4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015 Under specter of Cover Oregon, DMV begins major upgrade New online system could reduce customer visits to 'MV of¿ces By PETER WONG Capital Bureau SALEM — State govern- ment’s most recent failure in infor- mation technology hangs over it, but prompted by aging driver and motor vehicle systems that date back to the 1960s, Oregon law- makers have launched an upgrade that will take a decade to complete. Although the “service trans- formation” program will not change anything immediately, online transactions by custom- ers with the Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Division are expected to multiply in a couple of years with the opening phase of DMV2U. The DMV will still have ¿eld of¿ces — it has 60 now — but the new online system will re- duce customer visits for many routine transactions. The new system also will provide quicker access to DMV records by business customers — ¿nancial institutions, insur- ance companies and vehicle dealers — and police and courts. But Matt Garrett, director of the Oregon Department of Transportation — the DMV’s parent agency — said he is aware of the public and legisla- tive focus on a project that will affect millions of Oregonians. “A lot is riding on this,” Gar- rett said at a recent meeting of the Oregon Transportation Com- mission. “The gravity of this is not lost to anyone here. The shadow of Cover Oregon hangs upon us.” Oregon and prime contrac- tor Oracle have dueling lawsuits over the failed Cover Oregon website, which was intended to help individuals and small busi- nesses shop for health insurance coverage and determine individ- uals’ eligibility for state-support- ed health care. “Matt Garrett is absolutely right,” said state Sen. Betsy John- son, D-Scappoose, the Senate co-chairwoman of the legislative subcommittee that approved the Oregon Department of Trans- portation budget, including $30 million for the ¿rst phase of an upgrade estimated at $90 million when it is done in 2023-25. DMV Administrator Tom McClellan said his agency still uses mainframe technology that dates back almost 50 years, and relies on COBOL, a comput- er programming language that dates back to 1959. The most recent upgrade was in the 1990s. “We took an evolutionary approach and made gradual changes in response to legislative changes,” he said. “This is the ¿rst time in 20 years that we have said we need to replace these sys- tems, because they are the same as we were trying to replace back then – just 20 years older.” CAPITAL THE BUREAU What’s at stake The DMV affects almost ev- ery adult Oregonian. The department licenses 3.1 million drivers. It issues 4.1 mil- lion vehicle registrations, with 3.2 million of them for passenger vehicles. On an annual basis, the DMV issues 200,000 new licenses and renews 350,000 more; license renewals are usually for eight years. It issues 1.8 million vehi- cle registrations — Oregon has a two-year cycle — 850,000 ve- hicle titles and 400,000 license plate sets. Lawmakers began the effort in February 2012 with $500,000 for planning. In the new two- year budget, they approved $30 million and 30 full-time employ- ees for the ¿rst phase. Included is $20 million for new records systems for vehi- cles, point of sale, and licensing and regulation of dealers. The new point-of-sale system will build on an effort, which law- makers approved $6.3 million for separately, to enable the DMV to accept credit and debit cards for transactions. Another $5 million is for the new employees, and the rest for development of the DMV2U customer portal and outside con- sultants to oversee the project, change management and quality assurance. A multiyear $10 surcharge on driver’s licenses was proposed, but not approved by the Legisla- ture, to help offset the cost of the upgrade. It remains an option in future sessions. The budget also speci¿es the membership of a group to over- see the entire program: Three members each from the Senate and the House; two private-sec- tor members chosen by the Tech- nology Association of Oregon, and representatives of the Legis- lative Fiscal Of¿ce – which has a staffer assigned to informa- tion-technology projects – and the state’s chief information of- ¿cer within the Department of Administrative Services. “I do not know what more you can do,” Sen. Johnson said. “On the panel you have mem- bers from the people’s branch of government, professional staff and IT experts, and private-sector people who bring a different ap- proach to dealing with these mat- ters. There is no fail-safe system, but you do the best you can.” Future phases will involve ve- hicle titles and registrations, driv- er’s licenses and other records, through the 2023-25 budget cycle. McClellan has been DMV administrator since November 2007. He expects to oversee the project from start to ¿nish. “I’ll probably not be retired, but the gray hairs are there,” he said. Other upgrades The DMV project will fol- low several other high-pro¿le R.J. Marx/The Daily Astorian State Sen. Betsy Johnson, shown here speaking in Seaside in July, is hopeful about a panel named to oversee the upgrade. computer upgrades affecting key functions of state government. Among them are Oregon eCourt, which the state court system launched in 2011 and expects to complete in