Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySharleen Bennett Modified over 8 years ago
1
Electronic Submission of Massachusetts Crash Reports Dave Krasnow e
2
Introduction Dave Krasnow Software Development Manager EDS Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles (Registry) 617-351-9830 david.krasnow@eds.com
3
Project Background Registry Collects Data on Motor Vehicle Crashes 280,000 Crash Reports per Year –130,000 from Law Enforcement Officers –150,000 from Operators Mass Highway Department Primary User of Data for Safety Related Projects
4
Project History Prior System was 20 Years Old Location Data was unreliable Each State Collected Different Data Paper Form was sent via US Mail only Registry Clerk entered data from Paper Form (except narrative and diagram)
5
Crash Data System Federal funding was obtained to replace the old system New Paper Form based on MMUCC New Application for Collecting Data Locations Validated Electronic Submission
6
Birth of Electronic Submission At least eight RMS Vendors Supplying Software to Law Enforcement Agencies Prevented us from developing Crash Software and distributing Instead we needed a standard format for Data Exchange that RMS Vendors could implement
7
Choice of Format Proprietary EDI XML
8
Simplifies the Program Simplifies Data Transfer Simplifies Data Display Industry Standard Structures
9
Why We Chose XML Every other option was as complex or more complex than XML State of the Art Technology Versatile, Robust, Powerful We predicted easier acceptance from RMS Vendors than with other methods
10
The Design Create Electronic Submission Manual RMS Vendors Create XML data and JPG Crash Diagram FTP XML and JPG to Registry Registry Clerk Reviews and Accepts All or Portions Mass Highway and Others Can View Crash Data, Narrative, and Diagram
11
Electronic Submission Manual Data Dictionary Contact Information XML Overview Creating the XML Electronic Submission Procedures Testing and Approval DTD Sample XML Everything a vendor needs to modify their software to generate XML
12
The Plan Visit RMS Vendors Fall 2000 – Spring 2001 Send Electronic Submission Manual Spring 2001 CDS with Manual Data Entry Live November 2001 First Vendor live with ESub January 2002
13
Reality Visit RMS Vendors Fall 2000 – Spring 2001 (on schedule) Send Electronic Submission Manual August 2001 (planned Spring 2001) CDS with Manual Data Entry Live November 2001 (on schedule) First Vendor live with ESub February 2003 (planned January 2002)
14
What Happened? Vendor Buy-In Technology Funding Resources
15
What Happened? – Vendor Buy-In Previously Vendor software just printed paper forms They updated their software for the new form Too much money with too little benefit for them to implement Electronic Submission
16
What Happened? - Technology Proved to be more complex for less advanced Vendors than we anticipated Predicted eight weeks of work once we received first draft XML Actually took about a year before XML was acceptable We believe this is extreme and not the norm
17
What Happened? - Funding Some RMS Vendors wanted money to implement Electronic Submission Vendors couldn’t see the benefit to them
18
What Happened? - Resources RMS Vendors were busy with other things We were busy with other things, such as implementing the data entry system Third parties were busy with other things
19
Registry Effort for Electronic Submission Research XML Technology 400 hours Design Solution and Write ESub Manual 600 hours Implement Solution900 hours (450 Esub and 450 for review screens) Support Vendors600 hours
20
Where We Are Today Electronic Submission is Live with one Vendor Three other Vendors expressed interest Average Data Entry Time per Paper Report is six minutes Average Clerk Time per Electronic Report is two minutes
21
Technology XML (Basic implementation of XML) DTD (176 distinct elements) MS XML Parser FTP Visual Basic (97 class modules) Oracle DBMS (250 tables)
22
Future More Vendors on Board Could design web page for Operator form entry which would produce the same XML and feed into the same process A national standard XML Structure for Crash Reporting
23
Summary Great Design Great Plan Great Technology Took much longer than expected Biggest problem was Vendor buy-in Never once questioned using XML Would definitely do it again
24
Electronic Submission of Massachusetts Crash Reports Dave Krasnow e
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.