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Despite spending $500 million on the
California Case Management System (CCMS), court officials terminated the project and allocated $8.6 million to determine whether they can salvage anything. In 2004, planners expected the system to cost
$260 million; today, the price tag would be $2 billion if the project runs to completion.
The multi-billion project, started in 2001, was intended to automate California court operations with a common system across the state and replace 70 different
legacy systems. Although benefits from the planned system seem clear, court leadership decided it could no longer afford the cost of completing the system, especially during this period of budget cuts, service reductions, and personnel layoffs. A vague statement on the
California Courts website, explains:
“We have to develop a new vision for our branch technology infrastructure given our fiscal climate,” said Judge James E. Herman, chair of the committee. “We are committed to implementing a cost-effective, efficient technology that serves the public, litigants, attorneys, and trial courts.
Translation into plain English: “Branch offices across the state need this system but we just don’t have the money to pay for it.”
CIO ANALYSIS
California has a rich history of expensive and wasteful IT projects. Although the state has an
IT project tracking system, based on my research,
I personally do not have confidence in California’s IT project tracking website.
It’s a shame that California cannot afford to continue the project, which would have brought substantial efficiencies to court system employees and also to private citizens seeking court-related information. Although the project seemed promising, the initiative has been plagued by poor management and lousy planning. A
2011 state audit (PDF download)
highlighted the following issues:
Our review of the Administrative Office of the Courts’ (AOC) oversight of the development of the statewide case management project revealed that the AOC:
- Inadequately planned for the statewide case management project and did not analyze whether the project would be a cost-beneficial solution to the superior courts’ needs.
- Was unable to provide contemporaneous analysis and documentation supporting key decisions on the project’s scope and direction.
- Did not structure the development vendor’s contract to adequately control cost and scope—over the course of seven years, the AOC entered into 102 amendments and increased the cost from $33 million to $310 million.
- Failed to develop accurate cost estimates—in 2004 the cost estimate was $260 million and by 2010 the estimated cost was $1.9 billion.
- Has not obtained the funding needed for statewide deployment and without full deployment to the 58 superior courts, the value of the project is diminished.
You may wonder how the state can run such a large project with these kinds of management deficiencies. Frankly, it’s a great question.
California’s Judicial Council — the leaders of the state’s trial and appellate courts — voted to pull the plug on a statewide computer system that was designed to finally bring courts into the 21st century. There was very little choice: What would be the point in creatingtechnologically competent courtrooms with shuttered doors? The council was right to shelve the Court Case Management System, use the funding to keep courts in operation and hope to salvage the system for use, or rebirth, or spare parts, in better economic times.
Bottom line: The project was a good idea but failed due to poor planning, management, oversight, governance, and controls. California’s legislature should now conduct an in-depth investigation into how the state handles manages its multi-billion dollar IT budget.
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Update 4/2/12: As a commenter on this post correctly points out,
Deloitte was the contractor on this project.
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