1 / 28

NIEM Child Support & Court Communications

NIEM Child Support & Court Communications. From Concept to Action. Courts. CSE. The Child Support Enforcement Program. Federally Funded State Administered State or County Operated. The Child Support Enforcement Program. Challenges.... Cross Jurisdictional Program.

rasul
Download Presentation

NIEM Child Support & Court Communications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NIEMChild Support & Court Communications From Concept to Action Courts CSE

  2. The Child Support Enforcement Program

  3. Federally Funded State Administered State or County Operated The Child Support Enforcement Program Challenges.... Cross Jurisdictional Program

  4. Office of Child Support Enforcement Responsibilities • Provide Policy Guidelines to States • Provide Funding • Provide Technical Assistance • Ensure Compliance • Operate the Federal Parent Locator System (FPLS) & Federal Income Tax Refund Offset

  5. Administer the Child Support Enforcement (CSE) Program Deliver Program Services Operate State Parent Locator Service (SPLS) State Responsibilities

  6. State Functions • Locate Non-Custodial Parents • Establish Paternity • Establish Orders Using State Guidelines • Enforce Orders • Review and Adjust Orders • Monitor and Distribute Collections • Cooperate in Interstate Enforcement

  7. The National Community • Numerous jurisdictions • Various operating modes – judicial, administrative • Numerous systems • Common business need to exchange data Challenges.... A need for automation

  8. The Child Support Enforcement Process Case Initiation Locate Establishment Collections/ Distribution Enforcement The Case Begins Paternity Is Established And/Or Financial Obligations Are Set Funds Are Received And Distributed Tools Are Used To Ensure Payments Missing Data Is Sought To Locate The Non- Custodial Parent And His/Her Assets

  9. CSE & Courts - Business NeedsImproving Communications Courts CSE OCSE is committed to ensuring that information and communication is:

  10. CSE & Courts - Social Needs Speed improves support to children Faster orders results in increased collections Courts CSE Builds on the strength of NIEM

  11. How we Did it! Courts CSE • Goals of the OCSE Initiative • OCSE’s Role • State Initiatives • The Future

  12. Bridging the World of Child Support and Courts Speed up the Message: Identify communications need Identify the content Identify common terms Harmonize data Construct schemas Courts CSE

  13. Courts CSE OCSE Data Standards Program • Began in 2000 • Data Governance • Steering Committee • Oversight Board • Metadata repository • Workgroup consensus building practices • Data harmonization practices • Naming & definition conventions • We do forms & documents too!

  14. Creation of CSE/Court Data Standards Courts CSE Workgroup OCSE Data Standards NIEM XML Data Model (Global JXDM) 1. Gather Requirements CSE Communities Court 2. Collaborative Review and Vetting XML Schema 3. Create Message Exchange Request for Remedy Order

  15. Inclusion in NIEM Overview The inaugural content for the Family Services Domain—part of NIEM 2.1’s release in September 2009—was extracted from extension schema specifying national reference models for six data exchanges between courts and child-support enforcement agencies and between courts and child welfare agencies. The purpose of this domain is to support timely, complete, accurate, and efficient information sharing among the partners that can help improve outcomes for children whose circumstances make them particularly vulnerable.

  16. ImplementationColorado • Data Information Sharing (DISH) Project • 3 year grant from Federal Office of Child Support between Courts and Child Support Enforcement (CSE) to exchange data • Both CSE and Courts face similar constraints on money, time and technology resources • Both agencies understand the social need to get support to kids fast

  17. Goals of DISH Project Faster child support Reduce redundant data entry Improve data Shorten filing and processing time Eliminate paper Improved Efficiency in Workflow

  18. DISH Project Approach Took lessons learned Joint Chartering Session to develop elevator statement and goals of project- Formed Steering Committee including decision makers Built strong joint user groups of representatives from across the state Joint project management team with frequent communication Detailed Case Flows were diagramed

  19. Architecture

  20. The Hard Work Pays Off Courts CSE Statewide rollout complete November 2009 Integrated with few changes to legacy systems Significant cost savings Increased accuracy of data Trust and respect between agencies Increased automation Strong foundation for additional data exchanges and e-forms

  21. Lessons Learned Courts CSE Language and Definitions are Key Marketing project Build consensus Joint Training Joint Testing

  22. Courts CSE Lessons Learned • Planning which included the formation of numerous teams and groups comprised of staff at all levels, statement of work and elevator statement • Automated Data Exchange where data in XML format, in real time, using the National Information Exchange Model (NIEM), was utilized • Two county sites were used as pilot sites before Statewide implementation • A day long Statewide training including separate sessions for Judicial and CSE staff in the morning and joint session in the afternoon which involved a live demonstration

  23. Courts CSE Lessons Learned • Allow time for an extensive planning phase. CSE and Judicial spent 20 months on a planning process that involved numerous meetings of personnel from both agencies at all levels of the organizational chart: administrators, business planners, technical staff, and end users. • Find a shared goal and identify joint benefits. CSE and Judicial moved forward when they realized that they shared the common, real-world goals of reducing workload and errors, speeding up case processing, and generating orders and payments in a more timely fashion. • Get feedback from a broad range of end users. Taking the time to hear from users and crafting the solution that they needed meant that the end product was responsive to real needs. It also ensured buy-in by end users and gave personnel in both agencies the opportunity to see what happens in the other agency. • Recognize and deal with differences in agency styles, culture, goals, and terminology. Involving personnel at all levels from both agencies at every step of the planning, training, and implementation process was beneficial. A DISH dictionary was developed to help both sides speak the same language. • Work through the flow process. It was extremely useful to document the APA process from beginning to end in order to identify places to improve it.

  24. Conclusions DISH was a highly successful project resulting in the creation, development, and statewide implementation of an electronic exchange of information between CSE and Judicial agencies in child support cases filed using APA. The project was widely viewed to have reduced the workload associated with processing APA cases, cut the rate of errors in such cases, and sped up the process of filing child support cases and obtaining orders. The project was also viewed as having improved relationships between the child support agency and the court and led to a more uniform and efficient way of assigning docket and FSR numbers to new child support cases.

  25. Long Term Benefits of NIEM Courts CSE • NIEM is a catalyst for increasing Intra and Inter Agency Data Sharing • Reduced costs by sharing schemas and IEPD’s • Improved data quality • Improved workflow

  26. Challenges Courts CSE Syntax Governance Data Quality Privacy & Security Policy Harmonization

  27. Ongoing Work Courts CSE Add family services data to NIEM. Include private organizations - employers Collaborate with other agencies to establish family services domain (i.e. child welfare, SNAP, ) Knowledge Sharing

  28. Courts CSE QUESTIONS? Richard Ordowich Administration for Children and Families Office of Child Support Enforcement 202-260-5495 Richard.ordowich@acf.hhs.gov

More Related