United Way of Southern Nevada teams with Bitfocus

Monday, March 8th, 2010

United Way of Southern Nevada

United Way of Southern Nevada teams with Bitfocus, Inc. to provide Reporting and Service Tracking of the Emergency Food and Shelter Program (EFSP) through the Nevada statewide HMIS system.

Bitfocus, Inc. is assisting with the development of process flow, report design, agency training and system function  to provide the necessary reporting and analytics for the EFSP program.

For more information on the National EFSP program, please visit:

http://www.efsp.unitedway.org/

Bitfocus to attend NHSDC conference in Nashville, TN

Monday, March 8th, 2010

nhsdclogo2

Bitfocus Founder, President, and NHSDC member Robert Herdzik will be attending the NHSDC Spring Conference being held in Nashville, Tennessee on April 29th and 30th.  The focus of the Spring conference is “On the Horizon: Expanding the Uses of Human Services Data Systems”.

About NHSDC

The National Human Services Data Consortium (NHSDC) is the membership organization focused on developing effective leadership for the best use of information technology to manage human services.

NHSDC provides information, assistance, peer to peer education and lifelong learning to its membership and other interested parties in the articulation, planning, implementation and continuous operation of technology initiatives to collect, aggregate, analyze and present information regarding the provision of human services.

NHSDC Initiatives

In 2009 NHSDC launched the following six leadership initiatives:

  • Community Advocacy Regarding Homelessness and Housing
  • Public Policy Advocacy
  • Homeless Management Information Systems
  • Data Interoperability
  • Healthcare
  • Disaster Services

Bitfocus to attend NHSDC conference in Providence, RI

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

nhsdclogo2

Bitfocus Founder, President, and NHSDC member Robert Herdzik will be attending the NHSDC Fall Conference being held at the Hilton Providence on October 15-16th 2009.  The focus of the Fall Conference is “Transforming the Human Service Landscape through Community Data”.

For more information on NHSDC, please visit: http://www.nhsdc.org

About NHSDC

The National Human Services Data Consortium (NHSDC) is the membership organization focused on developing effective leadership for the best use of information technology to manage human services.

NHSDC provides information, assistance, peer to peer education and lifelong learning to its membership and other interested parties in the articulation, planning, implementation and continuous operation of technology initiatives to collect, aggregate, analyze and present information regarding the provision of human services.

NHSDC Initiatives

In 2009 NHSDC launched the following six leadership initiatives:

  • Community Advocacy Regarding Homelessness and Housing
  • Public Policy Advocacy
  • Homeless Management Information Systems
  • Data Interoperability
  • Healthcare
  • Disaster Services

Bitfocus teams with MetSYS Inc. for roll-out of MetSYS 7.0

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

MetSYSHeaderIn preparation for the roll-out of the Homeless Prevention and Rapid ReHousing (HPRP) program, Bitfocus is working with MetSYS to upgrade Nevada’s Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) to the latest .NET based version, MetSYS 7.0.

The new version features many additional customizable features, as well as a redesigned interface and new tools to increase productivity.  Bitfocus is in the process of preparing for the upgrade, and taking the necessary steps to customize the system to the needs of the State.

Existing users of the system will receive an upgrade announcement shortly, as well as a training schedule to prepare for the upgrade.  More news to follow.

Abt Associates partners with Bitfocus to provide National HMIS TA

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

633270035474004694Abt Associates, HUD Contractor for the HOME 7 Project, signs subcontracting agreement with Bitfocus, Inc. to provide national HMIS TA.

Under this agreement, Bitfocus will provide direct HMIS technical assistance and training under the National HMIS TA Initiative assigned by Abt, and approved by HUD. These activities include providing technical assistance to HMIS implementing communities and regional collaboratives.

The objectives of TA engagements are to promote:

  • Increasing homeless assistance provider participation in HMIS;
  • Improving the quality of data within local HMIS;
  • Improving CoC compliance with HUD’s HMIS Data and Technical Standards; and
  • Promoting effective HMIS grant administration

County, cities pitch homeless plan for stimulus money

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

In addition to bill-pay, rental aid, money would help coordinate services

By Timothy Pratt (contact)

Wed, May 27, 2009 (2 a.m.)

Clark County, Henderson and North Las Vegas plan to use $4.1 million in stimulus money for a wide variety of programs, such as helping families pay rent and overhauling the computer system that more than 15 agencies use to help the valley’s homeless.

