“[Our content management tool] is not just a scanning tool, but much more…to help the workflow and integrations, and help us achieve our goals in running the court system.” - Melissa Tuttle, Clerk of Common Pleas Court, Clark County, OH
This county adopted technology over a decade ago to become more efficient. Yet, today there are many other counties in the US still struggling with manual processes and paper files.
With each state creating their own guidelines for public record requests, it's become a growing challenge for the clerk’s office to respond “as quickly as possible" to provide the requested information.
With an increasing number of requests each year, each county is faced with creating an efficient fulfillment workflow to avoid a significant backlog of requests. The mismatch between the increasing number of requests and the staff available is not the only barrier a clerk faces. A record request can be challenging with the need to hunt for paper documents through multiple departments and file cabinets – putting the burden on the government staff and creating lengthy fulfillment cycles.
By automating the requests with eforms, automated workflows, and electronic searches for their digitized records – County Clerks can experience a number of benefits, including:
The key benefit to digitizing records and automating workflows is the time that is saved executing the same task – from a manual process to an electronic process. By automating manual tasks, staff can redirect to other tasks that need their attention instead. So, for requests that need very old records that are not digitized yet or are planned to remain as paper – staff in the office have the time to hunt down their rarer requests. In Duval County, FL – this meant responding to a request in less than 24 hours versus seven working days.
When it comes to a digital transformation, government offices are charged from the federal government on down – to utilize electronic records. Not only from the practical sense of providing better constituent services, but also to protect their history and important records from falling prey to a natural disaster. We have seen it with unpredictable hurricanes, violent tornado seasons, and surprise flooding to areas of the country that have never been underwater before. The night before a destructive event is predicted is not the time to worry about paper records.
Small counties to large counties need to think and plan about their operations and look for more efficiency. We demand it in our homes and we demand it of our government. We have seen cities and towns build the road map for change – recognizing the need to digitize – understanding the value of reducing tedious work and leveraging their information access for better information sharing – within their counties and for their constituents. The time to consider a change in government options is now – when technology can make the clerks’ offices operate more efficiently.