SSCHIS 2024 Supporting Statement Part B

SSCHIS 2024 Supporting Statement Part B.docx

Survey of State Criminal History Information Systems

OMB: 1121-0312

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Survey of State Criminal History Information Systems

OMB Control Number 1121-0312

OMB Expiration Date: 03/31/24


B. Statistical Methods


  1. Respondent Universe


The survey will be provided to the central criminal history record repositories in 56 jurisdictions including the 50 States, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, the N. Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. These entities represent the entire population of central state criminal history repositories in the U.S. Thus, the survey does not involve any sampling, methods for stratification, imputations or similar estimation methods. Every effort will be made to obtain a completed survey from every repository. However, if a repository does not answer every question on the survey or does not submit responses to the survey, the entry will remain blank in the resulting report. Footnotes are added to each table indicating not reported when applicable. With some follow-up, the most recent survey (2022) contained response from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Guam, but no responses were received from American Samoa, N. Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. A similar response rate is anticipated for the 2024 collection. The primary goal is to receive completed responses from the 50 states given most of the federal funding has been directed to and volume of criminal records are provided by the states.


  1. Procedures for Collecting the Information


Respondents will have access to online, password-protected reporting forms (screenshots from the 2022 web-based survey are included as Attachment 4). For the 2022 collection, all respondent states submitted their information via the web-based form. Similarly, SEARCH anticipates all state will submit online for the 2024 collection. The web-based forms will automatically populate databases that will be accessible by respondents online, thereby reducing data entry error. Online edit functionality is also employed by the online reporting tool to detect common errors in data reporting and anomalies against data reported in previous cycles. The functionality will include a built-in utility for respondents to complete and submit individual sections of the survey, and to examine/update previously submitted portions. It will also allow other maintenance and reporting capabilities such as the ability to store survey data in a researchable database to produce tables, dashboards, and graphics. Since it is possible that some respondents will prefer to complete a paper version of the survey, this capability is also being provided.


For most of the numerical data collected, the data collection agent will primarily calculate totals, percentages, and cumulative percentages. In some cases, frequencies will be compiled, and some distributional statistics will be calculated including means, medians, modes, and ranges. As stated above, there will be no adjustments made for missing data. Missing data will be properly flagged and any analysis of provided data will footnote any discrepancies in the analysis.


  1. Methods to Maximize Response Rates


Response rates will be maximized through email reminders after the initial contact. Approximately a week before the original deadline for submission, the data collection agent will follow up with respondents who have not submitted a completed survey. If some respondents have not responded by the deadline, a second reminder is emailed a few days after the deadline. Where necessary, respondents will be contacted via telephone. This follow-up will be performed primarily by the data collection agent. The survey is the only existing source for complete and comprehensive data on the status of state-maintained criminal history records. As such, users at both the state and federal levels have come to depend on its production on a regular basis to assess the effectiveness of programs designed to improve criminal record quality and to identify priorities for federal funding. It is the most cited publication produced by SEARCH and the survey is very popular among respondent agencies. As a result of the follow-up efforts, and due to the survey’s popularity and importance, non-response has not been a significant issue. In a few exceptional cases, follow-up may be conducted by BJS if the data collection agent has not been successful in achieving a response.


Respondents will be asked to verify submitted responses and will also be given the opportunity to review individual and compiled responses prior to publication.


  1. Tests of Procedures


The changes made to the survey described in Part A, item 3 (“Efforts to Minimize Burden”) were developed and designed by SEARCH staff, in consultation with BJS. SEARCH staff, along with personal experience with prior iterations of the instrument serving in previous roles as state record repository staff, have extensive experience with state criminal record repository operations. The alterations to the instrument and its implementation derive from ongoing discussions and reviews with state criminal record repository staff. Comments and suggestions on the survey are routinely gathered by SEARCH staff through presentations based on survey results to the SEARCH membership and at meetings of the FBI Criminal Justice Information Services Division Advisory Policy Board, the National Crime Prevention and Privacy Compact Council and their task forces, subcommittees, and regional working groups. The most recent version of the survey has been reviewed by the SEARCH member states mentioned in Part A, but all questions asked have not been fully tested. Given that this is not a new survey to these respondents a full testing of the instrument did not seem necessary. The estimates of the burden provided by respondents were based on a thorough review of the instrument and completion of past surveys.


  1. Contact information


BJS contact for statistical aspects of the design – Devon Adams (202) 307-0765; devon.adams@usdoj.gov)


Data Collection Agent contact – Becki Goggins, SEARCH, 4801 Folsom Boulevard, Suite 105, Sacramento, CA, 95826, (334) 201-3001; becki.goggins@search.org.



File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorDennis DeBacco
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File Created2024-12-03

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