The records retention requirement, the period of time the
documents must be stored and maintained accessible, is a critical element in the planning
of an imaging system. The length of that retention period will determine in part the
access, maintenance, and migration activities that must be factored as part of the imaging
system's ongoing costs. Those costs will continue to accrue for as long as the documents
must be retained.
Georgia's government agencies, state and local, are
required by law to have a State Records Committee approved records retention schedule
(records life-cycle plan) for each records series (file group) created, maintained, or
received (See the "Georgia Records Act": O.C.G.A. 50 - 18 -
90 et. seq.).
Many, if not most, agency programs considering the
application of imaging technology will already have approved records retention schedules
for the program records. Most of these schedules, however, will have been approved for the
program's paper-based records series; the aggregation of documents to be stored in an
imaging system likely will not correspond to the file groups (records series) on which the
existing retention schedule was based.
Therefore it is recommended that a re-evaluation of
the retention requirements be done as part of the required feasibility study for an
imaging system.
The Georgia Records Act mandates that the records retention
schedule shall be determined by the values the information in the records has for
administrative, legal, fiscal, and historical purposes. To develop a retention schedule,
the agency will analyze the values of the information in the records for the following
purposes:
The interests of the program, the agency overall, the
state, and the public will be considered in this analysis:
- Administrative: A record/document has administrative
value for as long as the information it holds is necessary for program operations or for
the continued administration of the program or the agency.
- Legal: A record/document has legal value for as long
as the information it holds serves as evidence of the legal rights or obligations of the
program, the agency, the state, or the citizens; or for as long as the information ensures
compliance with relevant laws and regulations.
- Fiscal: A record/document has fiscal value for as
long as the information it holds is necessary to document the expenditure of public funds
or fulfill financial obligations.
- Historical: A record/document has historical value if
the information it holds is of continuing interest to the program, the agency, the state,
or the citizens, and that interest is sufficient to warrant the costs of continued access
and maintenance. The Department of Archives and History will assist the agency in
determining historical values.
Once the agency has determined the retention values of the
records/documents file group(s), the findings together with the agency's proposed records
retention schedule (life-cycle plan) will be submitted to the State Records Committee,
through the Georgia Archives.
The Committee will then review, approve, disapprove,
modify, or amend the proposed records retention schedule. The agency head has the right to
appeal the decisions of the Committee.
For assistance in conducting an analysis of records
retention requirements, contact the Records and Information Management Division of the
Georgia Archives (678-364-3790). << BACK MORE
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