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Records Management Overview. Why?. It’s the Law It’s University Policy Fiscal and Legal Compliance Reduced Costs and Increased Efficiency Preserve the Institutional Memory. What’s in it for me?. More organized and efficient Easily find and retrieve records
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Why? • It’s theLaw • It’s University Policy • Fiscal and Legal Compliance • Reduced Costs and Increased Efficiency • Preserve the Institutional Memory
What’s in it for me? • More organized and efficient • Easily find and retrieve records • Less work for supervisors
What is Records Management? • Systematic control of recorded information, regardless of format, from the time a record is created until its ultimate disposition.
Terms and Forms • Retention Schedule • Record Series • Transmittal Form • Records Destruction Certificate
Retention Schedule • Different types of public records. • How long records must be kept. • When or ifrecords may be destroyed.
Record Series • …Basic unit for organizing and controlling files. It is a group of files or documents kept together (either physically or intellectually) because they relate to a particular subject or function, result from the same activity, document a specific type of transaction, take a particular physical form, or have some other relationship arising out of their creation, receipt, maintenance, or use (36 CFR 1220.14). National Archives http://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/faqs/federal.html#series
Schedules used by NKU • State University Model Records Retention Schedule • General Schedule for Electronic and Related Records
State University Model • Identifies records by series, title, function and content. • Gives retention time and disposition instructions. • Provides legal authority to destroy records.
Process • Determine the type of record – Contentmatters not the format • Locate the series on the records schedule • Applythe retention period to your records
KDLA Website http://www.kdla.ky.gov/recmanagement/schedules/kyuniversitymodel.pdf
University Records Formats Paper Files Electronic Records Video Tapes Audio Tapes Printed Publications Web Pages Photographs CD, DVD, Flash drive
Records Recommendations GOOD vs. BAD
Bad Records • Documents with: No title No author No date, draft or version status • Multiple copies of a report, but missing the signed, authorized copy. • Emails with subject lines that bear no relation to the current content (fw: fw: fw)
Good Records • Titled • Dated • Labeled
Good SACs committee report, 2009 History Dept, Official Correspondence, 2008-09 (U0100, permanent) Bad Important, need to keep Dept mail
Electronic Records • Directory and Folder Structure • Office wide adoption best • Naming • Establish and follow standard naming convention • Security • Control access… shared drives • Back up • When, what format and where stored
Best Advice • Start immediately, even if only small steps. • Don’t create unnecessary records. • Reduce duplicate copies. • Create and use a file structure for all records, no matter what format. The Result:
Records that are EASY to: • Organize • Retrieve • Preserve • Delete or Transfer
When your office no longer uses or needs a set of records… 4 Possibilities • Inactive Temporary Storage • Permanently Stored by Original Office • Transferred to University Archives • Records Destruction
Office Maintains • Records not actively used … but not at end of retention time. • Permanent Records
Record Transfers • Permanent Retention – those permanent records with historical significance are transferred to Special Collections and Archives
Archives Collecting Guidelines Colleges, Schools, Research Centers, Institutes & Departments • Meeting minutes and agendas • Official correspondence – especially from department heads • Policies, guidelines, reports • Organizational charts, staff lists • Publications • Photographs-names, dates, place/event • Information on events, meetings, participants • Recordings of events, lectures, presentations, publicity • Any other records which document/describe your department, its history and function
Records Destruction Procedures
Records Destruction • Records past their retention period can be destroyed • Destruction must be documented – complete the Records Destruction Certificate Exception • Records with litigation holds
Records Destruction Certificate • Legal proof of authorized destruction. • Form is on the Records Management website
The Form...continued University Archivist’s Signature Here Your Signature Here
Email: What’s the Retention? • Email is a format • Records retention is based on content • Evaluate the content of each email to determine retention period
Email Most common types of email records • Official Correspondence • General Correspondence • Informational and Reference Material
Non-business Related Email • Spam • Personal Messages • Unsolicited email
Email Delete messages that are not needed • Spam and other non-business messages • General Announcements-NKU All, Midweek • Transitory messages • Informational and Reference material
Retention for email University business? Private/personal e-mail (Not saved on NKU’s server) Delete or move to another folder E-mail Received No Yes Determine Category • Informational • & Reference • (Transitory) • Examples: • Listserv messages • Reminder memos • General Record • (Temporary) • Example: • General correspondence • Activity reports on • periodic activities • Official Record • (Permanent) • Example: • Official correspondence • such as policies and procedures File and delete according to retention schedule Save electronic copy in permanent file on server; or Print and file hard copy; Transfer to Archives Delete when no longer needed
Retention for email University business? Private/personal e-mail (Not saved on NKU’s server) Delete or move to another folder No Destruction Certificate needed E-mail Received No Yes Determine Category • Informational • & Reference • (Transitory) • Examples: • Listserv messages • Reminder memos • General Record • (Temporary) • Example: • General correspondence • Activity reports on • periodic activities • Official Record • (Permanent) • Example: • Official correspondence • such as policies and procedures Complete Destruction Certificate* *Annually or Semi-annually May need to Complete Transfer to Archives form Complete Destruction Certificate File and delete according to retention schedule Save electronic copy in permanent file on server; or Print and file hard copy; Transfer to Archives Delete when no longer needed
Email Folders Filing formats examples
Email filed by record series
Email filed by retention time
Most Importantly • Find a method that works for you • Use it consistently
Email: CAUTION • Auto Archiving • Replies to listserv/___ All’s
Email Management Tips Be Proactive – Email does not manage itself! • Effective email management = effective time management. • Is email the right tool? • Set up and use rules and filters. • Slow the Flow. • Use specific and descriptive subject lines • Restrict messages to one topic or subject.
Remember to… • Manage email on content, not space quotas. • Use folders and sub-folders; sort & categorize by record type or series and retention. • Keep only the last message in a chain; clear out sent messages once a reply is received. • Schedule time to review, move and delete files and stick to it! Do not use your inbox for long- term storage. • Empty your deleted files and junk mail folders.