Joe Whittemore's effort to reduce administrative overhead and operating expenses in Durham County, North Carolina, culminated in the county's social services unit being awarded the North Carolina Department of Social Services Best Practices Award on November 20, 2003. This is just one of several successful applications recently launched by Whittemore and his team.
The latest application produced by Whittemore, Durham County's manager of software development and support, and his staff is a social services time-keeping application dubbed Daysheets. Event-driven entries into Daysheets eliminates redundant input of more than 200,000 time entries each year, making Durham the first county in North Carolina to completely eliminate costs associated with the redundant reporting of staff time to the state. The Daysheets system runs on Durham County's AS/400 Model 620.
Many new applications developed using ProGen Plus from Business Computer Design are sparking new ideas throughout government statewide on how better software applications and business practices can improve efficiency and the quality of service delivered to North Carolina's citizens.
Carmen Giggey, senior programmer/analyst, introduced ProGen Plus to the county a few years ago. Giggey, who used ProGen Plus before going to work for the county, convinced Whittemore to license the package by writing a sorely needed Register of Deeds Tax history application overnight, a task that would normally have taken many weeks.
New Apps for Other County Agencies
Just prior to developing Daysheets, Durham County IT delivered an application called Jury Selection System (JSS) to the county's courts. JSS was referred to as "the ideal system" in a recent letter written to county officials by Kathy Shuart, trial court administrator for Durham County. According to Whittemore, when the courts needed a new application to track jury duty notices, summonses, and other court activity, no suitable commercially available package emerged. Four out of five people who received notices for jury duty were no-shows, and controls were needed to shed light on the problem and ensure diligent follow-up. "The government doesn't have the staff to process 1,000 people that fail to show up for jury duty," says Giggey.
Once the court's business requirements were clearly defined, three developers got to work. Within six weeks, the application programming was complete on the system referred to as JSS. Giggey explained that the development team ran into several unexpected delays outside of the sphere of development. "The biggest time-consuming factor was going through the state statutes to make the application 100% compliant with state law," she comments. "Actual coding took virtually no time at all."
Accountability
JSS has deep functionality for tracking jury duty no-shows and generating reports that detail the reasons for non-compliance. It automatically generates all summonsing, monitors moneys due, and manages other tasks, which all contribute to a better turnout rate and significantly lower court administrative costs. In fact, the application developed for the courts became the first in North Carolina to include automatic processing of no-shows. Durham County increased its court count from four to five during the same year the new application was implemented and still realized a significant reduction in juror processing costs.
Whittemore says that ProGen Plus has become his team's core development methodology because of its application modeling capabilities, adaptability to the Web using WebSmart, and the fact that ProGen-produced programs can be moved from a development machine to a production box and then executed without any special run-time environment. Moreover, people with other important business skills but minimal exposure to programming can be productive.
Progressive thinking put into motion by Durham's IT department has been the catalyst for praise and for change. The state of North Carolina intends to implement a time-keeping system patterned after the one developed in Durham. It's expected to save the state over a million dollars in processing expenses.
Though much of the focus has been on Whittemore, he believes the joint effort of all the IT support areas--network, operations, and IT management--contributed greatly to the program's success and asserts that his staff should receive the credit.
Durham will soon have two iSeries Model 810s to accommodate present and future needs. Looking forward, Whittemore intends to convert his green-screen apps to browser-based ones. "I'm looking at creating a familiar look and feel for users. That's where ProGen WebSmart comes in." ProGen WebSmart is BCD's award-winning Web and wireless application development tool and application server environment for iSeries-AS/400 computers. "ProGen Plus has been all that we anticipated and more," says Giggey. "WebSmart has produced equal praise. Not only will it easily handle our Web development needs, we were surprised by all the existing code available."
Over the next five years, Whittemore's application development methodology, coupled with a central data repository, will extend to all departments that can benefit from it. As the County bridges these homogeneous systems, faster access to needed information and the elimination of duplicated effort will save the county and state even more.
Robert Gast has written about technology and business management since 1986. He is a partner with Chicago area-based Evant Group, and can be reached at
Business Computer Design, Int'l, Inc. (BCD)
950 N. York Rd.
Hinsdale, IL 60521-2950
Tel: 630-986-0800
Fax: 630-986-0926
Web: www.bcdsoftware.com
Email:
Joe Whittemore, Manager of IT Systems Development and Support; Sharon Hirsch, Assistant Director, Program Support for Social Services; Kenna Phillips, Consultant, Braken and Company, Raleigh, NC; Dan Hudgins, Social Services Director
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