Title: Local Government Records Just the Basics
1Local Government RecordsJust the Basics
-
- An introduction to records management,
disposition and preservation for local
governments in Ohio. - Pari J. Swift
- Assistant State Archivist
- Ohio Historical Society
2Local Government Records
- Overview of the Ohio Historical Society and the
Local Government Records Program - Pertinent Definitions
- Records Commissions
- Determining Retention Periods
- Records Retention Forms
- Storage Media Decisions
3Ohio Historical Society
- ORC 149.31
- The Ohio Historical Society, in addition to its
other functions, shall function as the state
archives administration for the state and its
political subdivisions - Acts as archival repository for state and local
records of enduring historical value
4Ohio Historical Society
- OHS provides advice and assistance to state
government and to 5200 local government entities. - Counties
- Cities Villages
- Townships
- School Districts
- Special Taxing Districts
- Libraries
5Ohio Records Law
- 149.011 ORC (What is a record)
- Stored on a fixed medium
- paper, computer, film, audio/video, etc.
- Created, received or sent under jurisdiction of a
public office - Serve to document the organization, functions,
policies, decisions, procedures, operations, and
other activities of the office.
6Ohio Records Law
- 149.351 ORC
- All records are the property of the public
office concerned and shall not be removed,
destroyed, mutilated, transferred, or otherwise
damaged or disposed of, in whole or in part,
except as provided by law or under the rules
adopted by the records commission
7Records Commissions
- County Records Commission 149.38 ORC
- President of the Board of County Commissioners as
chairman - County Prosecuting Attorney
- County Auditor
- County Recorder
- County Clerk of Court of Common Pleas
- Meet at least once every 6 months
- Can hire an archivist
- Shall appoint a secretary who may or may not be a
member of the commission
8Records Commissions
- Municipal Records Commission 149.39 ORC
- Chief Executive (or appointed representative) as
chairman - Chief Fiscal Officer
- Chief Legal Officer
- Citizen (appointed by the chairman)
- Meet at least once every 6 months Can hire an
archivist - Shall appoint a secretary who may or may not be a
member of the commission
9Records Commissions
- Township Records Commission 149.42 ORC
- Chairman of the Board of Township Trustees
- Clerk of the Township
- Meet at least once a year
10Records Commission
- Library Records Commission 149.411 ORC
- Members and Clerk of Board of Trustees
- Meet once every 12 months
- Review Applications for One-Time Disposals (RC-1)
- Review Retention Schedules (RC-3)
- Revise retention schedules at any time
- Provide rules for the retention and disposition
of records - The Ohio Historical Society may not review or
select for custody any records pursuant to ORC
149.432
11Functions of Records Commissions
- Provide rules for retention and disposal of
records - Review retention schedules and disposal requests
- Provide that proper procedures are followed for
scheduling and disposing of records - Revise retention schedules as needed
- Notify local historical societies (counties)
12Record Commissions Meetings
- Meetings must be open to the public
- Public must be given notice that the meeting is
going to occur - Keep detailed minutes
13Records Officers
- Each department, office, or agency should
designate a records officer - responsible for all aspects of records retention
and disposition within dept. - serves a liaison to records commission
- should be someone who understands the duties and
responsibilities of the dept. and the records it
creates and maintains.
14What is a Record Series?
- Record Series-file units or documents arranged in
accordance with a filing system or maintained as
a unit because they result from the same
accumulation or filing process, the same
function, or the same activity have a particular
form - Annual reports, minutes, burial applications,
case files, etc. - NOT payroll records
- divide into payroll journal, payroll warrant,
cancelled checks, employee earning record,
withholding information, garnishment orders,
leave balance reports, W-2, W-4, etc.
15Determining Retention Periods
- Administrative Value
- used by office or agency to carry out its duties
- based on how often or for how long a record is
used - would the program be in jeopardy upon the
disposal of the record? - Consult Office of Origin
16Determining Retention Periods
- Fiscal Value
- pertains to the receipt, transfer, payment,
adjustment, or encumbrances of funds - required for an audit
- Contact Auditor
17Determining Retention Periods
- Legal Value
- documents or protects rights or obligations of
citizens or of the agency that created it - retain until legal rights and obligations expire
- Contact Legal Counsel
18Determining Retention Periods
- Historical Value
- documents an agencys organization, policies,
decisions, procedures, operations, and other
activities - contains significant information about people,
places, or events - Contact OHS LGRP
19Determining Retention Periods
- Retention Periods are determined and expressed in
3 ways. - Time (retain 3 years retain permanently)
- Event or Action (retain until audit report is
released) - Time and Event or Action (retain 3 years after
case closed) - Retention periods may be subdivided
- retain in office 3 years, then retain storage 6
more years, then destroy
20Determining Retention Periods
- Determine these values and retain for the
appropriate time period - These values are not static.
