City of Norfolk, Va.
Norfolk, Va., builds a better permit process with business process management
March 13, 2006 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
Norfolk, Va.
www.norfolk.gov
- Business: This municipal government with 5,000 employees serves a city with nearly a quarter of a million residents, the world's largest naval base and the East Coast's second-largest shipping container terminal. Norfolk has an $882 million budget for fiscal 2006.
- IT department: 126 employees
- Project champion: Hap M. Cluff
- Project payback: The average time to process building permits was cut from 19 days to three. Citizens no longer have to spend six to eight hours per application chasing forms through the approval process, saving 100,000 man-hours on 14,000 applications annually. The city has more than 5,000 forms left to automate.
Municipal governments enjoy monopolies within their city limits, but that doesn't mean they can get by with giving bad service. Right next door is another city that's more than willing to bring in new businesses and the accompanying tax revenue.
"We wanted our permitting process to be better than anyone else's, since it was the only way we could compete in our highly competitive region," says Hap M. Cluff, director of IT for the city of Norfolk.
The problem was that it took 19 days, on average, to get a permit approved. Residents and builders had to make multiple trips downtown to chase applications through departments scattered among six different buildings. Citizens complained about the wasted time and lost applications.
"This was not an acceptable time frame for something as simple as a driveway or a patio or a single-family dwelling," Cluff says. "It was not a good way for the city to do business."
The obvious answer was to use business process management (BPM) software to automate the process.
"A lot of government agencies aren't worried about revenue but about saving costs, and it will make people more productive to have managed processes in place," says Colin Teubner, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Mass. "They also want to provide better customer service to their constituents the way Norfolk did, by lowering the permit cycle time."
Sharing the Load
But there was a lot more than just building permits that needed automation. The city has more than 5,000 paper forms, and even doing one a week would stretch the task out into the next century. And there was no money in the budget to hire consultants to take over the job. Norfolk needed a framework for IT to push the automation out into the hands of those who use the forms.
In order to economically automate its numerous proc-esses, the city decided to use existing software and personnel.
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