Data is Complicated. Your Exchanges Shouldn’t Be.
Best Practice: Ensure you’re seamlessly exchanging data with other agencies and jurisdictions, and make sure your team can use the data you receive.
Best Practice: Ensure you’re seamlessly exchanging data with other agencies and jurisdictions, and make sure your team can use the data you receive.
Best Practice: Focus on the mechanics of what your team can DO with your tool and how efficiently they can work.
Best Practice: Prioritize file storage. It’s the least glamorous and most critical investment you can make in your team’s productivity … and aspirin consumption.
Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer and the team in Lewis County, Wash., are working to keep people with serious mental illnesses out of jail and in contact with the community resources they need.
Best Practice: Prioritize information access, and build your processes accordingly. Here are four ways your team can prioritize information access and find things faster.
Best Practice: Automate tasks whenever possible to capitalize on your team’s knowledge and skills, allowing them to focus on the critical elements of their job.
Hear stories about data research at Measures for Justice and get advice for how your agency can start moving toward greater transparency and positive change.
Host Sue Humphreys talks with Paul Wormeli on how Integration and collaboration are key to solving justice problems.
Best Practice: When designing or refining processes, take time to focus on each specific role and what it entails.
Using data to support decisions is critical at every single stage of justice, and we have to be able to rely on the quality of the data we’re using to make the best decisions possible.