cyber – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Fri, 01 Dec 2023 18:14:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png cyber – 社区黑料 32 32 Vermont鈥檚 Foster Care IT System Predates the Internet 鈥 And Puts Kids at Risk /article/vermonts-foster-care-it-system-predates-the-internet-and-puts-kids-at-risk/ Mon, 04 Dec 2023 19:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=718517 This article was originally published in

Erinn Rolland-Forkey has been a foster parent in Vermont for about 25 years, and has been active in that time advocating for the rights of parents and children in the system. In 2016, she was even appointed to sit on a foster parent workgroup created by the Legislature, which pushed, , that the state provide a two-pager to foster parents each time a child was placed in their care.

But while Rolland-Forkey is glad to receive that document, which is supposed to guarantee she鈥檒l get at least some basic information about the child in her care, she never assumes it鈥檒l be accurate or complete.

As Rolland-Forkey was speaking to a VTDigger reporter over the phone, she began inspecting the state paperwork that had come with a child who had recently been in her home. Under 鈥渁llergies and dietary restrictions,鈥 she said, someone had simply drawn a line, suggesting there were none to report.


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鈥淎ctually, that child has an EpiPen,鈥 Rolland-Forkey said, 鈥渁nd was allergic to all shellfish.鈥 

She learned about the allergy from the child, who mentioned it in conversation about a week after arriving.

Rolland-Forkey and many advocates 鈥 including Vermont鈥檚 newly created independent ombudsman for child welfare 鈥 say such scenarios are not rare, and the culprit, in most cases, is clear: antiquated information technology systems serving the family services division at the Department for Children and Families. 

Vermont鈥檚 state government is no stranger to IT woes. Amidst a pandemic-induced economic shutdown, for example, the state鈥檚 unemployment system  and later  of thousands of Vermonters. 

But the problems with the family services divisions鈥 IT systems nevertheless stand out 鈥 not only because of the age of the databases, but because of the stakes involved. 

The primary system, called SSMIS, for inputting and warehousing basic information about minors in state custody and their placements was created in the early 1980s. State officials and advocates alike note frequently that this means the cyber backbone of Vermont鈥檚 child protection system predates the creation of the World Wide Web. A secondary system, FSDNet, that handles child abuse reporting intake information and case notes, dates back to the 1990s.

Before becoming deputy advocate in Vermont鈥檚 , which has independent oversight powers over DCF, Lauren Higbee worked at the department for five years, and has firsthand experience with these data systems. She鈥檚 since developed a shorthand for conveying their limited functionality.

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 even have the capability of using a mouse,鈥 she said of SSMIS. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how old it is.鈥

In her former role, Higbee oversaw residential licensing and special investigations at DCF. And she recalled how badly the system complicated her work.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 search by facility to see all the allegations attributed to one facility. Right? So I鈥檓 not getting the scope, the history, the issue of what happened, or has happened or allegedly happened in one facility,鈥 she said. 鈥淗uge issue.鈥

SSMIS is so clunky that even the most basic information about a child can be hard to find. If they鈥檙e placed with a private service provider which may have several locations, for example, the system will only register that provider鈥檚 name 鈥 not the specific address where that particular child is located. 

DCF Deputy Commissioner Aryka Radke, who helms the department鈥檚 family services division, argued that this doesn鈥檛 mean that the state doesn鈥檛 know the location of the children in its care. But she acknowledged that identifying where it has stored such information is sometimes difficult.

鈥淭he address could be in case notes, which means that it鈥檚 gonna be harder to find. Obviously, the worker has the address for the child, which means we need to contact the worker to get the information. Or the district director may have it. Or it鈥檚 in a paper file at the district office. Or it鈥檚 in the worker鈥檚 telephone,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o it鈥檚 not readily available sometimes, but it鈥檚 absolutely there.鈥

But for Matthew Bernstein, who leads Vermont鈥檚 Office of the Child, Youth and Family Advocate, information that鈥檚 hard to find is almost as bad as information that doesn鈥檛 exist 鈥 putting kids at risk.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 know what medications a kid is allergic to,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 kid is in the hospital having an acute event 鈥 and sure, medical providers can do their thing and sure, some DCF workers can shuffle around looking for some paper that says what medications the kid is allergic to or anything else relevant to that. But that information is not at our fingertips. And that can obviously be catastrophic.鈥

As work-arounds to these inadequate systems, state workers and administrators report that they rely on an unwieldy and rickety system of supplemental databases, their own memories, and more than 30 Excel spreadsheets. The result is redundant data entry which is time consuming and, most importantly, vulnerable to human error. 

