Over the years I have had some excellent interns that worked for me in Arizona, on international projects, and here at the NCSC. It seems that, not surprisingly, all of them went on to good careers. In this week's post, I will share some project ideas for your potential interns and second, some tips to make their experience a rewarding one.
Friday, October 11, 2019
Tech Interns for Courts: Some Ideas
Over the years I have had some excellent interns that worked for me in Arizona, on international projects, and here at the NCSC. It seems that, not surprisingly, all of them went on to good careers. In this week's post, I will share some project ideas for your potential interns and second, some tips to make their experience a rewarding one.
Friday, October 4, 2019
CTC 2019 Session Videos Available Online
The NCSC is happy to share sixteen Court Technology Conference 2019 educational sessions. The full list of CTC educational sessions is available here so you can see what you missed and start to build your justification to attend either E-Courts 2020 or CTC 2021.
Wednesday, September 25, 2019
This and That in Court Tech – September 2019
In this month’s compendium, we have a lot of news and comments about electronic documents. The posts discuss online “phishing” scammers using fake legal documents, an audit report on the UK Court Modernization Program, a PDF standard implementation announcement by Microsoft, another court filer document redaction problem, the new public Texas court document portal, the 21st Century Integrated Digital Experience Act and a personal note on Judge Dorothy Nelson.
Friday, September 20, 2019
Judge Rose Zamora Awarded McMillan Scholarship at CTC-2019
Jim McMillan and Judge Rose Zamora at CTC-2019 |
We are pleased to share that Judge Rose Zamora from the New Braunfels Texas Municipal Court was awarded the McMillan Scholarship at the CTC 2019 Conference for her innovations. Much more below:
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Thursday, September 12, 2019
OASIS Litigant Portal Draft Standard Review
OASIS and the OASIS Litigant Portal (LP) TC are pleased to announce that Litigant Portal Exchange Version 1.0 is now available for public review and comment.
The Litigant Portal Exchange 1.0 (LPX 1.0) standard consists of a set of non-proprietary message specifications and data models, along with clarifying explanations, to promote interoperability between litigant portal systems, courts, legal assistance providers and related systems. Portal modules are designed to provide assistance to self-represented litigants.
Monday, September 9, 2019
Criminal Justice System Information – A NoSQL Solution
Cards used in Bletchley Park during WWII |
By James E. McMillan, Principal Court Management Consultant, National Center for State Courts
Summary: I think that I have found a solution for one of the most difficult problems in justice systems: the criminal case information data model and coinciding information accuracy. I understand that this is a bold statement and therefore the following article explains it in some detail.
The problem with tracking criminal case information from inception (incident or indictment), through the process and subsequent consequences and compliance have always been complexity. Criminal and juvenile case data includes charges, modifications, findings, orders, fines and restitution payment, and behavioral/remediation compliance that change and reconfigure in non-specific ways. The graphic from a SEARCH Group Report below shows some of the data and workflows involved.
Thursday, September 5, 2019
Thursday, August 29, 2019
Sharing and Highlighting
We learned via an article and video report from KSAT television news in San Antonio, Texas titled “Enormous justice system gap closed, allowing courts to communicate better” about a new system in Bexar County, Texas to make “firearm bans now more visible to more judges”.
Friday, August 23, 2019
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