Managing past and current septic permit applications for areas totaling just over 425,000 residents without an enterprise content management (ECM) Document Management solution meant a lot of paper trails and time-consuming manual processes for Idaho’s Central District Health Department (CDHD). “As each year passed, it became increasingly more difficult to locate documents without spending large amounts of research time to do so,” says Margaret Ross, IT Manager of the Boise-based CDHD.Serving Ada County, Boise County, Elmore County and Valley County, CDHD manages the Board of Health and the Community Health, Communicable Disease, Immunization, Reproductive Health and WIC Departments in addition to the Environmental Health Department. The planning and zoning authority of each county requires the Environmental Health Department to review every subdivision’s application for sewage permits, which can include:
Test hole inspections for sewage installation.
Plot plans.
Building permits.
Zoning certificates.
“Paper copies of the records were located in each county’s office, which made them difficult for us to access without a lot of copying and faxing,” Ross explains. Efficient storage, Document Imaging, organization and access to the documents crucial to the permit process was compromised until CDHD decided to implement Laserfiche ECM.
Powering Permitting
After the previous director of CDHD saw Laserfiche featured at an environmental health conference in 2004 and was impressed with its agility and Document Management Software, the department decided to implement the software later that same year. The initial objective was to find a program that could scan in past and present septic permits and applications, while providing central access to the records across all the offices in the health district.
Today, CDHD uses Laserfiche not just to scan and store permit documents, but also to enable external clients to access the information themselves using Laserfiche WebLink, which provides read-only access to records stored in the Laserfiche repository. Clients include:
Realtors selling homes that need permit information for potential buyers and appraisers.
Septic pumpers looking to access permit information to find the location of septic tanks for pumping.
Septic installers who are on-site and legally in need of a copy of the permit before proceeding with the installation.
Although clients applying for permits are supposed to provide a copy of their permits to septic installers (permits are required on the job site at all times), this frequently doesn’t happen. In the past, installers would have to come into the department and wait for a copy of the appropriate paperwork to be located and copied, or sometimes faxed over from the appropriate county. “Locating permit information for clients sometimes took hours to accomplish,” says Mike Reno, Supervisor of Land Based Programs for CDHD. “It slowed things down for both us and them.”
He continues, “With Laserfiche, the installers and other external clients can view the permit online and print their own copy if needed. This saves our clerical and field staff a lot of time making copies of permits and faxing them over.”
Ross notes that CDHD saw a significant reduction in information requests from external clients and that they continue to decline—especially from realtors—as clients realize most of their questions can be answered by accessing Document Management Solutions Laserfiche WebLink through the department’s Webpage.
“The ability to access data that resides in other offices is extremely helpful. It’s my favorite feature,” Reno says. If for some reason clients are unable to access the internet and attain records themselves, Reno can pull up the permit information on his desktop and provide the information within minutes.
With secure and easy public access and more efficient staff response time, Ross is pleased to report that CDHD “can concentrate on customer service, not paperwork.”
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