will give
voters objective data on what services have been delivered to what areas, as well
as what yet remains to be done.
“The citizenry will be able to make decisions based on this enormously helpful
body of evidence,” Stats SA Africa said in a statement. “But more importantly they
will know what they as citizens have to do in order to change their lives.”
Up-to-date information will also allow municipal
officials to plan properly,
helping to deepen democracy at the local level. Municipalities will be required to
deliver to constituencies that can hold them to account because of the almost
instantaneous availability of new data.
“Statistics should be embraced as a fundamental part of our democracy, a
conduit of trust among citizens, among nations,” Stats SA said. “Statistics can help
to improve the quality of democratic debate by providing reliable indicators, vital
for decision-making.”
For more information on the survey contact the call centre on 0800 110
248.
Source: South African Government News Agency