The money, part of the $1.5 billion being given to 540 public and private agencies nationwide, is for preventing homelessness or helping homeless people quickly into housing. But private and public officials who worked on the funding have made it clear that they hope communities across the nation also use the grants to focus as much as possible on the economic crisis while improving the way they deliver services.

National and local experts on homelessness said the county-led plan appears to deliver on both fronts.

“If implemented with determination and creativity, this approach holds promise of preventing a massive increase in homelessness, while at the same time creating a better system for the future,” said Nan Roman, president of the National Alliance to End Homelessness, a Washington-based group that advised Congress on the funding.

The spending plan developed by Clark County, Henderson and North Las Vegas was sent to the federal Housing and Urban Development Department on May 18. HUD has until July 2 to approve the proposal and would release the money Oct. 1.

The plan “could make a huge difference in the community,” said Duffy Gold, director of community development for United Way and part of a group that helped draft the plan.

She called attention to the parts of it that would use the least amount of money but help create a new system whereby a few agencies would act as hubs for the delivery of services, with up-to-the-minute information on the many programs in the valley and the ability to quickly match clients to the right program. Now, people wander through “pockets (of services) here and pockets there,” Gold said, often leading to a runaround.

The plan says: “Historically, Southern Nevada’s homeless preventions system has been fragmented, with upwards of 15 agencies receiving … funding … each with its own set of rules. This fragmentation is inefficient and ineffective.”

Revamping a computer system that those agencies currently use to cut down on fragmentation would take $314,000 of the $4.1 million. There’s also a pitch for using part of the money to develop better data on available affordable housing and to work more closely with landlords on getting people into housing.

Roman said her organization has pushed for some time to make communities with federal funding for helping the homeless manage their data better, to ensure that services are delivered more effectively and to make it possible to research who needs help and what is working to help them. She said the stimulus money offers the opportunity to make those changes.

Shannon West, who is paid by area municipalities to be the regional homeless service coordinator, said a more coordinated, better-run system “should have been in place before.” But when local municipalities and agencies that help the homeless began discussing how to use the stimulus money, which will be very closely monitored, “it forced the conversation about how to do things better.”

Finally, most of the money will be used to prevent homelessness through straightforward programs like help with past-due rent or utility bills, or with rent or utility bills for up to 18 months, or even security deposits or moving vans.

West said local municipalities and agencies had begun talking about how to shore up the local system for preventing homelessness last fall, even before the stimulus was announced.

Rising unemployment rates, now at 10.4 percent in the valley, will likely push more families closer to the brink of homelessness, Roman said, so it is wise to aim as much of the stimulus as possible at prevention.

“If you can help stabilize a family of four before they wind up on the street, you’ve saved the community an innumerable amount of money,” Gold said.

The county-led plan is missing one major local player — Las Vegas. The city sent in a separate plan for spending $2.1 million that focused mainly on helping dozens of people in one tent city downtown. But West said Las Vegas not participating “doesn’t affect the plan’s chance of succeeding,” and the city could tap into the improved system after it is in place.

Read Original Story

Charles David Giveaway Launched

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

370x555

Bitfocus assists Charles David and Zappos to launch the “My Life In Ruins” Grecian Giveaway. The contest runs between May 12 through June 7th.

For more information on the Grecian Giveaway, Click Here.

HMIS Data Standards Updated

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

seal_hud1On May 8, in compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, HUD published a Notice of Proposed Information Collection for Emergency Review and Approval.  This Proposed Information Collection includes the following documents related to the Homelessness Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program (HPRP):

  • The Initial Performance report (which will serve as the first Quarterly Report)
  • The Quarterly Report

Included in the Proposed Information are Revised HMIS Data Standards.  These revised HMIS Data Standards will apply to all service providers using HMIS.  These revisions include more than the inclusion of data standards applicable to HPRP and HUD encourages all HMIS-users to review the Standards and provide comments.

Key updates to the HMIS Data Standards Draft Notice include:

  • The introduction of new Program Descriptor Data Elements
  • The update and addition of new Universal Data Elements
  • The update and addition of new Program-Specific Data Elements

The team at Bitfocus has already begun the task of reviewing the updates in the draft notice, and are preparing to make the necessary systematic and programmatic adjustments necessary.

Latest Blog Entries

Full Blog »