Florida revamps IT operations to save children
IT operations at the state's Department of Children and Families were a 'mess'
March 10, 2004 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
PALM DESERT, Calif. -- Not so long ago, children supposedly under the protection of the Florida Department of Children and Families were being abandoned, abused and murdered.
"We were a broken agency," said Ben Harris, deputy secretary for operations and technology, who arrived at the scandal-plagued DCF last year after it became the center of a media firestorm about its inability to keep the state's underprivileged children safe.
Harris, speaking this week at Computerworld's Premier 100 IT Leaders Conference here, told attendees that "technology had to be the driving force" in fixing the $3.8 billion agency.
That's because technology was part of the problem. The DCF, which has a $250 million annual IT budget, was organized in part around a central information operation with 59 applications used to track families and children, the DCF's clients and the services they needed. But the department also had 15 semiautonomous districts with their own IT functions and managers, which soaked up about half the agency's IT budget and created an additional 243 often overlapping and inadequate applications.
"It was a mess," Harris said.
But by the end of this year, the DCF will have consolidated those 15 districts' IT operations under central control and eliminated all but 30 of the 243 district-specific applications. And DCF workers will get a single view to all 92 remaining applications that they have rights to access through a new portal called OneFamily.
Through OneFamily, users will get a unified view of each client, which was previously impossible because the information was scattered across various applications, meaning workers didn't always know which services a client was getting or needed, said Glenn Palmiere, DCF's IT director. The DCF will also get access to information from other state agencies, which should eliminate incidents such as the one last year when a Jacksonville mother left her 2-year-old child alone for 19 days while she was in jail.
Palmiere noted that OneFamily is fully compliant with the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act regarding client privacy in areas such as mental health, drug rehabilitation and other medical-related data.
As part of a major revamping of the DCF, Gov. Jeb Bush has pushed the department to privatize its services. As such, the DCF will be working with approved and monitored nonprofit community agencies, which will also have access to OneFamily, Harris said.
According to Palmiere, the DCF was able to consolidate its application portfolio by using integration technology called Ensemble from InterSystems Corp. in Cambridge, Mass. By using a handful of the 220 database and application adapters in Ensemble, the DCF has been able to begin eliminating programs and consolidating access to its remaining applications through the portal.
In addition, the DCF next month will pilot kiosk technology allowing clients to complete applications for services or change an address without having to wait in line to meet with a DCF worker, who would normally fill out the forms, Palmiere said. Data will immediately be accessible to agency case workers through the portal, and Palmiere said he expects the kiosks to be rolled out throughout Florida in July.
Among those in the audience was Gerry Dane, associate vice president for information systems at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Fla. She said the DCF's inability to keep tabs on children in its system "has been a major problem in the state."
"Now it looks like they will be able to track children better because they will be able to see the information better. They now have real tools to work with," she said. "That will save our children."
Complete preconference survey results (registration required)
Business Intelligence
Additional Resources



White Papers & Webcasts
IDC Research Report: The Business Value of Consolidating on Energy-Efficient Servers
Download this Resource Now!
HP Technology Guide for Scalable Business Solutions
Download This Resource Now!
Architecting Business Intelligence Applications for Change: The Open Solution
Register for this webcast today!
Clipper Group Report: HP Provides Enhanced Options for Data Center
Download this Resource Now!
Enterprise Data Governance: Bridging the Business-IT Gap
Register for this live webcast today!
Technology Brief: Technologies in HP ProLiant G6 c-Class server blades with Intel Xeon processors
Download this Resource Now!
Informatica 9 Launch: Transform your Business. Transform your world.
Business and IT will finally be on the same page. Data quality issues will be a thing of the past. The promise of...
Introducing the HP ProLiant G6 servers
Download this Resource Now!
Lower IT Costs with Oracle Database 11g Release 2
Register for this webcast now!

