Government Technology - January 2008 - (Page 46) health & human services management. “We had one state exec who actually counted and noted her caseworkers were writing down a family’s name 20 to 25 times in different paper-based forms, and that is not uncommon,” he said. “With the Web-based software, that kind of form-based work is left behind.” Although CGI can build on the SACWIS projects it’s done in other states, each system must be customized individual needs. One implementation challenge, Hogan said, is writing interfaces to other state data systems. For instance, federal foster care eligibility guidelines require collecting data from state welfare systems. “It will be up to the managers to make good use of the data.” Judith Meltzer, deputy director, Center for the Study of Social Policy Caseworkers Get New Tools NJ SPIRIT merges case management and data collection tools to help Department of Children and Families executives more easily produce reports on the aggregate condition of the child welfare system. A caseworker placing children in foster homes can pull up on her NJ SPIRIT screen a list of which foster homes are available in her geographic region. In addition to seeing the number of beds currently available, the caseworker can also get descriptions of characteristics of children and families to do better matching. The system also automates tasks, such as requesting a child be transferred from one foster home to another, that used to require filing paper forms with several different offices. executives better manage their resources. “The advantage of the new system is that it is built to collect and track more data,” he said. “The potential is huge to help us manage the agency better.” As an example, the system allows caseworkers to document unmet needs, Ducoff said. “In other words, if they tried to offer a service to a client and it wasn’t available, they can document that in the system. The theory is that this will help us understand where to build more capacity.” Ducoff said the creation of a Cabinet-level agency to deal with child welfare and the appointment of Kevin Ryan, the former head of the state Department of Human Services, as its first commissioner has elevated the focus on child welfare issues. Ryan himself sees better data systems as key to the agency’s turnaround. Although the state tried to make incremental improvements to its data systems while the SACWIS project was unfolding, progress was limited. Testifying before a state legislative committee in February 2006, Ryan described many of the agency’s ongoing shortcomings, and he called its legacy data systems “terrible.” “I recently received several conflicting reports on the same data request for caseloads,” he said. “We cannot identify and “The advantage of the new system is that it is built to collect and track more data. The potential is huge to help us manage the agency better.” John Ducoff, director, New Jersey Office of Legal and Regulatory Oversight JAN_08 Another advantage of the new system is better connectivity between the state attorney general’s office and DYFS. Attorneys now have much broader access to DYFS records. “When one has a court date, he can access the system directly and see every case note,” Ducoff said. “Previously he would have had to call our staff and ask them to make a paper copy of a file.” Although it’s too early to assess the impact of the new software on the day-to-day experience of caseworkers, Ducoff is convinced that the system will not only do a better job of supporting their work, it will also help agency address our problems if we don’t have good data systems.” Making Use of the Data New Jersey’s well documented difficulties are not unique. About a dozen states are in some form of litigation about the inadequacies of their child welfare programs, and a major problem of almost every state is that their data is not very good, said Judith Meltzer, deputy director of the Washington, D.C.-based Center for the Study of Social Policy. Meltzer, who serves as the court-appointed monitor of the 2006 revised settlement between Children’s Rights and New Jersey, calls the SACWIS implementation a “tremendous challenge” for New Jersey. “First, it has to be customized and designed to match the business processes of the state,” she explained. That requires standardizing those business processes, which can be different from region to region or office to office. Older data has to be put into a format for use by the new system. Making the transition is another issue for a work force that is either new and has to be trained, or old and resistant to change, she said. “The last challenge, which is where they are now, is working out the bugs, making sure you have online help available, and figuring out where you pull data from to help managers make decisions,” she added. “That is really the dessert. They still have a ways to go, but they have passed several important hurdles.” Meltzer said she believes it will take more than a year of use before agency executives realize the impact the software can have. “Then it will be up to the managers to make good use of the data,” she said. Although she believes the state still has a lot to prove, Meltzer is encouraged by the direction the agency has taken. “It’s not fixed yet, but I am supportive of their leadership and the urgency they are showing,” she said. The litigation has been a long and torturous process, she added, but ever since the creation of the Department of Children and Families, state officials “have lived up to all their commitments, have brought in the type of strong leadership and management they need, and they have focused on data.” Ducoff and Meltzer agree that any improvements the state eventually makes will be more because of people than technology. “I see this IT system can be a valuable tool,” Ducoff said, “but it’s not driving change in our case management practices. Our work is people engaging with kids and families and building a system that responds to their needs. The technology is only a tool that supports those efforts.” CONTRIBUTING WRITER DAVID RATHS IS BASED IN NARBERTH, PA. 46 http://www.govtech.