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8/16/2019 20160527 - MayorReport 15
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Fellowship Status ReportCode for America is partnering with Salt Lake County to build technology solutions to improve services and strengthen the relationship between the county and its citizens,
with an aim to lower the rate at which citizens fail to appear in court, for supervision and treatment appointments in addition to lowering the recidivism rate. To
accomplish these objectives, we pursue three workstreams - build, measure, learn - to iterate quickly and ensure our decisions are data-driven and user-focused.
Phase IV - Iterative Development Sprints Part 1 (05/05/2016 to 06/14/2016)
Workstream Goals during this phase
Buildagile development
· Iteratively implement features to improve case manager use of ClientComm· Focus areas: case manager workflow, passive client capture services, auto-notifications
Measuredata-drivendecision-making
· Implement feedback measures to determine parameters of each client’s close out· Target use goals (by end of Fellowship):
35+% of clients per case manager communicating via ClientComm80+% of onboarded case manager using ClientComm daily
Learnuser centereddesign
· Catalogue and address pain points in ClientComm that impede case manager efficiencyand reduce likelihood of use
· Direct client-facing opportunities to reduce FTA based on opportunities identified in ourresearch
Week ending 05/06/2016
This week has been dedicated to three primary activities for our team. The first was aggregating and analyzing all the results
from the user interviews that we performed last week as well as cataloging and documenting what we learned from the 3
workshops that were run with case managers in Pretrial and Probation, as well as supervisors from both. Ben wrote up two
nice pieces on our blog with regards to these efforts. The first focuses on how grouping and tagging might be rolled out for
ClientComm as well as, more broadly, how we understand the methods by which case managers sort clients. You can read it
here . The second covers our learnings from our interviews with clients. It summarizes the dominant trends we observed in
how people sort and organize their schedules, as well as how individuals differ in terms of how they consider their process
and level of completion and progress as they move through the criminal justice system.
In addition to this user research aggregation, we have taken a moment to review all the code that has been written. During
our 2-month sprint, we rolled out a number of feature improvements in quick iteration. This led to a great deal of code being
written quickly. This week, we’ve been taking the time to review that code in order to ensure that it is stable and optimized.
Furthermore, ensuring cleanliness in the code will be a key component in making sure that the codebase is something that
can be transferrable, should CJS take on ClientComm in-house at the end of the year.
In addition to an all-around tune up, we have also been focusing on security. Over the course of this week, Kuan has
identified some key elements that have been identified as potential vulnerabilities. Over the course of the remainder of this
week and into the early part of next week, we will be focusing on improving and building out systems to ensure that critical
security measures are rigorously implemented in the project. This will ensure the safety of information being passed back
and forth through ClientComm.
Finally, this past week was Twilio’s SIGNAL conference. Twilio is the API service that is utilized on ClientComm’s backend to
support conversion of the conversations seen on the application into real world SMS messages to clients’ phones. This
conference held a great deal of new information and was valuable in terms of learning strengths and opportunity points to
further capitalize on the tool. For example, through attending a number of Twilio Voice sessions, we have learned to a far
greater degree what kind of automated voice and conversation components, as well as voice-to-text transcription services
might be possible with ClientComm in the future.
Read more about the conference here and about our project via a new article published on Code for America’s site here.
Workstream This week’s accomplishments Next week’s objectives
Build · Perform a security review ofClientComm and ensure sufficientdesign security on new features
· Complete security modifications identifiedas critical during security audit
· Improve email notifications feature
Measure · Analyze Department of Public Securitycitation data dump
· Produce visualizations of VINE data from
Court-County secure FTP server
Learn · Synthesize user research onnotifications and to do managementwith clients from week in Salt LakeCounty
· Synthesize case manager workshopson notification system design
Thanks as always,
Kuan and Ben, Code for America, Team Salt Lake County
http://c4a-slc.tumblr.com/post/144871374691/how-clients-organize-and-plan-aheaduser-researchhttps://www.codeforamerica.org/stories/salt-lake-county-is-working-to-help-residents-succeed-with-probation-and-pretrial-supervisionhttp://c4a-slc.tumblr.com/post/144943133811/remind-is-an-interesting-application-that-washttp://c4a-slc.tumblr.com/post/144871374691/how-clients-organize-and-plan-aheaduser-researchhttp://c4a-slc.tumblr.com/post/144878501431/grouping-clients-to-serve-their-needs-betterhttp://c4a-slc.tumblr.com/post/144878501431/grouping-clients-to-serve-their-needs-betterhttp://c4a-slc.tumblr.com/https://www.codeforamerica.org/governments/saltlakecounty/Recommended