46804: Columbus, OH – IT – DOH – Programmer 4/PR4

DOH is looking for 1 Programmer 4/PR4s for a position likely to extend through November. (1000 hours from beginning of FY18)

Onsite interviews are REQUIRED. Local candidates are preferred. NO Skype nor phone interviews will be conducted. Do not submit candidates unavailable to interview onsite. Utilize the bid comment section to briefly (1-2 sentence) explain each candidate's situation.

Posting will close to submissions on: Monday 5/15 @ 9AM

A PO @ DOH will take 3+ weeks to create. Please set this expectation with each candidate prior to submitting.

Description of Duties:
89% of Total Work Effort: Development work with the Required technology stack (listed below)
5% of Total Work Effort: Visual Studio Unit Testing
1% of Total Work Effort: Agile Scrum recording of Completed and Estimated time in TFS
5% of Total Work Effort: Entity Framework

An ideal candidate would have 5-7+ years of relevant work experience with the majority of the items below (more than half of the items included are required for a candidate to be considered)
Required Technology Stack experience includes:
.NET 4.5.2/4.6
Visual Studio 2013/2015
SQL Server 2012
MVC 5
Entity Framework 6.2
Kendo UI Controls
JQuery
ASP.Net/C#.Net
WCF\Web API
Visual Studio Unit Testing

Desired: TFS 2012/2015

The current database (Early Track) was designed to support Early Intervention. Home visiting data fields were included later, and are not adequate to meet the program's needs. The home visiting program in Ohio has grown beyond what Early Track can currently handle, as evidenced by an exponential increase in user end crashes. The demands on the current database program have grown beyond its flexibility to collect the data needed for state and federal reports.

The system should be able to interface with Medicaid data system so that billing can be submitted to the Medicaid system.
The system should also be able to link with and pull data from Vital Statistics birth certificate data for child matching in a similar way to what Early Track currently does.
The new database will be a comprehensive data collection system for all ODH home visiting programs as well as the state's Central Coordination.
The new database must be able to provide billing function to accommodate a fee for service model.
The new database needs to be able to track most of the variables currently collected in Early Track and have the ability for system administrators to add new variables as needed.

The new database must have the ability for ODH level system administrators to create and edit "canned" reports (that may or may not include some minor data calculation) for both local agencies and ODH, which include a graphical representation of the data. Also it must have the ability to produce large system wide data downloads similar to Early Track currently.

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