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Disaster Recovery > Backlog
The following information is about Backlog.
Backlog Defined
The amount of work that accumulates when a system or process is unavailable. This work needs to be processed once the system or process is available and may take a considerable length of time to reduce. In extreme circumstances, this condition may become so large it may not be cleared or resolved.
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Off-site Backlog Links, User Submitted
The following links have been collected through user bookmark submission in the Backlog category. Please note, because these resources are off-site we cannot guarantee the accuracy or quality of any information.
Fri Jul 3
Thu Jul 2
- Benson, Simon. "DNA lab's two-year lag hampers NSW forensic investigations ." The Daily Telegraph. July 2, 2009.: Mass DNA testing was introduced in 2000, requiring police to test anyone charged with an indictable crime. That move created an instant backlog of cases.
- DanNorth.net » The perils of estimation: So now we have the worst of both the Agile and plan-driven worlds: the business expects delivery of a fine-grained list of requirements (whether we call it a Product Backlog or a Master Story List), and we have only taken a half-hearted attempt at it compared to the big up-front analysis we used to do. From here on we are on the back foot, constantly negotiating with the business to manage scope, when it?s our own fault they even care about the story-level detail. They see the story backlog and mentally turn it 90 degrees and think of it as a Gantt chart. Happy days!
Wed Jul 1
- Simoncelli, Tania. "Dangerous Excursions: The Case Against Expanding Forensic DNA Databases to Inncoent Persons." June 16, 2006.: -A 'hit' ; does not necessarily lead to the resolution of a crime. Neither will the number of hits increase proportionatel y with the number of people entered into the database. -Usefulness and relevance of DNA evidence. -Cost vs. benefit. Cost is unjustifiable. -The near ten-fold increase in demand for DNA processing imposed by CA's recent database expansion has so far resulted in a quadrupling of its backlog.
- Protess, Ben. "As Rape Victims Wait, Money for DNA Testing Goes Unused." ProPublica. November 9, 2008.: Los Angeles backlog of 7,000 rape kits. The federal backlog of rape kits is estimated to be at about 400,000 cases. Since 2004, Congress has given the Justice Department $474 million through the Debbie Smith Act. About $55 million of the money provided by Congress since 2004 is unaccounted for
- Protess, Ben. "The DNA Debacle: How the Federal Government Botched the DNA Backlog Crisis." ProPublica. May 5, 2009.: -At least 350,000 samples from murder and rape cases remain untested, according to the federal government 9;s best estimates. In 2005, labs across the country saw their DNA backlogs nearly double. -Backlog as a product of expansion. -Largest backlog is in LA, with more than 12,000 untested rape kits. 500 have passed the time limit for prosecution. -16% of state crime labs say their backlogs may have allowed additional crimes to be committed. -In CA, the backlog at the state crime lab jumped from 35,000 in January to almost 46,000 in February, after law enforcement agencies began collecting DNA upon arrest. -New York eliminated their backlog over four years. The city's arrest rate for reported rape cases rose from 30% in 1999 to 70% in 2007. -Description of outsourcing.
- Moore, Solomon. "Progress Is Minimal in Clearing DNA Cases." NYTimes.com. October 24, 2008.: -The LAPD has the largest known backlog, about 7000 cases. 217 cases backlogged so long that the 10-year statute of limitation had passed. -Two weeks ago, President Bush signed a bill that includes an additional $1.6 billion over six years to speed DNA analyses. But many crime labs are disqualified from receiving more money because they have failed to spend previous financing in a timely manner. The LA Police Department spent less than half of the $4.4 million in federal money it received from 2004-2008. -About 1/4 of the 105 local and state agencies that received federal money failed to meet spending goals. 40 of 82 agencies said their DNA case backlogs had increased or remained constant in the last six months. Many places haven't counted their backlogs. -Use of 'touch 39; technology to see whether a defendant even touched a weapon. -"DNA really accounts for just 10% of the caseload in crime labs around the country. The majority of our work is analyzing drugs."
Tue Jun 30
- Eggert, David. "Without funding, Mich. law will boost DNA backlog." Mlive.com. June 29, 2009.: Katie's Law is going into effect in Michigan, requiring suspects arrested for a violent felony to submit DNA. However, money has not been set aside for crime labs to handle the extra workload.
- "Limitations of Using the DNA Database." DNA.gov: "The more data contained in the forensic and offender indexes of CODIS, the more powerful a tool it becomes for law enforcement.&q uot;
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