Pesticide Licensing Compliance System
Merge four Access databases into one. Remove and merge duplicate data. Create user-friendly forms for non-technical staff. Migrate data to SQL Server. User-level security on server and database. Integrate specialty printers. Work within changing government IT policy and security requirements. Specialized print drivers for certifications and reporting.
Microsoft Access, SQL Server.
State government. 15+ staff.
Environmental compliance / government licensing.
❓ What problem did this project solve?
The agency had built four separate Access databases over time, each created to handle a different aspect of pesticide licensing: manufacturers, distributors, applicators, and the training and certification process. That approach made sense when each piece was built, but over time the four systems accumulated duplicate records, inconsistent data, and no way to get a complete view of a licensee's status across all four. Staff were maintaining the same information in multiple places and reconciling discrepancies manually.
The licensing software also needed to handle the full certification lifecycle: class scheduling, rosters, grading, printed certifications, rejection and failure tracking, renewal fee processing, and lists of manufacturers storing regulated chemicals. All of that had been spread across four systems. The agency's IT environment added further complexity, with government security policies and specialty printing requirements that changed regularly and had to be accommodated without disrupting operations.
🛠️ What PCG built
PCG had worked with this client for years before this consolidation project, which meant the team understood the pesticide licensing process deeply enough to make the merge decisions correctly. Data that looks like a duplicate often is not, and data that looks unique sometimes is. Getting that distinction right is the difference between a clean migration and a system that produces errors on day one.
The four databases were merged into a single Access front end backed by SQL Server, with zero data loss confirmed through the migration process. Duplicate records were identified and resolved rather than simply deleted. The new interface was designed for staff who were not technical users, replacing the forms that had required workarounds and institutional knowledge to operate correctly.
Payments and renewal fee accounting were added as part of the consolidation, bringing the financial side of licensing into the same system as the regulatory side. Automated notifications flagged problem areas for management rather than requiring manual monitoring. Specialty print drivers for certifications and compliance reports were integrated to meet the agency's output requirements, and the system was built to accommodate the government IT security policy changes that came through periodically without requiring a full rebuild each time.
🔍 Technology used
PCG founded 1995. All project details drawn from PCG's internal documentation. Client identity withheld at client request.
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