NCJ Number
210668
Journal
Corrections Today Volume: 67 Issue: 4 Dated: July 2005 Pages: 70-77
Date Published
July 2005
Length
8 pages
Annotation
This article examines the principles used in the information technology of jail operations in the Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff’s Office, such as automation, integration, and performance-based management.
Abstract
The Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff’s Office (OPCSO) in Louisiana is one of the nation’s 10 largest jail systems. The OPCSO is focused primarily on jail management, criminal court security, and service of process for both State and municipal courts. Due to the size and complexity of the jail operations and manpower constraints, management has sought to automate jail operations. OPCSO has applied four principles to its use of information technology in jail operations, resulting in a distinctive approach to IT-based jail management or information technology: (1) automate jail and court system processes; (2) integrate software applications with one another; (3) use these integrated applications for the reengineering of business processes; and (4) extract performance measures from operational databases. 1 Table, 4 notes