- Ex. Legal value in particular can change as laws
change - Set retention period to the longest value
- Ohio County Records Manual
- These are recommended retention periods, not
mandated ones - Base retention schedule on the record series that
your office creates
21Retention Schedules
- Every ongoing record series that your office
creates should be listed on a retention schedule. - A retention schedule is a list of the records an
office creates with a corresponding retention
period that states how long the record should be
retained
22Retention Schedules (RC-2 form)
- Provide the foundation of any records management
program - Lists the records that an office maintains and
the length of time the records should be kept - When the retention period has expired, the
records can be disposed of on an ongoing basis - Signatures indicate review by each involved
entity - Local Records Commission (approving body)
- State Auditor (reviewing agency)
- Ohio Historical Society (informational review for
selection)
23Retention Schedule (RC-2 form)
- Fill out information at the top of the form
- Complete columns
- schedule number
- record title and description (NO DATES!)
- retention period
- media type
- Submit to your records commission
- form must be signed and dated by records
commission in an open meeting
24(No Transcript)
25RC-2 Helpful Hints
- Sign Forms
- Responsible Official
- Records Commission Chairman
- Email should be scheduled according to content
- Do Not include Dates
- Include address and contact information on top of
form
26Retention Schedule RC-2
- Form is forwarded to OHS, from OHS to Auditor of
States Office (60 days each) - Copy of form returned to you (original on file at
OHS) - Retention schedules can be revised at any time
- must go through same process and resubmit form
27Using a Retention Schedule RC-2
- Provides for ongoing disposal
- Prevents build up of unnecessary records
- Can be a legal asset
- proves that public records were destroyed in
accordance with public records laws
28Obsolete Records
- Your office may have records in storage that are
not ongoing. Those records are obsolete. - they are no longer created
- ex. Records regarding an employee childcare
program your office participated in from
1980-1990 - These records should be listed on an RC-1,
Application for One-Time Records Disposal
29Application for One-Time Disposal RC-1
- Used to dispose of obsolete records
- Those no longer created or used
- Same format and information as RC-2
- except include dates for these records
- Must be submitted to Records Commission, OHS and
Auditor of State - same process as RC-2
30(No Transcript)
31RC-1 Helpful Hints
- Sign Forms
- Responsible Official
- Records Commission Chairman
- Include address and contact information
- Use inclusive dates after record series title
32Disposing of Records
- After you have submitted and received back copies
of the RC-1 and/or RC-2, you should determine
exactly what records you can now dispose of - These records should be listed on an RC-3,
Certificate of Records Disposal - OHS final opportunity to choose records of
enduring historical value - provides an administrative/legal record of
exactly which records were disposed, when they
were disposed, and that they were disposed
according to retention schedules
33Certificate RC-3
- Complete the top of the form
- List records to be disposed of
- title (from retention schedule)
- schedule number (from retention schedule)
- RC approval date (from retention schedule)
- media type (from retention schedule)
- other media
- dates
- date of disposal (15 business days in advance)
- Have form signed by the responsible official
34(No Transcript)
35Certificate RC-3
- Submit original form to OHS, keep copy in your
files, send copy to records commission - If there are records OHS wants to select for
archival storage, we will contact you prior to
the proposed date of disposal (network) - If there are not records OHS wants to select, you
will not be contacted or receive a copy of the
form back - You may send a self-addressed stamped postcard
which we will date stamp and send back for
verification that we received your forms - OHS forwards the form to the Auditor of States
Office
36RC-3 Helpful Hints
- Signed by Responsible Official
- Contact phone number
- Records Committee Approval date is that listed on
RC-1 or RC-2 containing those records. Not the
date the RC-3 was approved. - If the records are being transferred to another
media, list that in appropriate column - Mail AT LEAST 15 working days prior to scheduled
destruction
37Transferring Records
- Records can also be transferred to non-network
repositories such as your local historical
society or library - 149.31(A) ORC
- Public records shall be transferred by written
agreement only, and only to public or
quasi-public institutions agencies, or
corporations capable of meeting accepted archival
standards for housing and use.
