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Issues management involves Colorado Springs ratepayers in resource planning

Planning gives Los Angeles head start on California RPS

Sum of large customer plans equals power wholesaler's IRP

Polling supports NPPD plan to acquire more wind power

One report meets Minnesota utility's state, Federal requirements

Montanans learn ins and outs of small wind interconnection

State building shows North Dakota's commitment to efficiency

Grocery stores get more energy saving tips from Power Line

Western support makes planning manageable
Western shops for green tags, green power for Federal agencies

Topics from the Power Line:
Find solar technology and finance information online

Energy Shorts
Technology Spotlight:
New heat pump technology won't freeze up in the cold
Calendar of events


Survey technique digs for informed opinions

Conventional polls rarely show more than the public's surface impressions of sound bites and headlines. Professor James Fishkin of the University of Texas at Austin developed Deliberative Polling to learn what people would think if they had the opportunity to study an issue before answering questions.

Several key elements set the deliberative polling process apart from standard opinion polling and focus groups. First, a scientific sample of the target population answers a telephone questionnaire, gauging raw opinion.

Participants from the telephone survey are recruited for a one- to two-day deliberation exercise. Before the meeting, they receive information on the issue to be discussed, compiled by a broadly representative advisory panel.

The event is broken into small group sessions, led by a professional moderator, and large groups where participants can question the panel of experts. At the end of the exercise, participants answer the questionnaire again and before and after results are compared.

The Center for Deliberative Polling, at the University of Texas at Austin, is devoted to research about democracy and public opinion obtained through Deliberative Polling. The first utility application of the method took place in Texas in summer 1996. Several investor-owned utilities sponsored polls to discover if customers supported building 1,000 MW of new renewable energy.

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