Courthouse squares are not immune to adversity. Many local, state, and federal government offices across the country have been dealt serious blows by natural disasters, fires, leaky pipes, and technology outages over the years.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, state and local government agencies across the globe have been forced to close their doors and reduce staff significantly. Shutting down operations for extended periods means that crucial services to citizens are slower or simply not available—this equates to a bad citizen experience.
Closed to the public or not, government agencies must still deliver vital services to the public sector.
Digital transformation has been on the agenda of government employees for many years – despite huge steps in the right direction, bringing agencies to the digital age has been a slow and arduous process. Even with the best intentions, many office’s digitization efforts are hamstrung by bureaucracy and external factors.
COVID-19 will be the catalyst that changes the mindset about digital technology in government from nice-to-have to mission-critical.
Accelerating digitization in government
Illuminated during the pandemic was government employees’ dependency on paper and manual processes that require a high degree of human interaction. Too many important documents still exist only in paper form, and too many government functions still rely on printing, signing, faxing, and mailing physical documents.
Nearly all government agencies have invested in records management systems to create public service access to electronic records. Many of these systems were purchased after 2000. If historical records – those prior to the system being installed – have not been converted to an electronic format and imported into the system, a large, important gap remains in the database.
Real estate transactions, for example, require copies of mortgage and conveyance instruments. A title attorney or abstractor may need to search as far back as 40 years to determine the chain of custody for a piece of property. Even though most counties have a land record management system in place from vendors like Cott Systems, Tyler Technologies, or Software & Services, many land instruments have yet to be scanned and indexed into the system. Once all land records are made available in a single repository, a recorder’s office can bring in new revenue through online subscriptions without ever touching a document.
Other manual processes that are ripe for digitization include FOIA requests, permitting, marriage licensing, and grant application processes.
Beyond paper in government
Digitizing paper documents is the low-risk, high-yield lever of digital transformation. Once a system to manage records is in place and all documents have been made accessible, agencies can tackle other repeatable, manual processes that slow government offices down.
While each office has a unique set of functions, there are several areas that are primed for modernization in government.