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Managing the Retention of. Electronic Records. Ann Marie Przybyla Electronic Records Symposium Region 9, November 2007. Goal. Describe the essentials of managing e-records retention and disposition. Why Not Save Everything Forever?. Discovery, FOIL, audits Access and retrieval
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Managing the Retention of Electronic Records Ann Marie Przybyla Electronic Records Symposium Region 9, November 2007
Goal • Describe the essentials of managing e-records retention and disposition
Why Not Save Everything Forever? • Discovery, FOIL, audits • Access and retrieval • Storage costs • Migration costs • Increasing risks
Why Managing Retention is Difficult • ER not part of RM program • Split between RM and IT • End-user responsibility • Increasing complexity of ER • Enterprise-wide ER systems • Layers of obsolescence • Basic RM principles don’t always apply
Options for Managing E-Records Retention • Print records and manage as paper • E-file and manage on individual PCs • E-file on LAN and manage centrally • Manage via ECMS/EDMS
Good E-Records Retention Habits • Manage electronically and centrally • Implement schedules and standards at creation • Develop classification system • Simplify retention as much as possible • Preserve and destroy records appropriately • Develop policy
E-Records Creation • Know retention schedules • Know relation of e-records to records in other formats • Work closely with IT • Address retention in system design • Avoid proprietary formats
Classification System • Takes resources to plan and implement • But must have to manage e-records electronically • Consists of filing plan, access levels, keywords • Links to retention schedule • Relies on effective use of metadata
Metadata • Data describing the content, context, structure of records • System generated • And manually created • Essential for finding, preserving, authenticating, understanding e-records • Examples?
Simplifying Retention: “Big Buckets” • At a level higher than records series • Groups records by function, document type, or other category • Links group of records to a retention period • Also a term and concept applied to file plans
Pros of B-B Scheduling • Eliminates a scheduling backlog • Schedule less likely to change • Improves consistency • Simplifies ER system requirements • Simplifies role of end user • Mitigates risk
Cons • Leads to an increase in • retention periods generally • storage needs • migration costs • e-discovery risks • A concept that appears to be anti-RM
Case Study #1New World Financial System • Handles all accounts payable and receivable in a government • Budget data entered every fiscal year • Each department enters own data • Produces annual report • Encompasses permanent and 6-year records • Management of retention is uncertain
Case Study #2General Accountability Office • Hummingbird’s EDMS/ERMS (2004) • Simplified file plan with 3 buckets • Units tend to work in 1 or 2 buckets • Buckets subdivided by function (33 total) • User asked to choose bucket and function for each document • RM functions activated when user titles and saves the document
Case Study #3E-Mail • May or may not be records • Each record must be retained for appropriate retention period • Automating retention involves • Analyzing each end user and end user’s e-mail • Identifying permanent e-mail • Managing non-permanent e-mail
Case Study #4Madison County • Piloting project in DSS • Imaging project for case files • Controlled index terms • 19 document types • Staff can view discrete case file • System will eventually manage retention
Some Observations • Big bucket scheduling is an absolute necessity for managing ER • Rejects managing at the item level • Alternative to “all or nothing” • Supports use of electronic tools • Helps make RM invisible to end users
…and Recommendations • Know records at the granular level • To ensure buckets aren’t too big • Schedule records before system design • Bring RM to the table at system design • Work closely with IT • Balance risk with simplicity
Retaining ER • Apply preservation strategies to all ER, not just permanent • Anticipate obsolescence and instability • Some strategies • Reformatting • Standard formats • Migration • Refreshing
When to Think about Destruction • Planning records system • End of retention period • Computer reassignment • Computer surplusing • Staff turnover
When not to Destroy E-records • Before the end of retention period • Needed beyond retention period • In response to FOIL • In response to legal action • When audit is pending
Exercise Control • Of all computers • PCs, laptops, tablets • Personal Digital Assistants • Digital cameras • Of all copies • Backups • Detachable devices, removable media • Printouts, microfilm
Methods of Destruction • Deletion • Reformatting • Defragmenting • Physical destruction • Degaussing • Overwriting
Basic E-Records Retention Policy • Establish government ownership • Maintain equipment and system inventory • Identify record copy • Follow records schedule regularly • Define procedure for halting destruction • Train all staff • Review for compliance
Conclusions • Managing retention of ER means knowing essential RM principles • But rethinking those principles when needed • And being flexible ourselves Thank you.