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Interpreting the Library General Records Schedule. Brad Houston, University Records Officer July 15, 2008. What is a record?. Records : Recorded information, in any format, that allows an office to conduct business This includes emails and IMs! Also documents business processes
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Interpreting the Library General Records Schedule Brad Houston, University Records Officer July 15, 2008
What is a record? • Records: Recorded information, in any format, that allows an office to conduct business • This includes emails and IMs! • Also documents business processes • Value of Record determined by content, not format! • Ask: “Does this document help me perform my job description?”
UW-System Library GRS • Produced by UW Records Officers Council (UWROC), in conjunction with library staff • Department heads here were consulted for input • Covers 44 records series (functional groups) in 9 categories • Effective immediately and retroactively • Example: records with 10 years’ retention created in 1998 can be destroyed immediately • Prescribes MINIMUM retention periods • Be aware, however, of legal liability
Using the GRS: Finding schedules • Organized into 9 categories • Administration, Collection Development, Special Collections, Circulation, Interlending, Information Systems, Publicity, Reference, Surveillance • Within each category, find the record type you need • Examples: Call Slips, Donor Files, Registration Forms • Record series names may not correspond to the names YOU use– read the description to determine functional similarity
Using the GRS: Official Records • Official Record: The copy of record for audit purposes, record requests, etc. • Usually, author of document is the official record-holder • Exception: Committee chairs are official record-holders for minutes, etc. • Only official records need to be retained for full period • Convenience copies usually have shorter period, if any
Using the GRS: Reading Schedules • Record Schedules consist of: • Description of the Series • Retention period (original) • Retention period (copies) • Retention periods include ‘triggering event’, i.e. when you start counting (creation, end of fiscal year, etc.) • If retention is marked “Destroy confidentially”, materials MUST BE SHREDDED or put in records management shred bins
Electronic Records • As with paper records, need to be scheduled and retained appropriately • Includes E-mails, instant messages, webpages, etc. • For long-term retention e-records, convert to neutral format (PDF/A, text) before transfer • For short-term retention e-records, do not format-switch unless appropriate • E.g. software upgrade, etc. • Printouts of computer records are copies • Can be destroyed once no longer needed
A Note on Email • Yes, this is a record, too! (Wis. Adm. 12) • Most email is transitory and can be destroyed after small period of time • Some email (reference requests, etc.) is routine, and should be retained 60 days or specific schedule length • Small amount of email of historical value– save and send to Archives (via PantherFile, etc.)
Sending records to the Archives • In general, Archives is interested in records that provide unique historical perspective on library activities and operations • Series specifically included for archives in GRS include: • Director’s Subject Files • Library Strategic Plans • Newsletters • Programming/Events Files
Sending to the Archives, cont. • Fill out records transfer form (available on Records Management website) • Contact Brad for records center boxes • 1 file cabinet drawer=1.3 records center boxes • Put documents in folders; remove binders if possible • Create inventory of boxes • Box-level is OK; folder-level is better • Arrange for pickup/transfer
Confidential Shredding • UWM now contracts with Kard Recycling and Shredding for confidential shredding • Pickup is 2nd and 4th Thursday of each month • Contact Brad to have shreddables taken to the shred bins/shred room • n.b. There is a limited amount of space in the shred room, so send shredding a little at a time if possible • Shredding is for confidential material only– NOT an all-purpose garbage pickup!
“Why isn’t X on this schedule?” • May be covered by existing GRS • Examples: Fiscal/Accounting records, annual reports, payroll information • May be covered by existing Library schedule • Example: Cataloging/Statistical Files are scheduled at UWM, but do not appear on the GRS • May have been missed by both UWM RM and UWROC • Often the case for specialty program files • If so, contact Brad for records scheduling
Litigation Holds and Records Requests • Received by Brad and Amy Watson, UWM Public Records Custodian • Supersedes ALL active records schedules • Records from series affected by Litigation Holds MAY NOT be destroyed until hold lifted • Most likely will affect email; probably does not affect most library records
Office Cleanup: RM Checklist • Am I no longer actively using this record? • Is it an official or unofficial copy? • Has the triggering event for this series occurred? • Has the retention period for this record passed? • Does this record need to be sent to the archives? • Does this record need to be destroyed confidentially?
When in doubt, look it up! • http://www.uwsa.edu/gc-off/records/schedules/UW.System.Library.Schedule.pdf • The Library/Archives GRS itself • http://records.uwm.edu • UWM Record Management, with tips (and this presentation!) • http://www.uwsa.edu/gc-off/records/guidelines/ • Records Management Guidelines from UWSA