A game-changing Facebook application?

Thanks for the probing ideas that came back on game-changing opportunities to solve the "a crisis is a terrible thing to waste" challenge.

Here's one from Bob Knisely, former Deputy Director of the NPR, the initiative that got many folks started on thinking about the impacts technology might make in reinventing government." For many serious changes, the biggest step is moving from an idea to something that shows value and motivates necessary but later work to smooth things out. Could Facebook handle this step in getting us quickly started on such "Department of Mary Jones" information sharing?

===

FACEBOOK and "The Department of Mary Jones"

 

            During Vice President Gore's National Performance Review, some of the staff began to fantasize about reinventing social services to create "the Department of Mary Jones." FACEBOOK can make that fantasy a reality. This could bring unity to the most dispiriting, inefficient stovepipes* in American government today.

 

            The idea behind "The Department of Mary Jones" was that the organizing principle of social services should be the client, not the providers of health, welfare, housing, education, etc. We were ‘reinventing government' back then, and what would make more sense?

 

            Our "Department of Mary Jones" (for I was a Deputy Director of the NPR) would have provided immediate access to all of the information about Ms. Jones, and encouraged/facilitated/mandated coordination among her contacts with food stamps, Section 8 Housing, the police, the juvenile justice system, her welfare case worker, the guidance counselors at her children's schools, and so forth. Such a system would enable the social worker to find out if there was a problem with food stamps or housing, and the school guidance counselors to notify the social workers of suspected abuse within minutes of seeing a bruised child.

 

            Last year my wife and I became CASAs - Court Appointed Special Advocates - for a dysfunctional family with six kids. They absconded from Maryland and are now four hundred miles away, in a different state. Recently my wife took a call from the principal of the "special school" where the eldest boy is now enrolled. The principal was trying to get in touch with the family's Children and Family Services caseworker. The principal and the caseworker are less than fifty miles apart and in the same county, far to the west; my wife was in Annapolis, MD. What's wrong with this picture?

 

            This inability to communicate and collaborate across agencies (and within them!) is neither new nor novel. Kids can get killed because information and actions taken aren't shared. For just one example, see "Review Finds Agencies, Nonprofits Failed to Coordinate in Jacks Case" (Washington Post, April 2, 2009 at: www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/02/AR2009040201404.html), and the underlying DC Inspector General's report at:

http://oig.dc.gov/news/view2.asp?url=release09%2FOIG%2DFinal%2DPublic%2DAt%2DRisk%2DFamily%2Epdf&mode=iande&archived=0&month=20093&sid=ST2009040202338.

 

            FACEBOOK could be the solution to this problem, in so many ways. First, if everyone involved became a "fan" of Mary Jones, then whatever they posted would be instantly and automatically available to everyone else. A quick review of her page at any hour would bring each worker fully up-to-date. The caseworkers' workloads would be more easily (and quickly) accessed, from their FACEBOOK homepages. Supervisors at each agency, also enrolled as fans, could check on their workers' efforts just as quickly and easily. All staff could work from anywhere that has Internet access. Such a system should be both more effective and more efficient.

 

            There are now over 200 million users of FACEBOOK worldwide, so there's unlikely to be a learning curve for many workers. If you're a user of FACEBOOK, you can readily imagine how such a system would work!

 

            What's not to like? Well, there's the privacy issue. In practice, it would be trivial to put the FACEBOOK software onto secure servers, and the information could be made as secure as anything that the Central Intelligence Agency is involved with. Caseworkers already work with a great deal of confidential information.

 

            Also, recent attempts to create an integrated case management system in Fairfax County, Virginia, have foundered on both the data sharing (privacy) issues and because "the rules" do not permit commingling administrative grants across TANF, Food Stamps, etc., to pay for an integrated system.

 

            It would be nice to think that all we'd need is a few "Yes Lawyers" rather than all the "No Lawyers." In fact, both the data sharing issues and the commingling of grant monies would require changes in legislation as well as policy and regulation. But the vision of a FACEBOOK-driven integrated services delivery system should not be hard to sell in an Administration as "wired" as this one!

