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New York State Education Department
New York State Agency Fights Paper Burden
VESID is a New York State agency that helps individuals with disabilities
overcome their challenges and find jobs. But VESIDs paper-based
case management system was slowing these efforts down. The agency asked
CGI to design a new, automated system. Now VESIDs staff can share
information and work together more effectively than ever.
The Challenge The Office of Vocational and Educational Services
for Individuals with Disabilities (VESID) is the New York State Education
Department agency that helps individuals with disabilities find jobs.
With more than 20,000 new cases per yearand an active caseload close
to 100,000VESID fills an urgent social need.
Federal regulations require VESID to keep detailed records. From the
moment a client made contact, their case was tracked on paper. Government
forms, medical reports, counselors noteseverything went into
bulging paper files.
By the late 1990s, all this paper was becoming a problem. Since only
one person could work with a file at a time, there were many bottlenecks.
Important documents could be misplaced. Compiling statistics was onerous.
And there was no way to ensure consistent case handling across VESIDs
15 field offices and 10 satellite offices.
VESID knew they needed to start moving away from paper. So they engaged
CGI to develop an up-to-date case management system (CaMS) that would
help them achieve their goal.
The Strategy The project began with joint design sessions where
CGI and VESID decided what standard forms and data to capture and what
business rules to implement.
We made sure these sessions included key people from every field
office, says Randy Hyatt, CGIs project manager. And
we took a use case approach, so we were speaking their language, not technospeak.
The goal was to create a system that would let staff manage their cases
all the way from initial client contact through to final disposition.
Once the design was finalized, CGI began developing CaMS with industry-standard
tools, to facilitate future enhancements. At the projects peak,
CGI had 25 developers working on CaMS, assisted by VESID staff who made
a key contribution: an innovative module that moved many forms from paper
to screen while still producing attractive printouts.
Late in the project, a new requirement emerged: modify CaMS so that it
could be accessed over the Web by VESID staff while they were in the field
and by contractors who were not on the VESID network. To minimize costs
and development time for this change, CGI sourced an existing package,
Citrix Metaframe, for serving applications over the Web.
Using Citrix MetaFrame to Web-enable the system was a very innovative
touch, says Philip Lahaie, VESIDs manager for the CaMS project.
Instead of adding $1.5 million and another year to the project,
this approach cost less than $100,000 in purchases and took just 4 months
of development time.
Because CaMS had to go into production immediately, with no time for
debugging in the field, CGI used an automated test method to catch an
estimated 97% of the bugs before the software was released. We had
to go live right away, notes Lahaie, and with a highly sophisticated
system like this one, thats impressive.
The Technology
- Application environment: automated Case Management System providing
LAN, WAN, and Web access to Oracle 8.0 database and on-screen forms
and letters; Citrix MetaFrame application server with very thin client
transport protocol for Web access
- Development tools: Rational Rose UML analysis and design tool,
Powerbuilder 7 fourth-generation programming language, OCX add-on for
screen-based forms and letters
- Total users (projected): over 900, in 25 offices and via the
Web.
The Results CaMS is now up and running, making life easier for
VESIDs staff. In addition, the business rules built into CaMS now
ensure that every case receives consistent handling, and that new staff
learn proper procedures.
Were still largely paper-based, says Philip Lahaie.
But now our people can access more data more quickly and share workloads
more easily. People know that when CaMS accepts their information, that
means theyve done their job properly. Were now rolling CaMS
out one office at a time, and wherever its in use, the results have
been very encouraging.
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