1 / 28

Tsawwassen First Nation’s RIM program: Case Study

Tsawwassen First Nation’s RIM program: Case Study. Presentation to the ICT Summit February 25 th , 2012 Jennifer Jansen, Records Analyst. Background. Tsawwassen First Nation (TFN) members belong to the seafaring Coast Salish people ancestral language is hun’qum’i’num

krista
Télécharger la présentation

Tsawwassen First Nation’s RIM program: Case Study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tsawwassen First Nation’s RIM program: Case Study Presentation to the ICT Summit February 25th, 2012 Jennifer Jansen, Records Analyst

  2. Background • Tsawwassen First Nation (TFN) members belong to the seafaring Coast Salish people • ancestral language is hun’qum’i’num • traditional territory is located in southwest British Columbia, near Vancouver • pre-contact: 3 main fishing villages, gathering place for people from many nations • profound connection with the ocean and lands • a long history of environmental stewardship

  3. Demographics Today • 435 Members, about half of whom live on Tsawwassen Lands • Other half live in Lower Mainland, Okanagan, US, and elsewhere • Population is young and growing: over 40% of TFN Members are under 18 • Post-treaty land base is 724 hectares • Commercial, residential & industrial potential • Approximately 400 non-Member leaseholders currently living on Tsawwassen Lands: • Tsatsu Shores (condominium complex) • Stahaken (residential community) • Tsawwassen Beach (gated, beachfront homes) • 52% of Members have attained a high school diploma; 5% have a university degree

  4. Map of TFN’s Traditional Territory

  5. ALR RESIDENTIAL Neighbourhood Plan 2010 INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL

  6. The Treaty • Became Effective on April 3, 2009 • Canada’s first modern urban treaty, and first treaty under BCTC Treaty Process • Provides cash settlement, transfers land ownership, and provides comprehensive self-government powers • Exclusive jurisdiction over land management, in addition to broad law making authority (social policy, education, health, taxation, economic development, etc.)

  7. The Treaty (cont’d) • New governance structure replaces Indian Act structure • Interacts with federal and provincial law through a concurrent law model that ensures there is no legal ‘vacuum’ • TFN passed 23 laws on Effective Date of Treaty, including Constitution Act  public online registry of laws ensures transparency • Land is owned by TFN Members in fee simple, and by TFN Government as ‘allodial title’ (akin to how provincial and Federal governments hold Crown land)

  8. Government • Tsawwassen Legislature • 12 elected Members plus Chief • Presided over by Squiqel (speaker) • Passes laws, annual budget • Executive Council • 4 Members plus Chief • Highest vote-getters from Legislature election • Regulations, policies, strategic management/oversight • Chief – elected separately • Strategic management and overall direction • Judicial Council, Advisory Council, Property Tax Authority, other legislated committees/structures

  9. Administration • Directed by Chief Administrative Officer • Lands: development, land use, community planning, zoning, referrals, permits and licences • Natural Resources: fishing allocations and licences (commercial, selective, and FSC), hunting and gathering activities/licences, protocol agreements with other FNs and other governments • Finance: funds management, auditing and reporting, IT • Health and Social Services: income assistance, housing assistance, social services for Members, Elders support, community health, community nursing, outreach • Legal Services: legal support to government administration and legislative bodies • Human Resources: employee management, occupational health and safety, Member employment opportunities, Impact Benefits Agreements (IBAs) • Government Services: administrative support to Legislative Assembly, Executive Council, and other TFN bodies and departments, information management, enrolment and membership, treaty implementation • Education and Skills Development: Smuyuq’wa’ Lelum ECE Centre, TFN Youth Centre, education support K-12 and post-secondary, employment training programs, language and culture programs • Policy and Intergovernmental Affairs: policy development, intergovernmental relations, treaty implementation

  10. TFN Economic Development Corporation(TEDC) • Arms-length, corporate entity incorporated in 2009 • Seeks partnerships to develop the skills, training and employment side of TFN land developments • Mandate to ensure TFN members benefit from the creation of new jobs and business opportunities and become active contributors to the local economy • Relationship with TFN Government is similar to a Crown corporation

  11. Records and Information Management - Beginnings • Records Analyst hired in November 2010 • Challenges: idiosyncratic and legacy filing methods, minimal RIM coordination between dept’s, lack of space, insufficient time and resources to manage effectively, “can’t find anything” • Goal is to create a corporate-wide standard for managing records and information assets regardless of format or location • Adopted a function-based approach to classification

  12. Guiding Principles • Records and Information = Assets • Information assets have value, just like financial or capital assets • Information assets must be managed • Proper management of an asset enables the organization to leverage its full value • Effective information management is vital to transparency and good governance • Management of information assets is driven by function • Records are classified based on the business procedure/process they are related to

  13. Why a function-based approach? • Emerging standard for RIM methodology – ISO 15489 • Records are product of business procedures • Records are used to support business procedures • Classification scheme reflects the business procedures within the organization • Not tied to org structure accommodates organizational change • Records of common business functions are managed consistently • Expandable/adaptable as the organization and its business procedures evolve

