Colorado Department of Corrections Libraries
Transcription
Colorado Department of Corrections Libraries
EOS International Case Study: Colorado Department of Corrections Libraries Client Background: The Colorado Department of Corrections (CDOC) has 22 libraries in 20 mornings, afternoons, evenings, correctional facilities in Colorado with a collection from 2,200 to 22,000 titles. weekends, and holidays. EOS size that varies “OPACs used by public libraries look excels at maintaining outstanding In keeping with the public library model of patron very different from smaller, local ‘online’ 24/7 technical support via live catalogs. It is important that offender “Prison libraries are open phone, e-mail, and real time (web/chat formats). “ Diana Reese, Coordinator, Institutional Library Development, Colorado State Library “EOS.Web has improved services to offender patrons at CDOC. EOS.Web has the capability for many more resource options to better serve offender patrons in the months to come.” Diana Reese, Coordinator, Institutional Library Development, Colorado State Library services, their library collections represent broad and varied points of view in a variety of accessible formats. Challenge: CDOC was faced with security needs for the correctional environment. The 22 libraries’ databases could not be combined. Offender library assistants used the ILS to conduct routine library operational tasks and they were not permitted to know at which facilities individual offenders were housed, nor which titles were available in each library. The former could compromise offender safety; the latter offers an increased opportunity for secreting contraband or illicit communications in titles requested through the libraries’ intra-facility loan program. Therefore, the Department needed 22 separate databases, with 94 concurrent users. Offender library assistants handled all circulation transactions and performed basic catalog data entry operations. CDOC needed a vendor who was willing to make substantial software customizations to remove staff-side functionality necessitated by the corrections environment, such as email functionality and access to electronic content and resources. Additional options for set-up and user permissions needed to be added to prohibit offender assistants causing irreparable harm to the circulation and catalog databases, or the system itself. CDOC needed a remote-hosted SaaS system where the vendor would be responsible for installing upgrades and maintaining data back-ups. CDOC also looked for a system that was user friendly. They needed circulation and catalog module screens that were clear and uncluttered, with obvious command/menu links. Solution: To provide additional security, CDOC required a server dedicated to its databases. EOS made the investment to do this. The CDOC also required SSL encryption and IP authentication. EOS offered both service modules. There was legitimate reticence and concern on the part of the CDOC regarding allowing offenders to access online data, however indirectly. EOS was an active partner in developing and testing the proof-of-concept site to validate the security of the system and ensure compliance with security requirements of Colorado’s Office of Cyber Security. EOS worked closely with several CDOC departments to ensure that EOS.Web functioned properly at every level of the organization. “EOS’ commitment to EOS.Web® Benefits patrons have experience using a ‘realworld’ OPAC that has the same look and feel of the OPACs they encounter upon release. CDOC libraries focus on providing a continuum of library services from the prison to the community, and this is one component of that effort.“ -Diana Reese, Coordinator, Institutional Library Development, Colorado State Library “CSL staff - We have improved collection management, since we can see each library’s catalog from any location.” -Diana Reese, Coordinator, Institutional Library Development, Colorado State Library “EOS virtual training options are a great benefit of EOS.Web” -Diana Reese, Coordinator, Institutional Library Development, Colorado State Library the project never waivered throughout the four years, from initial proposals to final approval and implementation”, says Diana Reese. “By no means is this an innovative concept in the library world beyond the prison walls; but it is groundbreaking for the world of corrections. “ “EOS was unfailingly patient in its work with the CDOC and the State Library, from testing the firewall to working with BT (Business Technologies) in the configuration of the desktop security software.” “The CDOC has since demonstrated the successful application of this secure technology solution from Florida to Alaska.” EOS worked with the CDOC to provide the product at a price that met their budget constraints. While there were additional costs associated with the software customization, they were minimal. “Prison libraries are open mornings, afternoons, evenings, weekends, and holidays. It was particularly important to have 24/7 technical support via live phone, e-mail, and real time and EOS excels at maintaining that”, says Diana Reese, Coordinator, Institutional Library Development, Colorado State Library. Given their limited fiscal resources, the guaranteed price protection for the annual support and maintenance fee was important for CDOC. They knew there would be no hidden additional charges and could confidently predict their ILS funding need for subsequent budget cycles. EOS.web has improved services to offender patrons at CDOC. Patrons can easily find the information they need by using the public access catalog. They use the pathfinders and reading lists prepared by the librarians and loaded to the OPAC to improve their reading skills and to find re-entry, self-help, and life skills materials. They use a library catalog that works like the one they will encounter in their community libraries upon release. Offender library workers learn to use an ILS that will provide them with basic job skills for possible employment in a library on the outside. And EOS.Web has the capability for many more resource options to better serve offender patrons in the months to come. EOS.web saves the State Library’s Institutional Library Development many hours each month. They can now access all 22 libraries’ databases, which provides for much more effective collection development. Using software such as Adobe Captivate, they can easily develop customized training modules that address CDOC libraries’ specific training needs. They remotely administer the sites, and no longer need to concern themselves with installing software upgrades. CDOC saves many hours in support they no longer need to provide the facility librarians in zipping up their data and uploading it to EOS Support. “EOS.Web saves facility library staff the time spent backing up the database files or zipping up problem files and uploading them to the vendor”, says Diana Reese. During these times the library operated manually, which meant staff input the information by hand when the repaired files were downloaded and restored. These are hours they now spend providing meaningful library services to their offender patrons.” “The expertise and support from all EOS departments is outstanding – from the Research and Development unit who customized the software for the corrections environment, to the Implementation Manager who held our hand every step of the way in setting up the template and converting the data, to the outstanding Support staff”, says Diana Reese. Assuring CDOC security in terms of data storage and transmission was imperative, EOS applied high security addon functionality to satisfy CDOC IT policy. Additionally, EOS customized the library solution to meet the specific needs of the correctional institutions utilizing offender librarians. “It is an excellent product for use by offender library assistants. Command/menu options are obvious, and the software functionality is similar to many other ILS. The skills they gain in using EOS.Web will serve them well as they apply for entry-level library jobs in the communities to which they are released”, says Diana Reese. About Diana Reese Coordinator, Institutional Library Development, Colorado State Library Diana leads the ILD team, coordinating activities of the unit, providing technical recommendations, developing standards, and advising staff. She works closely with the State Library’s five state partner agencies to improve library services in their institutions and ensure residents have access to library services that support learning, literacy, and community reentry needs. Diana was a correctional librarian and correctional libraries supervisor for 15 years before becoming the Coordinator of Institutional Library Development in 2005. Prior to her work with the incarcerated, she was a teacher librarian. The experience with information literacy and lifelong learning she gained as a school librarian still enriches and informs her work in correctional libraries. About EOS International EOS International is a leading world-class library information and knowledge management software and services provider with an impressive client base of libraries across the globe. EOS is a client-driven company that has earned the top customer satisfaction award and earned a nomination for the Computerworld Smithsonian award. EOS library automation software products (EOS.Web® Express, EOS.Web Legal®, EOS.Web Medical®, EOS.Web® Enterprise, EOS.Web® Academic, EOS.Web® Digital, and the SaaS EOS e-Library Service®) serve the critical knowledge and content management needs of corporate, legal, medical, government, academic, digital, and special libraries of all sizes. EOS International can be found online at http://www.eosintl.com. 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