LocalGov Drupal Workflows Emphasise Governance in Public Sector Publishing
Managing content on council websites involves high levels of risk, where inaccurate or prematurely published information can lead to public confusion or legal issues. In a blog post, Tony Barker of Annertech outlines how LocalGov Drupal addresses this challenge through structured editorial workflows designed for governance rather than speed.
The system introduces defined workflow states, typically moving content from Draft to Needs Review, Published and Archived. This ensures that content cannot move directly from creation to publication without passing through an approval stage. Role-based permissions further enforce this structure, with contributors able to create drafts while editors retain control over publishing decisions.
Additional tools support day-to-day governance. An approvals dashboard provides visibility into content awaiting review, while scheduled transitions allow content to be published and archived automatically at predefined times. Review reminders help prevent outdated information by returning content to the review queue when it requires verification.
The post illustrates these workflows through a council scenario involving the launch of a new recycling centre. Content is drafted, reviewed, updated across related pages and scheduled for simultaneous publication, ensuring consistency without requiring manual intervention at launch time.
The approach positions workflows as a mechanism for maintaining control as teams scale, particularly in environments where multiple departments contribute to the same platform. Rather than focusing on publishing efficiency alone, the emphasis is on ensuring accuracy, accountability and long-term content governance.


