ECSL · Public Dashboards
What honest service dashboards look like
Public dashboards are the structural condition of trust, not the outcome. Every dashboard pattern shown below would be required of a future service before it opened its doors. PSNI's quarterly bulletins, IOPC's annual report, ICAC's annual review and the UK ICO's enforcement register are the discipline floor.
Design study plaque · Dashboards
ECSL is a public design-research surface under TLTE. No service exists. No operational authority is claimed. In an emergency call UK 999, EU 112, or the relevant Sri Lanka emergency line.Independent Complaints · era report (pattern)
0 verified this eraEvery Service-related unit would be required to publish a structured complaints table every era. This is the pattern. The numbers are zero because the service does not exist.
Use-of-force review
0.0
Discourtesy / process
0.0
Discrimination claim
0.0
Property / damages
0.0
Disappearance allegation
0.0
Mean response time · five sample districts
sample · 0 verified this eraSample output from the response-field model (see /lab/models/response-field), not a measurement. The point is to show that the rural-coastal gradient (Mullaitivu vs Jaffna) is the design problem to solve.
Jaffna (urban sample)
8.2 min
Mannar (coastal sample)
11.6 min
Mullaitivu (rural sample)
14.8 min
Vavuniya (transit sample)
9.1 min
Trincomalee (urban sample)
8.9 min
Discipline floor
- Area-level only. Never individual coordinates, never person-level identifiers.
- Every chart carries the sample stamp and the era label.
- Every chart has an accessible long-description below the figure.
- Every chart names its methodology page (open formula, parameters, code-link).
- Every chart has a published cadence — Mondays of the first week of every era.
- Every chart's underlying data, when it exists, is downloadable as CSV under an open licence.