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Policy&Practice

August 2016

52

our

do’ers

pro le

Key Members of theTetrus

Team:

Sharad Rao, President and

CEO; Tom Livoti, Director of Customer

Support; Raghu Govindaraj, Vice

President of Engineering; Susmita

Linga, Senior Business Analyst,

Chandra Jonelagadda, Chief

Information Officer; and Michael

Giammanco, Vice President of Program

Management

Experience withTETRUS or

Similar Projects:

Although this

was the first time working together,

APHSA, AAICPC, and Tetrus soon

formed a collaborative partnership

based on mutual respect, collegiality,

and individual expertise to build

and deliver the National Electronic

Interstate Compact Enterprise (NEICE)

system to state child welfare agencies.

The NEICE was developed as a pilot

project with five states and the District

of Columbia to exchange case data and

documents electronically across state

lines. The successful pilot reduced

the time children were waiting to be

adopted or placed in foster care across

state boundaries, and has helped

improve administration of the ICPC

through better case tracking. In 2015,

the partnership was expanded to take

the NEICE system nationwide. NEICE

is made possible by grant number

90XA0151 from the Children’s Bureau.

1

The members of the project team

(APHSA, AAICPC, Tetrus, and the state

pilots) have truly worked in partner-

ship with a “can do” attitude to solve

various issues that have arisen during

the project. Rather than tell the project

team that new requests “can’t be done,”

Tetrus has consistently worked with

the team to find and develop workable

technical solutions.

Rewards of the Project:

The

biggest rewards of the project have

been the reduction of timelines for

placement decisions for children across

state boundaries, and the savings in

copying and mailing costs.

Some of the other rewards include

the increased ability of states to share

case data quickly and securely using

national data standards, known as

the National Information Exchange

Model (NIEM). Tetrus has brought its

considerable technical expertise and

experience with NIEM standards to

bear on this project, and significantly

elevated the overall quality of the infor-

mation system developed. NEICE has

created a data infrastructure that other

human service programs will be able

to leverage to support interoperability

within and across state programs.

Accomplishments Most

Proud Of:

NEICE’s most important

accomplishment has been reducing the

time children wait before they can be

placed across state lines for adoption or

foster care.

Future Challenges for the

Delivery of Public Human

Services as it Applies to

this Project:

This project provides

the ability for public agencies to

connect data stored across different

human service program information

systems, which will improve decision-

making and program administration.

For example, ultimately, NEICE is

intended to be connected to child

abuse and neglect registries and

health information systems. However,

the ability to share and connect case

information across public agencies is

a relatively recent innovation made

possible by data standardization

efforts. Security and privacy concerns

are real issues that must be navigated

for each data-sharing effort, and are

governed by a number of state and

federal laws that are also still being

refined. Cybersecurity and liability

insurance policies must be outlined,

and plans for handling data breaches.

These challenges do not make data

sharing impossible, but are examples

of some of the issues this project has

faced and thus far, overcome.

Little Known Facts About

the Project:

This data exchange

infrastructure is the first of its kind in

the public human service arena. This

project will create the infrastructure to

support integrated service delivery and

effective interventions for victims of

human trafficking; enable child welfare

workers to be operationally effective

in the delivery of services; and provide

information to judges and other per-

sonnel involved in the decision-making

process to support the adoption of

children across state boundaries.

Reference Note

1. The contents of this article do not

necessarily reflect the views or policies

of the funder, nor does mention of

trade names, commercial products, or

organizations imply endorsement by the

U.S. Department of Health and Human

Services.

In Our Do’ers Profile, we highlight some of the hardworking and talented individuals in

public human services. This issue features

Tetrus Corporation

, a technical vendor to

APHSA and Association of Administrators of the Interstate Compact for the Placement of

Children (AAICPC) responsible for building a national data exchange for ICPC information.

From left, Raghu Govindaraj, Michael

Giammanco, and Susmita Linga