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Records and Information Management Email Lifecycle Dennis Larsen Records Officer Webinar for Cooperative Extension 5/19/2014

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Records and InformationManagement

Email Lifecycle

Dennis Larsen

Records Officer

Webinar for Cooperative Extension

5/19/2014

Records Management

• Wis. Statute 16.61(2) spells out management and retention of records, role of public records board, records officers, records retention schedules, etc.

• Records retention schedules: rules which concern the retention and disposition of specific and identified groups of records.

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Presentation Will Help You--

1. Learn the principles of records management.2. Learn the records retention and disposition

rules for managing your e-mail.3. Consider what email and other records to

retain and what to delete and when.

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What are records?

• Recorded information in any form or media.• Evidence of business transactions.• Wisconsin Statutes 16.61(2)(b) defines “Public

Records” and lists various media, then identifies that records are made or received in the course of public business.

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Records Management LegalAuthority

• Authority for records in the UW System is established by state statute and the UW System Board of Regents.

• Public Records Board (PRB) approves retention & disposition schedules.

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Requests for Public Records

• Open Records Requests—when an individual or other entity (public or private) requests to obtain or see a public record. In Cooperative Extension, mostly mailing lists.

• Statue calls these “public records”• Related in law to “open and public meetings• Refer requests for “public records” to Jason Beier, Interim Vice Chancellor

for Administrative and Financial Services, UW Colleges and UW-Extension, 608-265-3040.

• See also http://www.uwex.uwc.edu/records/request/• Jason Beier will ensure proper legal protection of confidential and

personal identifiable information.

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What are not records?

•Wisconsin Statute 16.61(2)(b) indicates what public records do not include:

Duplicates or convenience copies, drafts, notes, preliminary computations, routing slips, envelopes, unsolicited invitations & notices, and library books

•These often called non-records.

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We often have more records than we need & finding what we want is like finding…

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Where do we start?

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Computer files

facebook

Cloud Computing

Google+

Retention or Disposition?Retain or Dispose?

• Axiom of records management:– Most records loose significance fast.

• Once you have attended a meeting, the email invitation becomes much less interesting.

• When can we discard, destroy, or delete?

• A few records - much more important & kept longer: contracts, others?.... But then delete!

• Retention periods for records imply an end to retention. In other words, deletion!

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Records Managementand

Email Lifecycle

Think in terms of a hierarchy for retention purposes:– Delete– Retain for 7 days then, delete– Retain for 6 months after an event, then delete– Retain based on an existing records schedule for

longer periods of time and then delete.

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Identify email content

Is the email non- business & personal, an extra copy, a draft,

or spam?

Is the email business, but has transitory, short term value?

Is the email routine business, but with an ending

event?

Is the email part of existing a

known schedule?

Wisconsin State Statue 16.61(2)(b) says it is not a record. Delete it!

Retention Schedule*: Keep 7 days or until superseded or event has expired. Delete it!

Retention Schedule*: Keep 6 months after event, project or activity. Delete it!

e.g. RDA00112000 Program Participant Data and Records/Registration Forms.Session ends + 18 months. Delete!

No

No? Contact records officer

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

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Is the email non- business &

personal, an extra copy, a draft, or

spam?

Wisconsin State Statue 16.61(2)

(b) says it is not a record, it is a non-record

Delete it!

Yes

No

Non-Records Examples:

• Details about a social lunch date (non business)

• Copies of email for which you are not the primary recipient.

• Email from a firm selling or advertising.

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Is the email business, but has transitory, short

term value?

Keep 7 days or until

supersededor event has

expired.

Delete it!

No

Yes

Transitory EmailThis email is business oriented but of very short term value.

– Invitations to meetings that are only of minor importance for you, or for a meeting that has already occurred.

– Response to a simple request for information or materials which are dispatched in a matter of minutes (without lengthy research to do).

– Notifications sent via a distribution list about holidays, news bulletins, news of air conditioner maintenance, etc. e.g. News and Ideas updates

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Is the email routine business,

but with an ending event?

Keep 6 months

after event, project

or activity.

Delete it!

No? Contact the Records Officer

Yes

No

Create Folders for Retaining Emails

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• Routine Retain 6 mo. From Event– EVT = project ends (mm/dd/yyyy)– EVT = semester ends (05/17/2011)

• Event is defined by the email user or by a group of users

• Routine Retain 6 mo. From Event– EVT = project ends (mm/dd/yyyy)– EVT = semester ends (05/17/2011)

• Event is defined by the email user or by a group of users

ABC Project

Routine Email ExamplesRoutine email has continuing value. Documents transactions of

public business, decision making and dissemination of substantive materials.

• Email thread with members of program area team about development of educational program with attachments of the draft curriculum. The program will be used over time by colleagues throughout the state in local communities.

• Email from Dean and Director Rick Klemme explaining a study of salary equity issues in Cooperative Extension with the executive summary report of the consultant as the attachment. The report and Rick’s message is posted on a website and on a blog.

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Routine Email ExamplesRoutine email has continuing value. Documents transactions of

public business, decision making and dissemination of substantive materials.

• Email thread of a faculty governance committee discussing an issue from a recent and future committee meeting with comments about implications of the issue for an institutional governance meeting.

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Is the email part of existing a known

schedule?

e.g. RDA0011200:

Program Participant Data and

Records/Registration Forms

Keep after session ends, 18 months.

Delete!

No? Contact records officer

Yes

Cooperative ExtensionRecords Schedules

Some custom records retention and disposition schedules pertain to your work:

• Program Participant Data and Records/Registration Forms– RDA00112000– Event + 18 months, destroy – Event = Session ends

• Criminal Records Checks (Criminal Background checks)-Volunteers– RDA00111000– Year created + 4 years, destroy, but keep latest records check

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UW System-wide Records Schedules

Some General Records Schedules useful to you:UWPER013 Search & Screen Committee Records

– Event + 6 years then confidentially destroy/delete,– Event = Date position filled– Copies: Destroy when no longer needed

UWADM018 Agendas/Minutes– Event + 3 years then transfer to UW-Archives– Event = Approval of minutes– Copies: Destroy when no longer needed

Many other records schedules and details are available at http://www.uwex.uwc.edu/records/schedules/

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Questions or Comments

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Contact Information

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Send questions and comments to Dennis Larsen

[email protected]

432 Lake Street, Room 211

Madison, WI 53706

608-262-2477

– See website for information about records management and records retention schedules.

http://www.uwex.uwc.edu/records/index.cfm