geonuc wrote:I completely disagree. With balanced systems, a 5-10% rejection rate is not only reasonable, but arguably optimum.
We must have worked in totally different industries.
Its a feedback system as far as I can see, more than it is a balanced system.
If it was balanced we'd have 50% rejection.
Balanced systems also work on little feedback, its a case of push and pull, give and take.
I'd hate to think a legal system can be swayed by factors not relevant to the case at hand.
If I ever saw a feedback system that had 5-10% error I'd say that is a candidate for redesign.
The police make a request.
The court rejects request.
The police should then look at the reason and not put in another request that will be rejected for the same reason.
Either the reasons for rejection vary (for identical situations) or are not given or the police are passing on requests they hope will pass.
I'd like to see something that quantifies it.
In any case, I'm interested in why TSC and now yourself think that its optimum to have that high rejection rates.
From what I can see, two professional organisations working with the same set of rules/laws should agree far more often than that.