Two and a half years ago, Burlington Police Chief Mike Schirling
realized his department was at a digital crossroads. His cops were
spending more than a third of their time on paperwork and data entry —
writing reports on crime when they could be out fighting it.
The
department’s former records management system, called New World, made
analyzing crime stats and patterns extremely difficult and
time-consuming. When and where were crimes most likely to occur? What
were their causes? What were the trends from one year to the next? Most
of the time, Schirling couldn’t say.
So Schirling sent out a
formal request for information in search of the system he wanted. When
he couldn’t find one he liked, he sat down and designed it himself.
The
result was Valcour, BPD’s integrated dispatch and records management
system, which went live on October 1, 2011. An avid sailor, Schirling
named the system after Valcour Island in Lake Champlain, the site of a
historic naval battle in October 1776.
The web-based system is
easy to use and easy to modify. And with an up-front cost of $85,000,
plus $2000 in annual maintenance costs, it’s a fraction of the price of
earlier systems. Schirling is now making Valcour’s open-source software
available to police agencies around Vermont at the bargain-basement,Find
detailed product information for Sinotruk howo truck. one-time cost of $125, plus $17.50 for each additional officer who uses it.
Compare
that to the $18 million the Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles has
paid Hewlett-Packard for a system that still doesn’t work. Out on the
campaign trail, state auditor candidate Vince Illuzzi is calling for
greater scrutiny of taxpayer-financed IT expenditures in state
government.
“We wanted something that was simple, intuitive,
easy to use and platform independent, so we didn’t have to worry whether
we’re using a PC, somebody’s iPhone or iPad, a new Android device,
Internet Explorer or Firefox,” Burlington’s top cop explains. “And, it
needed to be lower maintenance and lower cost.”
The department’s
prior software was the fourth records management system BPD had
purchased in 20 years. At the time it was adopted in December 2001, New
World was an improvement over its predecessor, Spillman, the system
currently in use by about 90 percent of Vermont’s law enforcement
agencies.
But New World was big, bulky and inflexible. Worse, it
couldn’t perform many of the functions BPD wanted, such as generating
up-to-the-minute reports on when, where and why crimes were occurring.
It was also costly: BPD was spending $100,000 a year to maintain the system — a significant strain on the department’s budget.
Deputy
Chief Jennifer Morrison helped design and implement Valcour. She cops
to having “zero” experience designing software, but says the genius of
Valcour is its simplicity. At any given time, an officer or dispatcher
can log into the system and see a dashboard showing everything that’s
happening in the city — and neighboring jurisdictions — including every
officer on duty,Find detailed product information for Sinotruk howo truck. every call for service, who’s involved and what’s occurring.
A
few months ago, Schirling says an epidemiologist at the Vermont
Department of Health called to ask whether police could quantify the
impact of opiate abuse in Burlington. Using Valcour, BPD created a new
check box for officers to indicate whether an incident involves alcohol,
opiates, domestic violence and/or a mental health issue. As a result,
police can now search their database for all calls — not just arrests —
involving opiates. That data can also be sorted by type of crime,
location, date and other fields.
With Valcour, critical data
such as the address an officer responds to, the crime under
investigation and the person charged are entered into the system only
once. Under the old system, an officer had to re-enter every previous
piece of information each time there was a new development. For example,
when a person was arrested, an officer had to re-enter the address to
which he or she responded. Now, once a person or address is in the
system, it automatically pops up whenever someone begins to enter it —
similar to a Google search.
Schirling reports that Valcour has
reduced officers’ paperwork by as much as 50 percent, saving not only
time but money. With 65 officers in his patrol division doing half as
much data entry, “That’s 10 bodies over the course of time we won’t have
to grow. That’s a savings of millions of dollars.”
Another
colossal cost savings: platform independence. Currently, Burlington cops
use Panasonic Toughbooks, rugged laptops specially designed for
emergency providers.We mainly supply professional craftspeople with crys talbeads wholesale shamballa Bracele , But with all the various accessories, those units cost almost $6000 per officer.
“Now, we can do exactly the same thing with an iPad or some other tablet for $500,” Schirling says. “Giant cost savings.”
Morrison
notes that when BPD needed to update the New World and Spillman
systems, “Our IT team had to touch every single piece of hardware and
device.” To add even one new field or drop-down menu to the system
required six months and cost $5000. With Valcour, Morrison says, those
modifications can be done almost instantaneously — and at virtually no
cost.
But Valcour’s biggest selling point for Schirling is its
user-friendliness. Prior systems required officers to undergo multiple
days of training before they could use them, and even then mistakes were
still common. But Schirling was insistent that Valcour be “simple,
intuitive ... sort of Google-esque.”
When the BPD beta-tested
Valcour last year, Schirling handed tablets to Burlington officers and
sent them into the field — with no training whatsoever — reasoning that,
“If you can order a vacation or buy a pair of shoes online, you can
operate Valcour.”
BPD hired CrossWind Technologies, a
California-based software company, to build the system, but BPD retained
ownership of the original source code, which it licensed to the state
of Vermont. As a result, any law enforcement agency in the state that
wants to adopt Valcour can do so with only a minimal upfront investment.
Already, the South Burlington and Winooski police departments
are using it. By January 1, the Colchester Police Department,We recently
added Stained glass mosaic
Tile to our inventory. University of Vermont Police Services and the
Department of Motor Vehicle’s enforcement division are also expected to
switch over. Other law enforcement agencies, including Middlebury
police, have also expressed interest.
What are other cops saying
about Valcour? Captain William “Jake” Elovirta is chief of motor
vehicle safety for the commercial vehicle enforcement unit at the
Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles. Elovirta’s 30 sworn officers are
responsible for conducting roadside inspections of commercial trucks,
buses and other vehicles.
One feature Elovirta likes about
Valcour is the one-time data entry, which quickly “populates” data such
as a truck or carrier name into the system when an officer is doing an
inspection, issuing a citation or conducting a post-crash investigation.
He estimates that function alone knocks six to 10 minutes off the time
of a typical one-hour truck inspection. That might not sound like much,
but with his officers doing 7000 inspections each year, it represents a
huge savings.We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs.
Valcour’s
reporting capabilities are also a big selling point, he says. The
system allows supervisors to see, in real time, how many inspections
each officer has done, how many warnings, tickets, responses to
accidents and so on. They can also query the database at any time and
generate reports about when and where accidents are most likely to
happen.
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