Police to push far less paper
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Marisa O’Neil
On the television show “Cold Case,” detectives root through a massive
room of file boxes and evidence from old, unsolved cases.
But real-life scenes like that will play out less frequently in
local police departments as more files are in the computers and out
of dusty basements. In the not-too-distant future, loose papers and
file folders could be endangered species in some departments.
On Nov. 1, the Costa Mesa Police Department started the laborious
switch to a new, computerized records management system for the first
time in more than 20 years, civilian commander Scheralee Ford said.
Once the new system is in place, and other components are added over
the next year or so, information typed in by officers will flow
electronically to everyone who needs it.
“When a report comes into the station, it’s entered into the
system, which knows by statute where the report is to go next,” Ford
said. “There are less delays getting it to the right detective to get
to work, and it’s all done electronically, so we’re not doing the
paper shuffle.”
Ultimately, an officer will be able to enter a report and send it
for approval to a supervisor, she said. From there, information will
go to detectives, if necessary, and to the records department.
Now, officers write reports and submit hard copies for approval.
Then, records technicians type them into the system.
Managing the amount of records and paperwork that comes through a
police department is a massive job, Newport Beach Police Lt. John
Desmond said. It takes about six months to train new employees to
enter and manage data in the records department, he said.
“We have someone working in records 24 hours a day, seven days a
week, 365 days a year,” he said. “They never close. The records
section works every day, including Christmas.”
Police work involves volumes of paperwork and report writing,
often the least favorite part of an officer’s job. With the new
system in Costa Mesa and planned laptop computers that can be used
for report writing in patrol cars, the process will be simplified,
Ford said.
“We need our policemen in the field, not in the station [writing
reports],” she said. “If they can respond in the field, the community
is better served.”
Newport Beach Police already have laptop computers in patrol cars,
Desmond said. Officers still print out hard copies of reports for
supervisor approval, and the information must be typed in.
But that department also has a document imaging system, which
allows them to scan every piece of paper into its network, Desmond
said. Newport police have documents dating back to 1994 scanned in
and are working on the rest, he said.
Most of the files that pre-date 1994 are on microfiche or
microfilm, he said.
“We still have some hard copies, but we’re in the process of
destroying the old paper copies,” Desmond said.
Costa Mesa police keep most records up to five years, but major
cases like murders and rapes are kept indefinitely, records manager
Ellen Herter said. Costa Mesa doesn’t have files on microfilm or
microfiche, but hopes to get a document imaging system like Newport
Beach’s, she said.
Until then, Costa Mesa still has thousands of files from old cases
dating back half a century, Herter said. And the department had to
wait until things got up and running before records technicians could
enter new information into the system, meaning they have to play
catch-up this week, Ford said.
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