—
Pennsylvania parents who recently brought home a new little bundle of joy might not be so joyous about their newborn’s birth certificate.
The state Department of Vital Statistics, which is transitioning to new records software, acknowledged a computer glitch that caused some of the certificates issued to be printed incorrectly. Specifically, the name of the father is wrong – completely wrong.
It’s an issue that Holli Senior, spokesperson for the department, claimed only affected a “small percentage” of certificates – about 500 in all.
According to Senior, when the data for the father’s first and last name fields were automatically pulled during the document parsing process, they were pulled from the incorrect fields, giving all the affected newborns an incorrect father.
“We were able to identify all affected individuals, and there was a letter that went out to those individuals that explained the error and requested that they return the incorrect birth certificate in a postage paid envelope that we enclosed, so that we can expedite the corrected birth certificate,” said Senior.
“There is a small chance that someone, in the interim, could choose to use them inappropriately,” she said. “(But) the information (that was) auto-pulled only contained a name – not date of birth or other details that might lead to fraud.”
Senior said the glitch only affected the printed certificates and said that all of the state’s electronic records are accurate.
Senior also said the software vendor has since corrected the error and the department does not expect any additional misprintings.
Currently, the department is working with the vendor to learn if the incorrect names were pulled from the same record or if they identify a real person.
Although both Altoona Regional and Somerset hospitals were unaware of the issue, Somerset has since alerted staff to aid those who have an erroneous certificate. Memorial Medical Center has already received calls from inquisitive parents.
“Our maternity staff is aware of the glitch,” said Amy Bradley, director of marketing at Memorial Medical Center. “Somebody from (the Department of Vital Statistics) did alert our maternity staff and they have had a few phone calls.”
Latest News
You're not my real dad: Birth paper mix-up result of software glitch
- Latest News
-
-
Windber school board OKs 1 mill tax increase
The average taxpayer in Windber Area School District, with a property assessed at $21,000, will see his tax bill rise by $22 next year.
-
McVay wins Dem nom for Superior Court seat race
Allegheny County Judge Jack McVay has beaten Philadelphia Municipal Court Judge Joseph Waters Jr. for the Democratic nomination for a vacant seat on the state Superior Court.
-
Feds raid doctor’s office, home
Federal authorities raided the home and office of a Cambria County family physician who specializes in pain management and carried away boxes of medical and financial records on Tuesday.
-
Authority approves nightspot at airport
Fans of country-western and classic rock music will have a nightspot catering to them when two veteran restaurant owners open their new endeavor in John Murtha Johnstown-Cambria County Airport terminal building.
-
Poverty hits home at role-playing event
Eunice Ussar lives alone in her modest Johnstown home. With no family and few friends, the 85-year-old widow has only her two cats for companionship.
- Local briefs 5 22
-
Peduto bests Wagner, Wheatley for Pittsburgh mayor nomination
Longtime Pittsburgh City Councilman William Peduto has won the Democratic nomination for mayor, defeating former state auditor general Jack Wagner and state Rep. Jake Wheatley.
-
Search for Okla. tornado survivors nearly complete
Helmeted rescue workers raced Tuesday to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children.
-
Polls close in Pa. primary and the counting begins
The polls are now closed in Pennsylvania’s primary election and now the counting begins.
-
Game officials: Bald eagle killed in Cambria County
The Pennsylvania Game Commission is trying to determine who fatally shot a bald eagle in western Pennsylvania earlier this month.
- More Latest News Headlines
-
Windber school board OKs 1 mill tax increase



