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Success Stories

The value of information-sharing and exchange efforts can best be achieved through the active participation and collaboration of the many organizations involved in serving our nation and the world.

Who Uses NIEM?

The value of information-sharing and exchange efforts can best be achieved through the active participation and collaboration of the many organizations involved in serving our nation and the world.

Submit a Success Story

  • Temporary Resident Biometrics Project

    Biometrics Immigration Justice Screening
    2013

    The Temporary Resident Biometrics Project (TRBP) was delivered through a partnership of three Canadian government departments—Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA)—and the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The solution includes a collection system, a processing engine to provide workflow and act as the information exchange platform between partner systems, and a standardized interface to receive biometrics from other governments. The use of NIEM shortened delivery time, reduced cost

  • Temporary Resident Biometrics Project

    Biometrics Immigration Justice Screening
    2013

    The Temporary Resident Biometrics Project (TRBP) was delivered through a partnership of three Canadian government departments—Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA)—and the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The solution includes a collection system, a processing engine to provide workflow and act as the information exchange platform between partner systems, and a standardized interface to receive biometrics from other governments. The use of NIEM shortened delivery time, reduced cost

  • Temporary Resident Biometrics Project

    Biometrics Immigration Justice Screening
    2013

    The Temporary Resident Biometrics Project (TRBP) was delivered through a partnership of three Canadian government departments—Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA)—and the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The solution includes a collection system, a processing engine to provide workflow and act as the information exchange platform between partner systems, and a standardized interface to receive biometrics from other governments. The use of NIEM shortened delivery time, reduced cost

  • Temporary Resident Biometrics Project

    Biometrics Immigration Justice Screening
    2013

    The Temporary Resident Biometrics Project (TRBP) was delivered through a partnership of three Canadian government departments—Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA)—and the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The solution includes a collection system, a processing engine to provide workflow and act as the information exchange platform between partner systems, and a standardized interface to receive biometrics from other governments. The use of NIEM shortened delivery time, reduced cost

  • Open Justice Broker Consortium – Subscription/Notification

    Justice
    2013

    Probationers and parolees may have contact with law enforcement—such as an arrest—however, their probation or parole officers might not learn about this contact until days or even weeks later. Through an automated information exchange between the state’s booking system and probation and parole case management systems, the Hawaii Integrated Justice Information Sharing (HIJIS) program has enabled near real-time notification to probation and parole officers when one of their supervisees is arrested anywhere in the state—critical for effective offender management. Leveraging the approximate six