They may have their reasons for not putting it online - the obvious one being that they are using paper copies and it's too hard to put it online.
Perhaps too they are targetting certain individuals for profiling - women, older drivers, younger drivers etc, and it will create too much extra work for them to develop and post a survey that can screen for this.
And perhaps they don't want a flood of responses from the same people since this will corrupt their data, and it will create a massive workload for the Ministry to assess all the responses.
And they may also figure that people with internet access are also more likely to have access to the MOI website, and therefore access to the laws online. This survey might be geared towards devising meaningful ways to communicate with people who don't have web access.
Just my thoughts. Market research companies could do all this very easily, of course!
They may have their reasons for not putting it online - the obvious one being that they are using paper copies and it's too hard to put it online.
Perhaps too they are targetting certain individuals for profiling - women, older drivers, younger drivers etc, and it will create too much extra work for them to develop and post a survey that can screen for this.
And perhaps they don't want a flood of responses from the same people since this will corrupt their data, and it will create a massive workload for the Ministry to assess all the responses.
And they may also figure that people with internet access are also more likely to have access to the MOI website, and therefore access to the laws online. This survey might be geared towards devising meaningful ways to communicate with people who don't have web access.
Just my thoughts. Market research companies could do all this very easily, of course!