38(No Transcript)
39Email Policies
- Circumstances under which e-mail is used
- Circumstances under which e-mail is defined as a
public record - 3-pronge test
- Back-up and purge cycles (when you delete it, it
isnt really deleted immediately) - Assure that email backups are deleted when all
retention requirements expire - Retention requirements and implementation
- Retain according to content
- How to file and retain for access
40E-mail Options
- 1. Dont use e-mail
- 2. No organizational policy/guidelines
- let users manage e-mail however they choose
- 3. Policy stating e-mail will be used only for
transient communications, nothing official - 4. Print important records, purge all others
- 5. Purge messages that arent needed create
simple file structures for some messages print
messages that are important - Where to store? Hard drive, e-mail system,
central filing repository - security concerns
- 6. Records Management Application (RMA)
41E-mail Options (cont)
- None of these options without problems
- Decide what will work best for your local
government - Be sure to do something to deal with e-mails
meeting the ORC definition of a record - Guidelines for Managing Electronic Mail
- http//www.ohiojunction.net/erc/email/emailguideli
nes.html
42Media Decisions
- Three media types you can use to store records
- Paper
- Microfilm/fiche
- Electronic
- Each media type has characteristics that make it
more or less appropriate for certain kinds of
records
43Format Characteristics
44Format Characteristics
45Media Decisions-paper
- Is enough storage space available and affordable?
- Requires no equipment to view records
- Only one user per record at any given time
46Media Decisions -- microfilm
- 9.01 ORC
- Microfilm must be certified as to its
authenticity and completeness - Must comply with ANSI standards for permanent
photographic records - duplicates must be stored in separate buildings
- Must have a microfilm reader so that records on
film can be made accessible for inspection per a
public records request
47Media Decisions -- microfilm
- Must have the ability to reproduce paper copies
per a request for copies of public records - Properly certified microfilm is acceptable under
the code of evidence in court proceedings
48Media Decisions -- electronic
- Hardware and software dependency
- Non-proprietary formats (.txt, .tiff)
- Migrate periodically-Check for loss of
information - Set retention periods according to content of
records, not the type of media it is retained on - Great for access and manipulation (functionality)
- Inscribed on impermanent media
- Must be created reliably and maintained
authentically (TIS Handbook) - Is it what it says it is? Is it still what it
says it is? - Much more documentation involved
- System documentation, metadata, security, audit
trails, recovery plans
49Scheduling E-Records
- The total retention period for an electronic
record series depends on how long the data needs
to remain in computer processable format.
50Scheduling E-Records
- Different formats of same record may have
different retention periods - If electronic records no longer need to be
maintained in manipulatable state, there is no
justification for retaining them in a digital
format. Schedule them for less time than the
paper or microfilm version - Ex. Deeds
- Retain paper copy until microfilmed
- Retain microfilm permanently
- Retain digital image 10 years
51Scheduling E-Records
- Generally easier less expensive to maintain
some digital records in paper or microfilm than
to migrate - Some digital records will have to be retained in
electronic format for the duration of their
retention period for functionality reasons - Databases
- Spreadsheets
- Web-sites
52Scheduling E-Records
- Gartner Group recommends
- Any record stored longer than 10 years should be
stored in an analog, human-readable form such
as paper or microfilm - inexpensive formats
- stable media
- avoid compatibility problems with new technologies
53Electronic Records
- Ohio Electronic Records Committee (ERC)
- Guidelines for Managing Electronic Mail
- Revised Digital Imaging Guidelines
- Trustworthy Information Systems Handbook
- Guidelines for Managing Web Content
- Databases as Public Records Guidelines
- http//www.ohiojunction.net/erc
54LGRP Contact Information
- Pari J. Swift
- Assistant State Archivist
- (614) 297-2553
- (614) 297-2546 (fax)
- pswift_at_ohiohistory.org
- www.ohiohistory.org/lgr
- www.ohiojunction.net/erc