 

            Of course, it might be an incentive to know that Canada (and other countries are well on the road to developing such systems, with or without America's "high tech" Web 2.0 services, such as FACEBOOK. IBM's Center for the Business of Government published a research report in 2008 entitled Integrating Service Delivery Across Levels of Government: Case Studies of Canada and Other Countries (available in full at www.businessofgovernment.org/publications/grant_reports/details/index.asp?GID=316).

 

(If we succeed in developing such a system, it will soon become apparent that the next steps must be a transfer pricing model and the channels needed to move resources quickly to where they are needed. But that's another story.)

 

            If we really care about children and families at risk, we need to solve the problem of coordinating multitudinous agencies and workers. FACEBOOK could make it happen, in a New York Minute.

 

Robert A. Knisely

robert@knisely.info

04May09

_______

*As we now know, only on the East and West Coasts do we refer to "stovepipe" agencies. In the Midwest, they're known as "silos." We can't even agree on the same terminology for the vertical focus of most government agencies. We're caught in the same trap!

 ===

All the best,

Jerry

P.S. Keep those cards and letters coming. If you have an interest in such "major move" thinking, follow the link and join the Tough Times Project

10:00 PM, 04 May 2009 by Jerry Mechling

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Comments: (2 Add a comment

  • Can Mary Jones Trust Facebook with her Information?

    No argument that there is value in a centralized, collaborative point of access to information about an individual needed to ensure appropriate services and benefits are made available to her. But for Mary Jones or any other citizen to use such an environment, Mary has to be put in control of her own personal information, particularly with respect to granting access to others when needed. The problem with Facebook in this scenario is that when all Mary's "fans" post information to her page, Facebook's terms of use acknowledge that Mary owns her information, but claims an unrestricted right to use that information in any way it likes. One of the advantages of having your personal information stored by the government is that the government is tightly constrained on under what circumstances it can collect that information and for what explicit purposes, and it can't share your information or do anything else with it without your consent. Social networking seems a great way to increase the level of communication among individuals and, potentially, among organizations or entities with whom those individuals have relationships. However, there's a foundation of trust that needs to be established among all the participants before it makes sense to share sensitive personal information, and Facebook just doesn't provide the sort of privacy protections necessary to establish that trust.

    by Steve Gantz on 05/06/09

  • Royal Restrooms

    It was a well-written review. On the other hand, if you want to have indoor quality restrooms outdoors, you don't necessarily need debt consolidation, you need Royal Restrooms. Royal Restrooms is a company that sells portable bathrooms complete with axle and trailer hitch for towing, but this isn't your normal trailer bathrooms – these are the Cadillacs of commodes. Each unit comes complete with a real toilet, urinal, tile flooring, cabinets, sink and hot and cold running water. It's a real bathroom, not unlike what you would see in your own home that gets pulled around on a trailer.
    If you need a portable bathroom, and don't want to need debt consolidation for some cheap and degrading affair, try Royal Restrooms.

    by Dallas B. on 06/08/09

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Recent Entries

Some would argue that the biggest NEW idea re: how IT can make a difference in government is aggressive sharing of data with the public.

Some argue otherwise, of course.

To figure out for yourself, you have a chance tomorrow to talk with some of the key folks involved with the DC Data Feeds program, the Innovations Award winner that has been at the forefront of "democratizing data."

Increasing Civic Participation Through Democratization of Data

Date: Thursday, April 15, 2010                            Time: 5:00 p.m.

Location: Ash Center, 124 Mt. Auburn Street, Suite 200N, Cambridge, MA

Designed to increase civic participation, government accountability, and transparency in government practices, the city of Washington, D.C. created an initiative making virtually all current district government operational data available to the public in its raw form rather than in static, edited reports.  

Spearheaded by the Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO), raw data from multiple D.C. government agencies is housed at the District's Citywide Data Warehouse (CityDW) and supplied via over 320 data feeds to online sites, citizens, and government agencies to increase civic awareness.  In addition, OCTO launched an annual Apps for Democracy contest awarding the best applications that use CityDW data feeds. Its 2008 contest received 47 applications from software developers in 30 days-avoiding an estimated $2.6 million in internal development costs.

