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Partners in State-Local Information Systems: Lessons from the Field



Chapter 1. Project Overview

The Project at the Center for Technology in Government

In the fall of 1996, the Governor’s Task Force on Information Resource Management Standing Committee on Local Government asked CTG to conduct a brief “reconnaissance study” that involved field visits and telephone interviews with various local government agencies to better understand the information flows and working relationships between state and local governments. The results showed that there was a very wide range of conditions and experiences to consider. Among the key issues were indications that state-supplied software systems often did not take local needs into account and were seldom coordinated or integrated with either state or local practices and existing systems. Based on these findings and a descriptive inventory of existing and future projects developed by Stanley France of Schoharie County, a Special Work Group on State-Local Information Systems was created and the project focus was sharpened in an effort to identify, document, and disseminate information about existing “best practices.” Eleven existing system projects agreed to participate in the study.

The eleven projects are briefly summarized in Table 1.

Table 1. Eleven State-Local Information Systems Projects and Their Goals
Aging Network Client Based Service Management System Project
 
  • Single application and screening process for multiple benefits
  • Electronically link older persons and their caregivers with programs and services that preserve independence
  • Reduce administrative and service delivery costs
  • Satisfy multiple reporting and management needs
 
Electronic Filing of Local Government Annual Financial Reports
 
  • Reduce local staff time and effort to prepare AFR
  • Reduce time for review of data by OSC
  • Increase accuracy and timeliness of data
  • More consistent data for interpretation and trend analysis
 
Electronic Death Certificate Project
 
  • Reduce delayed and inaccurate death certificates and burial permits
  • Remote submission of information by authorized parties
  • Remote authorization of certificate through electronic signatures
  • Reduce data entry costs and errors
  • Immediate access to information
  • Reduce overhead for funeral directors
 
Electronic Transfer of Dog License Data
 
  • 14% savings in processing, data entry, and corrections costs for a slight increase in management costs
  • Provide faster, more accurate, complete dog identification data to participating municipalities
  • Eliminate duplication and data entry errors
 
Hunting and Fishing Licenses
 
  • Faster, one-stop, 24 hour, license shopping for customers
  • Eliminate accountables such as license validation stamps and decrease paper recordkeeping
  • Increase assurances that valid licenses are being sold
  • Increase the accessibility of data and facilitate marketing capability to increase revenue to the Conservation Fund and recruit and retain licensees
 
Immunization Information Systems Project
 
  • Increased rates of fully immunized children in NYS
  • Improve medical record charting and information processing to help health care providers ensure children receive age-appropriate vaccines
  • Eliminate wasteful re-administration of expensive vaccines
  • Reduce need for testing for previously administered vaccines
 
Probation Automation Project
 
  • Reduce the paperwork load for Probation Officers and return that time to direct services
  • Easier and faster access to criminal histories and pre-sentence investigation reports
  • Eliminate duplicate data storage
  • Access to administrative templates for common functions
 
Real Property System (RPS) Version 4
 
  • Faster and more efficient system processing
  • Code maintenance ability enhanced
  • Support user requested enhancements
  • Integration with local functions and commercial systems
 
SALESNET
 
  • Eliminate the need for data entry at both state and local levels
  • Reduce corrections resulting from illegible and incomplete forms
  • Verified sales information will be available to agency staff and local assessment officials in 60 rather than 123 days
 
Local Social Services District Imaging Project
 
  • Reduce caseworker access to files from days or hours to seconds
  • Potential to redesign case records and workflow based on the functionality of electronic storage technology
 
Electronic Voter Registration
 
  • Decrease time needed to register address changes, party enrollment, and voting eligibility
  • Decrease data entry errors due to repetitive manual entry
  • Decrease the flow of paper between local Boards of Elections, the State Department of Motor Vehicles and Health
 

Project objective

The objective of this project was to identify and document the practices associated with successful state-local information systems by studying the experiences of existing initiatives in New York State.

Project workplan and participant roles

Figure 1 shows the time line for the project, including major phases of work and interim and final deliverables. Information needed to support the project objective was gathered in four ways: a literature and current practice review, an effort to describe the eleven participating projects in a standard way, a survey of both state and local participants in each project, and focus group interviews with the project teams. The Special Work Group served as both a planning and advisory body. Each state-local project designated a contact person who coordinated the participation of both state and local officials involved in their system initiative. CTG’s role was to act as integrator and lead investigator.

Literature and current practice review. In order to better understand this complex world of intergovernmental exchanges, CTG conducted a literature search and was generally unable to uncover any significant formal research regarding this issue. Various scholars and government agencies have begun talking about the issues relevant to this project but have done very little to expand their theoretical work. The current practice review included a search of the World Wide Web and a series of telephone interviews with officials around the country engaged in state-local initiatives similar to ours. All were at a very early stage of development.

Project descriptions. Each state-local project designated a contact person who served a coordinating role including the preparation of a project description that followed a standard outline provided by CTG. These descriptions allowed a first look at the differences and similarities among projects and supplied important background information for the subsequent surveys and interviews.

Survey. To establish a framework for the effort, the Special Work Group developed a set of characteristics that exemplify an “ideal” intergovernmental information systems project. The characteristics are organized into four categories: project objectives, project management processes, system characteristics, and user support features. The group also identified barriers to project and system implementation. This work became the basis for a mail survey sent to approximately ten members of each project team. The respondents were divided equally between state and local participants.

Figure 1. Project Workplan
Figure 1. Project Workplan (View larger image)

Interviews. The results of the survey were used to construct an interview protocol that was then customized for each project. The intent of the interviews was to explore the survey responses of the project team with special attention to those areas where there was strong agreement between state and local participants about particularly successful elements. We also identified areas where each project differed substantially from the average across all projects. Thus, each group provided in-depth feedback regarding successful planning, design, and implementation strategies and also elaborated on areas where they had encountered particular problems. The interview notes were analyzed and compared across projects in order to identify the kinds of practices that seemed to lead to good results. Examples of each of the identified best practices were described in project-specific vignettes to explain in detail how a given project applied each concept in practice.

The final result of the project is a handbook of best practices called Tying a Sensible Knot: A Practical Guide to State-Local Information Systems. The contents of the handbook are summarized in Appendix A.