  14. Review of Legislation and Policy • Identify what records are required explicitly • E.g. : Tsawwassen Election Act requires that an Election Manual be created after every election • E.g.: Chapter 25 s.6 of the Final Agreement requires that the tri-partite Implementation Committee prepare annual reports on implementation activities • Identify statutory bodies that will generate records – for example: • Legislative Assembly • Executive Council • Advisory Council • Judicial Council • Implementation Committee (tri-partite) • Joint Fisheries Committee

  15. Business Process Analysis • Review of laws, regulations, and policies to determine prescribed procedures and the records produced • E.g.: Elections Calling the election  notices Nominations  nomination forms Identify eligible voters  voters lists Appoint elections officers/scrutineers  agreements

  16. Business Process Analysis (cont’d) • Meetings with departmental managers and staff • What does your department do? What kinds of records do you have? • Identify each departments’ “functional authority” • Identify cyclical processes (e.g. financial, fisheries, reporting cycles, etc.) • Identify formalized procedures (e.g. permit applications, membership applications) and the records associated with those • Identify procedural gaps, or processes that exist “by default”

  17. Findings • Informal procedures (small staff) • Transitional period post-treaty  procedural gaps • “Hybrid” type of government: • Municipal-type functions (e.g. lands management and development, facilities management) • Provincial and federal-type functions (e.g. social assistance/housing; education; community health; fisheries management) • Functions unique to First Nations (e.g. referrals; managing FFA, IBAs, etc.; traditional knowledge; membership)

  18. Adopted a model • Municipal records management model (City of Vancouver – VanRIMS) • Identify classifications that could be directly adopted (with minor modifications) • E.g.: Employee Files, Operating Budget Files, Annual Reports • Identify similar areas of functional responsibility/ authority (current and future) • E.g.: Permits and Licences, Emergency Planning, Access and Privacy, Governance • Functions are similar, but records are different

  19. Tsawwassen Records and Information Management Standard (TRIMS) v.1 • TRIMS is a comprehensive standard for managing TFNs information assets • A corporate records classification scheme: used to organize, describe, and provide physical and intellectual control over groups of TFN corporate records • A filing standard: used as the basis for filing systems, network directory hierarchies, and document libraries and hierarchies in digital document management systems • A records retention and disposition schedule: a life-cycle plan for each type of corporate record.

  20. Beyond a filing plan… TRIMS is for managing information assets • Defines types of files/records according to their purpose within the organization  based on business processes • Defines how long each type of file/record needs to be kept and what happens to it in the end  life-cycle management • Identifies what kinds of files/records have confidential information, what files are essential records  handling and storage requirements • Can be used to manage all types of information, not just hard copy files

  21. How does TRIMS work? • Hierarchical block-numeric system that has three levels • Function Group (2-digit code) • Primary(4-digit code) • Secondary(2-digit code) • E.g06-1000-10 = Human Resources Management – Employee Management – Employee Files

  22. Policy and Procedures • New RIM Policy approved Oct 2011 • Officially adopts TRIMS as the TFN corporate standard for managing information assets; defines departmental responsibilities for RIM, and the role of the Government Services Department • Includes new section for Essential Records (preliminary) • RIM Procedure manual • “How to” for implementing the Policy • Formalized procedures and forms for transferring records to storage, retrieving records from storage, and destroying records (still currently in draft) • Provides naming conventions for folders and documents in hard copy and electronic formats

  23. Accomplished to date • Review of and input on TRIMS classifications from managers and staff  on-going • Departmental file inventory and initial implementation is underway • RIM Policy adopted by Executive Council Oct 2011 • Review and detailed inventory of pre-Treaty and Treaty Negotiation files underway • 2011: hired summer intern (with grant from Young Canada Works) for archival arrangement and description project targeting Chief Baird’s Treaty Negotiation records

  24. Moving Forward • Complete hardcopy implementation of TRIMS (CAO, Lands, Natural Resources, PIGA, Government Services and HR targeted for completion in 2012) •  retroactive only to Effective Day of Treaty (April 3 2009) • Implementation of retention and disposition procedures once TRIMS implementation is complete • Moving towards implementation of EDMS • First step will be needs assessment • “Special schedules” for Treaty Negotiation records (archival), pre-Treaty “legacy” records • Develop RIM training program for staff • Develop TFN Essential Records program • Eventually we will establish a TFN community archives

  25. Challenges • Capacity of staff • time commitments, availability - progress gets interrupted by “brush fires” • technical proficiency • complexity – some dept’s need more support than others • Buy-in • long-term solution to an immediate problem • RIM is low priority for many staff, difficult to see longer-term benefits • Significant organizational change, shift in how staff think about their records • varying levels of comfort, trust • No comprehensive model to follow

  26. Additional Resources • TFN – www.tsawwassenfirstnation.com • Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development – http://hpaied.org/ • BC Treaty Commission – www.bctreaty.net

More Related