Records dilemma: When in doubt, throw it out?

 

Connecting state and local government leaders

Some agencies are tackling their records management problems by deciding not to digitize paper records.

Like many government social service agencies, the Illinois Department of Human Services was having trouble managing paper-based forms. But the answer DHS found started with the decision not to digitize its archives. Instead, it decided to digitize only new eligibility forms, leaving the archives to gradually disappear.

In 2010, DHS had more than 100 million pieces of paper stored in case files at local offices and warehouses throughout the state, taking up space and hurting caseworker productivity. The agency embarked on a “going-forward strategy.”

Instead of attempting to scan all of the existing printed documents, CIO Doug Kasamis spearheaded efforts to digitize and store the three types of benefit eligibility forms which collectively make up nearly 70 percent of the agency’s total form volume, according to Government Technology magazine.

But rather than print and store the new case files, DHS turned them into PDFs with metadata and stored them in the agency's IBM content management system. And because the department’s records retention policy required that forms be stored for only five years, as the DHS continues to digitize forms, the stored hard copy files will be phased out, Government Technology reported.

“Rather than trying to figure out a way to scan all that legacy paper, we’re basically getting rid of 20 percent of our problem every year over the next five years,” Kasamis said.

Most government agencies wage a daily battle against records storage and retention. Add big data hype into the mix and records managers are on the horns of a dilemma: whether to cut down on the amount of stored data or save it, in hopes that some nugget, somewhere, will justify the costs of storage and analysis.

But according to Jeff Clark, writing in the Data Center Journal, most of the data in storage is useless and identifying useful data is difficult at best. For some, he said, "the value to be gained from analyzing massive amounts of information is insufficient to justify the costs of implementing a big data analytics system."

But big data is just the latest addition to the records management headache. Even management and storage of e-mail can be problematic. When the Environmental Protection Agency wanted to move its 15-year-old e-mail system to the cloud, it discovered some mailboxes with more than a million objects in them, making moving the entire e-mail system unfeasible. Working with Lockheed Martin, the EPA, weeded out mailboxes with large attachments and archived legacy information that was older than a year.

A recent survey of federal records managers by MeriTalk found that records management issues hinder agency operations and cause budget overruns. 

The report recommends agency managers consider what records they have, who needs them, for what purpose and for how long. They should then digitize those records first and destroy older inactive records that are no longer needed for compliance or business reasons, the report recommends. A common mistake when converting paper records to an electronic format is to scan and then save everything.

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