鈥淲hen we remove a child and take them into state custody, we鈥檙e really taking responsibility for them and all that that entails,鈥 said Amy Rose, the policy director for the nonprofit advocacy group Voices for Vermont鈥檚 Children. 鈥淎nd not prioritizing just even accurate information 鈥 or the ability to access that information 鈥 really sets us all up for mistakes. And those mistakes can have a significant impact on the lives of the children that we鈥檙e taking responsibility for.鈥

 on the drivers behind the high rates of children in state custody in Vermont, produced by researchers at the University of Vermont two years ago, named the 鈥渋mmediate priority鈥 of replacing the division鈥檚 IT infrastructure as its first recommendation.

The researchers found that data systems were inadequate and did not allow child welfare workers to 鈥渕eaningfully measure and track child safety, permanency, or wellbeing.鈥 Bad data impacted decision-making, and created 鈥渙pportunities for individual bias in decisions to place a child,鈥 the study鈥檚 authors wrote.

In November 2021, Sally Borden, the co-chair of Vermont鈥檚 citizen advisory council to DCF, urged lawmakers in to invest in a new IT infrastructure and marveled that the system wasn鈥檛 riddled with even more errors. She argued that the status quo makes the foster care system a sort of black box. Because family services databases cannot reliably search, organize, and collate data, administrators and advocates alike often find it impossible to accurately measure a problem 鈥 let alone measure progress in fixing it.

To figure out how many parents involved with DCF were dealing with substance use disorders, she noted, the department had recently relied on a hand count, derived from asking individual family services workers to tally up their cases.

鈥淭his, in the middle of an opioid crisis, is absurd,鈥 Borden wrote.

In October 2020, Christine Johnson, then the head of DCF鈥檚 family services division, offered a similar critique during a . Johnson recalled arriving at her job the year prior and, in an attempt to get a lay of the land, requested a variety of data points she believed would be available 鈥渨ith a few strokes鈥 in a user-friendly dashboard. 

鈥淲hat I found very quickly was that we had a system that was built in 1982 鈥 back when computers weren鈥檛 even really a thing,鈥 she said.

Radke, Johnson鈥檚 successor, pushed back at the notion that the state鈥檚 IT system puts children at any risk. 鈥淚 think it impacts my team and that they have to go the extra mile to make sure that we have the level of care that we need,鈥 she said. 

Nevertheless, she stressed that an upgrade was of utmost importance. And Radke has made more progress than any of her predecessors to fix the problem, although it is only a start: She is finalizing a request for proposals to build a new IT system, expected out this January.

But once contractors submit their offers, the state will have to decide whether it is willing to pay for an overhaul. No one knows yet what the price tag will be.

鈥淎t this point, based on our estimates of similarly situated states, we鈥檙e estimating that the cost could be anywhere between $35 and $40 million,鈥 Radke said. 鈥淏ut of course we鈥檒l have a much better idea when we get those responses.鈥

Luckily, the federal government will likely pay half the cost. And those pushing for a new system can also plausibly argue the upfront cost will pay for itself over time. The state leaves federal dollars on the table each year in reimbursable expenses because the data system regularly fails to comply with federal reporting requirements.

But even if the state fully commits to funding a new system, it鈥檒l be years before a new one is in place. Radke guessed three 鈥 at a minimum. 

In the meantime, state workers and families will have to keep making do. 

Rolland-Forkey, the veteran foster parent, wonders whether that鈥檚 tenable 鈥 for her, for other foster parents, and particularly for the children they bring into their homes. She worries the system causes even more 鈥渇racturing鈥 for children already dealing with such instability. And she struggles with a feeling of 鈥渕oral injury,鈥 when she realizes a kid in her care isn鈥檛 taking the medications they need, or missed a doctor鈥檚 appointment, court hearing, or after-school activity because there was no reliable record available for her to consult.

鈥淲e鈥檙e supposed to be doing no harm,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 take an oath or anything, but I feel that. I feel like that鈥檚 what we should be.鈥

This was originally published in VTDigger.

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