The program won the Innovations in American Government Award in 2009.

A light dinner will be served.

About the Speakers

Julia Bezgacheva is a project manager at the Data Transparency and Accountability Program (Citywide Data Warehouse) at D.C.'s Office of the Chief Technology Officer. Her responsibilities include coordination with the District agencies and other stakeholders, participating in developing recommendations, policies, and procedures related to the new practices implemented by the Citywide Data Warehouse, and managing application design and development.

David Strigel joined the District government in the summer of 2004 to lead technology projects for the Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO). Strigel comes to the District with over 16 years of experience in building Web applications, software, and technologies for companies, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations.  At OCTO, Strigel leads the Citywide Data Warehouse (CityDW) program planning and managing, technology direction and strategy, service development and rollout, purchasing and contract negotiations, training and deployment strategies, IT strategies and solutions, and customer/partner relationship management.

Innovations in Government Seminar Series This event is part of the Innovations in Government Seminar Series, which explores various aspects and approaches to the study and replication of government innovation.  This year-long series seeks to educate and inform the next generation of government innovators. 

All the best,

Jerry 

04:27 PM, 14 Apr 2010 by Jerry Mechling

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Hello hard workers --

Having not completely recovered from the "almost but not quite" Butler basketball extravaganza the other night (with proper congratulations to Duke fans for the hard fought victory), I offer a poem (?) that, if you've seen it before, you'll enjoy seeing again, and -- if it's new to you -- could make your evening.

Spell-checkers are sooooo useful... 

After this, of course, it's back to work...

CANDIDATE FOR A PULLET SURPRISE

I have a spelling checker.
It came with my PC.
It plane lee marks four my revue
Miss steaks aye can knot sea.

Eye ran this poem threw it,
Your sure reel glad two no.
Its vary polished inn it's weigh.
My checker tolled me sew.

A checker is a bless sing,
It freeze yew lodes of thyme.
It helps me right awl stiles two reed,
And aides me when aye rime.

Each frays come posed up on my screen
Eye trussed too bee a joule.
The checker pours o'er every word
To cheque sum spelling rule.

Bee fore a veiling checkers
Hour spelling mite decline,
And if we're lacks oar have a laps,
We wood bee maid too wine.

Butt now bee cause my spelling
Is checked with such grate flare,
Their are know faults with in my cite,
Of nun eye am a wear.

Now spelling does knot phase me,
It does knot bring a tier.
My pay purrs awl due glad den
With wrapped words fare as hear.

To rite with care is quite a feet
Of witch won should bee proud,
And wee mussed dew the best wee can,
Sew flaws are knot aloud.

Sow ewe can sea why aye dew prays
Such soft wear four pea seas,
And why eye brake in two averse
Buy righting want too pleas.

Jerry Zar, 29 June 1992 

===

Back to work! 

And all the best to you,

Jerry

08:38 PM, 07 Apr 2010 by Jerry Mechling

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For those of you who have followed us lo these many years, you know that we've worked hard to keep the academic side of what we do connected pragmatically to what's happening in the "real world." A key tool for that has been the "Harvard Policy Group on Network-Enabled Services and Government."

And the key role within that group has been the Practitioner Chair held by Teri Takai, first as CIO for Michigan and now as CIO for California.

Good news for the country: With yesterday's announcement by the White House, Teri has been nominated by President Obama to become Assistant Secretary (Networks and Information Integration) of the Department of Defense.

For the HPG, Teri has been smart, pragmatic, well-respected, and... just what we needed.

For DoD, which is now struggling with strategic shifts to respond to new threats and possibilities, Teri will again be smart, pragmatic, well-respected and... just what is needed.

Congratulations, Teri! And congratulations, all of us. More here.

All the best,

Jerry

04:15 PM, 30 Mar 2010 by Jerry Mechling

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