Transcript Slide 1

Digital Life Events – A view from the front
Brian Clarke
Registrar-General of Births, Deaths and Marriages
Department of Internal Affairs
Births, Deaths and Marriages
Births, Deaths and Marriages registers and
maintains New Zealand birth, death, marriage,
civil union and name change information and
provides access to that information by issuing
certificates and printouts.
Generally, all records are now digital or partly digital:
• Births and Deaths from 1848 (scanned images to 1997)
• Marriages from 1843 (scanned images to 1997)
• Civil unions from 2005
• Name changes (for overseas births) from 2009
Towards all-Digital
Birth notices from hospitals and midwives (65,000)
– 36% by form; 64% over the Internet (as at Feb 2010)
– Future – All via the Internet
Birth registration from parents (64,000)
– All by form
– Future – iGovt opens the door for online notifications
Marriages and Civil unions (24,000)
– All by form
– Future – Still use forms but keyed online and at front office
Deaths (29,000)
– 40% by form; 60% over the Internet (as at Feb 2010)
– Future – All via the Internet (except non-funeral director)
Name changes for persons born overseas (2,500)
– All by form as requires statutory declaration
– Future – iGovt might open the door for online notifications
Pressure for Digital Information
Individuals
• Online access (e.g. genealogy)
• Research
• Balance against privacy concerns
Government agencies
• Information matching
• Verification
• Deceased persons
• Statistical analysis
Private organisations
• Verification
• Deceased persons
Challenges – Part 1
• Pre-1998 partly digital records have subset of full
record so some info wanted now is not easily
accessible without viewing each image i.e. no
crystal ball 10 years ago when decision on which
fields to back capture
• Minimal transposition errors converting old hand
written records to digital
• Slowly converting pre-1998 records to full digital
records when other maintenance carried out on
that record (e.g. name change)
• Digital record is expanding e.g. citizenship by
birth added about 30 extra fields to a birth record
Challenges – Part 2
Hardware
• Scanned images of older registrations recently moved from
old technology CD jukebox to modern server
• Maintaining seamless access during upgrades and shifts
Software
• 12 years since installed and was old then (update planned)
• Supplied and supported from overseas, and registry specific
• Keeping up with the Jones’ – benchmarking against overseas
jurisdictions
Production environment
• Coping with planned and unplanned outages
• Wellington backups each night to Auckland e.g. recent power
cut caused server mother board to fail
• Firewalls, internal and external protections and monitoring
Questions
Author Megan Hutching, of the
Ministry for Culture and
Heritage, profiles seven people
who have worked closely with
the registers. They describe the
evolution of record keeping
from beautiful old books,
painstakingly handwritten, to
computerised data systems
that can search millions of
records and verify the details of
any particular one.
Available for download at www.bdm.govt.nz