mid- 2016, and the core systems re- placement project at the Oregon Department of Revenue, which the agency started in 2013 and expects to ¿nish by spring 2019. Like the DMV, the systems of those agencies are aging. OJIN relies on 1980s technology, and the Department of Revenue still processes tax returns with sys- tems dating back to 1993. Both projects have encoun- tered some bumps — but noth- ing like the Cover Oregon fail- ure, or some of the large cost overruns listed in a June 2014 report compiled by the Legis- lative Fiscal Of¿ce of 66 major information-technology projects dating back to 2006. “Major project” is de¿ned as more than $1 million. One of those was the OR- Kids system run by the Depart- ment of Human Services, which according to a 2014 state audit had to repay $23.3 million in federal funds and correct $9.5 million in balances as a result of errors between September 2011 and December 2013. Lawmakers approved $15.7 million and 24 more employees for the Department of Admin- istrative Services — the central technology provider for state government — to ¿x problems and improve security. Johnson acknowledges past IT failures, but said there was one critical difference between Cover Oregon and the others. “We had people in charge of Cover Oregon coming to the Leg- islature and not telling the truth, in my observation,” she said. The Cover Oregon failure, in addition to the lawsuits, resulted in multiple resignations. It also led to Republican-spon- sored bills, which got a House committee hearing but did not advance, to require some officials to testify under oath and penalize “false swearing” to the Legislature. “I think we have not reached the point where that is neces- sary,” Johnson said. “But I cer- tainly expect that legislators will be observant and encouraged to ask tough questions — and not accept super¿cial answers.” The Capital Bureau is a collab- oration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. Oregon bottle deposit slated to rise in 2017 as redemption rate falls By JONATHAN J. COOPER Associated Press SALEM — New state data show that Oregonians are re- turning fewer beverage bottles to redeem their 5-cent depos- it, putting the state on track to double the deposit to 10 cents per bottle in 2017. Figures released by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission on Wednesday showed that just over 68 per- cent of bottles were redeemed in 2014, down nearly three points from the year before. Under a 2011 law aimed at stemming the downward trend in bottle redemption, the deposit is slated to rise Jan. 1, 2017, if the redemption rate does not stay above 80 percent for two consecutive years. “The dime will get the consumer’s attention in a big way,” said Vicki Berger, a for- mer state representative from Salem and a strong advocate for the bottle bill. “Unfortu- nately, it will probably cause a backlash against the bottle bill, which I don’t want to see.” Berger’s father came up with the bottle deposit con- cept and convinced state law- makers to adopt it in 1971. It’s credited with signi¿cant- ly boosting recycling and reducing litter, and has since been replicated in nine other states, 12 Canadian provinces and more than a dozen coun- tries. But redemption has fall- en precipitously since the 1990s, when nearly all con- tainers were returned for a refund. That’s due in part to the growth of curbside recy- cling and consumer frustration with grocery store redemption rooms. When they adopted the de- posit hike, lawmakers tried to make the bottle-return process less frustrating. They allowed uni¿ed redemption centers that aim to be cleaner, faster and larger than those in grocery stores. The installation of re- demption centers has increased redemption rates within a 3.5- mile radius, though by varying degrees, said Cherilyn Bertg- es, a spokeswoman for Oregon Beverage Recycling Coopera- tive, which collects and recy- cles containers statewide. At one store in Portland, the number of redeemed cans doubled, she said, while others have seen a smaller increase of 10 to 15 percent. Twelve cen- ters are now open, with plans to eventually create about 45. “We believe the redemp- tion centers are helping,” Bert- ges said. “They are increasing the (redemption) rate where they exist. They just don’t ex- ist in enough places yet.” Backers of the bottle bill say redeeming the deposit is prefer- able because the materials are presorted, preventing contam- ination and avoiding the sub- stantial sorting costs associated with curbside recycling. Another big change to the bottle bill is also on the way. In 2018 the bottle deposit will begin applying to glass, metal or plastic beverage con- tainers except those contain- ing milk, wine or liquor — a signi¿cant expansion over the current system. Lawmakers said it made little sense that a soda bottle would require a deposit but a nearly identical iced tea bottle would not. “People don’t realize the billions and billions and bil- lions of consumer containers in Oregon that never went into the waste stream, that were actually recycled,” Berger said. “Particularly aluminum, which is so highly recyclable. All the energy that didn’t have to go into making new con- tainers.” HEALTH N OTIFIC ATIO N Are Y o u Ha rd o f Hea rin g ? 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