The Indiana Supreme Court Division of State Court Administration is releasing a Public Notice of Contracting Opportunity (PNCO) seeking proposals for an Electronic Filing Manager (EFM) and a basic Electronic Filing Service Provider (EFSP) for Indiana’s trial and appellate courts. The PNCO is available at http://courts.in.gov/admin/3190.htm.
Division contact information is available within the PNCO document. Responses to the PNCO are due September 15, 2014.
This week we share some interesting ideas that have come to our attention on Pennsylvania’s new online Dependency Benchbook, an online support calculator, and how to publish Internet Calendars with Microsoft Office Outlook.
Here is the hot and humid mid-summer news from the world of Court Tech. We have notes about online and in-person training, courtroom technology bench configurations, New Hampshire chooses an E-filing vendor, CITOC, and an online multilingual dictionary that includes legal terms.
An interesting article was posted on Government Technology magazine's website (www.govtech.com), "Montgomery County Hoping to be Among First in Texas to Go to a 'Paperless' Justice System by Cindy Horswell of McClatchy News Service on July 2, 2014.
The Texas Office of Court Administration (OCA) has issued a Request for Offers (RFO) for a statewide cloud-based trial court case management system. The solicitation is available for download from the OCA's Procurement site (select the link for RFO 212-4-0672).
The OCA will host an Offeror's Conference in Austin on July 8, 2014 at 1:00 p.m. Central Time. The deadline for submission of offers is July 25, 2014 at 3:00 p.m. Central Time. See the RFO for more details.
The Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands is requesting the submission of bids from qualified web developers with expertise in web designing to provide website redesign services to the Court’s current website.
Time again for our compilation of news and notes from court tech and related subjects. News about data dashboards, voice information systems, conference news, a court CCMS project contract, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales support for court automation, and the future of handwritten signatures.
Reminding people to appear at court or to make payments has achieved solid results. We will discuss the studies, some courts with systems, and a USA commercial service provider in this article.