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Government Technology - January 2008 Government Technology - January 2008 Contents Point of View Big Picture The Last Mile On the Scene CIO Sightings Four Questions for... Spectrum Location, Location, Location Digital Governor Back to the Drawing Board Waukesha Goes Green Collaring Dangerous Dogs Public Sector Goes Web 2.0 Bounce Back SACWIS Rollout Simple Strategy Products Personal Computing How It Works signal:noise Government Technology - January 2008 Government Technology - January 2008 - (Page CW1) Government Technology - January 2008 - (Page CW2) Government Technology - January 2008 - (Page CW3) Government Technology - January 2008 - (Page CW4) Government Technology - January 2008 - (Page Bellyband1) Government Technology - January 2008 - (Page Bellyband2) Government Technology - January 2008 - Government Technology - January 2008 (Page Cover1) Government Technology - January 2008 - Government Technology - January 2008 (Page Cover2) Government Technology - January 2008 - Government Technology - January 2008 (Page 3) Government Technology - January 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Government Technology - January 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Government Technology - January 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Government Technology - January 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Government Technology - January 2008 - Point of View (Page 8) Government Technology - January 2008 - Point of View (Page 9) Government Technology - January 2008 - Big Picture (Page 10) Government Technology - January 2008 - Big Picture (Page 11) Government Technology - January 2008 - The Last Mile (Page 12) Government Technology - January 2008 - The Last Mile (Page 13) Government Technology - January 2008 - On the Scene (Page 14) Government Technology - January 2008 - CIO Sightings (Page 15) Government Technology - January 2008 - Four Questions for... (Page 16) Government Technology - January 2008 - Spectrum (Page 17) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 18) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 19) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 20) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 21) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 22) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 23) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 24) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 25) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 26) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC1) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC2) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC3) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC4) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC5) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC6) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC7) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page NIC8) Government Technology - January 2008 - Location, Location, Location (Page 27) Government Technology - January 2008 - Digital Governor (Page 28) Government Technology - January 2008 - Digital Governor (Page 29) Government Technology - January 2008 - Digital Governor (Page 30) Government Technology - January 2008 - Digital Governor (Page 31) Government Technology - January 2008 - Back to the Drawing Board (Page 32) Government Technology - January 2008 - Back to the Drawing Board (Page 33) Government Technology - January 2008 - Back to the Drawing Board (Page 34) Government Technology - January 2008 - Back to the Drawing Board (Page 35) Government Technology - January 2008 - Waukesha Goes Green (Page 36) Government Technology - January 2008 - Waukesha Goes Green (Page 37) Government Technology - January 2008 - Collaring Dangerous Dogs (Page 38) Government Technology - January 2008 - Collaring Dangerous Dogs (Page 39) Government Technology - January 2008 - Public Sector Goes Web 2.0 (Page 40) Government Technology - January 2008 - Public Sector Goes Web 2.0 (Page 41) Government Technology - January 2008 - Bounce Back (Page 42) Government Technology - January 2008 - Bounce Back (Page 43) Government Technology - January 2008 - SACWIS Rollout (Page 44) Government Technology - January 2008 - SACWIS Rollout (Page 45) Government Technology - January 2008 - SACWIS Rollout (Page 46) Government Technology - January 2008 - SACWIS Rollout (Page 47) Government Technology - January 2008 - Simple Strategy (Page 48) Government Technology - January 2008 - Simple Strategy (Page 49) Government Technology - January 2008 - Products (Page 50) Government Technology - January 2008 - Personal Computing (Page 51) Government Technology - January 2008 - Personal Computing (Page 52) Government Technology - January 2008 - Personal Computing (Page 53) Government Technology - January 2008 - How It Works (Page 54) Government Technology - January 2008 - How It Works (Page 55) Government Technology - January 2008 - How It Works (Page 56) Government Technology - January 2008 - How It Works (Page 57) Government Technology - January 2008 - signal:noise (Page 58) Government Technology - January 2008 - signal:noise (Page Cover3) Government Technology - January 2008 - signal:noise (Page Cover4)
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