Ageing probation tech failing to keep tabs on prisoners

Crams! It's crumbling

By Nick Heath, 11 June 2009 17:28

NEWS

Failure to update the ageing IT system that helps manage offenders in the UK is making it difficult for the probation service to protect the public when prisoners are released into the community.

Currently, around three-quarters of probation staff use a system known as Crams (Case Recording and Management System), first rolled out in 1995, to keep track of offenders. According to the National Association of Probation Officers (Napo) the non-Windows based system, which acts as a central repository for information on offenders, is outdated and awkward to use.

Tim Wilson, chairman of the Napo, said the probation union has had worries over the system since its inception.

"We first registered concerns about Crams when it was conceived in 1993 and we are still using the same antediluvian system," he told silicon.com at the GovNet Modernising Justice Through IT event last week.

As well as questions over its usability, Crams is unable to share information it holds with prisons or the courts.

"How is it possible that we can protect the public when you've got so many variables to do with inadequate communication in IT systems. What we need is information and the information systems that are reliable," Wilson said.

A replacement for Crams, known as Delius, is currently used by about a quarter of probation staff in the UK, mainly in large cities such as London and Manchester. An upgraded version of Delius will form the basis of a single national case management system for the probation service, allowing the service to share information, and is expected to be fully rolled out by 2011.

However, it seems that Delius is also experiencing reliability issues: Napo says that its members in London complain of frequent problems with the Delius system crashing and being unavailable for hours at a time.

A Ministry of Justice spokeswoman denied there were significant problems however saying: "London's IT does not operate at a lower level of performance than other comparable probation areas.

"It does, however, need an upgrade which it is scheduled to get in the next two years.

"In the meantime we are upgrading servers, improving the server builds so that they are more supportable and resilient and increasing WAN bandwidth."

Rather than natively interoperate with the National Offender Management Information System (C-Nomis) - the system that will allow prisons to share information on offender case management - Delius will instead use a bridging system, to allow a limited amount of read-only information to be shared between Delius and C-Nomis.

C-Nomis is currently used by three prisons in Yorkshire and is set to be rolled out to all prisons within 12 months. The bridging system is expected to be in place by 2011.

Director general of the National Offender Management Service (Noms), Phil Wheatley, said the bridging system is preferable to a single integrated system.

"The two services only need to share probably a third of the information held by the other. For instance, the probation service does not need to know what prisoners spend their money on or what cell they are in," he said.

C-Nomis is now working well, Wheatley added.

Originally, a version of C-Nomis that would share all information on offender case management between the prisons and probation services had been planned. However, it was effectively scrapped in 2007 after three years of work and £155m had been spent on the project, when projected costs for the system...

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  1. 1. anonymous

    The U.K. criminal justice system should consider adopting a national exchange standard like the National Information Exchange Model (NIEM) being implemented across the U.S.

    It is designed to develop, disseminate and support enterprise-wide information exchange standards and processes that can enable jurisdictions and agencies to effectively share critical information in emergency situations, as well as support the day-to-day operations of agencies throughout the U.S. but is applicable to any country.

    NIEM enables information sharing, focusing on information exchanged among organizations as part of their current or intended business practices. The NIEM exchange development methodology results in a common semantic understanding among participating organizations and data formatted in a semantically consistent manner. NIEM will standardize content (actual data exchange standards), provide tools, and managed processes.

    A number of criminal justice information exchange data packages (IEPDs) have been written by U.S. agencies and are freely available.

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