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Electronic
Records and the Illinois Local Records Act
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| Guidelines
for Using Electronic Records |
April
2001 |
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Effective January 1, 2001, the
Local
Records Act (50 ILCS 205) is amended to allow Local Government
agencies to reproduce existing public records in a digitized
electronic format with the intent to dispose of the original
records. This practice is only allowable if the electronic records
are reproduced on a "durable medium that accurately and legibly
reproduces the original record in all details," and "that
does not permit additions, deletions, or changes to the original
document images." In addition, the digital records must be
"retained in a trustworthy manner so that the records, and the
information contained in the records, are accessible and usable for
subsequent reference at all times while the information must be
retained." Each agency is also under the obligation to file a
Records Disposal Certificate with the appropriate Local Records
Commission before any original record may be disposed of and before
the reproduced digital record is disposed of. Click here for the Guidelines
Summary.
In the past, public record laws,
regulations, and procedures were based on the fact that records were
created and maintained in paper or microfilm formats. Although very
safe for long-term storage of records, those formats only allowed
access to the records by one person in one place at one time.
Currently, some local government record keepers feel that paper
records take up too much space and filmed records are often too
difficult to use. They perceive that the wide-scale use of
electronic records will increase their ability to provide records to
more clients in a clearer format in a timelier manner while saving
money on record storage and staff. Digital systems also greatly
reduce the amount of physical space required to store paper records.
However, while electronic record
technology promotes broad and rapid access to local records, it also
carries the danger that those records and the information contained
therein can be easily lost. It is imperative that local governments
ensure that because of changing technology, electronic records are
not rendered unusable before their retention and preservation
requirements are met. When indicating his support for the amendment
to the Local Records Act, Governor Ryan warned that there are no
universal standards for the creation and storage of electronic
documents and urged local governments to "be cautious in the
way in which they maintain public records and protect the public
interest."
Because digital media are constantly
in a state of flux, few national standards exist regulating the
creation, copying and preservation of electronic records. Therefore
the Local Records Commissions have issued no formal standards to
guide local government agencies that decide to implement an
electronic records storage system. The following guidelines for
electronic record keeping in Illinois are currently accepted as
"best practice" by industry and are endorsed by the Local
Records Commissions, the Governor’s Office on Technology, and the
Secretary of State as State Archivist. These guidelines do not
specify how a local government agency is to accomplish electronic
record keeping and do not preclude agencies from transferring imaged
records to other media or maintaining microfilm copies for long-term
preservation purposes.
Legal Responsibility
Agencies must remember that any
information that was a public record when produced in paper remains
a public record when produced or maintained in any digital format,
and that any information created as, or converted to, an electronic
format is a government asset and must be retained for any period
required by law or Local Records Commission regulations. Agencies
are also obligated to produce and present to the public any records
kept in digital formats that are needed to comply with the
provisions of the
Illinois
Freedom of Information Act (5 ILCS 140/). Disposing
of any public record, regardless of format, before its retention is
complete and notification given to the Local Records Commission is a
Class 4 felony. Therefore, before implementing any local government
electronic record keeping system, a records inventory (Application
for Authority to Dispose of Local Records) should be on file with
the Local Records Unit of the Illinois State Archives
(217/782-7075).
To prevent negative audit findings
and to defend itself during any legal challenge to the authenticity
of the document, agencies should prepare documentation that explains
how its systems and procedures ensure the integrity of the
electronic document. At a minimum, this documentation should explain
the technology that was used during creation and use (i.e.
type of media, file format, type of document management software
used); the operational procedures about how the document enters the
system; and the security procedures about how the agency ensures the
document has not been altered.
Longevity of
Digital Records
Most people realize that if you
had created a text document 12 years ago using any of the most
popular commercial word processing software programs, you would not
be able to read it today. Even if you had kept the exact machine and
software program that created the document, there is a good chance
that the storage medium would have degenerated.
| Therefore,
although no longer required by law, the Illinois State
Archives and the Local Records Commissions still suggest
that digital records with a retention value of more than ten
years be backed up on microfilm or paper. |
When retaining long-term records in
digital format, user copies should be made and the
"original" digital information stored off-site in a
controlled environment. Temperature and relative humidity for
permanent digital information should be in a range between 65-75
degrees Fahrenheit and 30-45 percent humidity. Maintaining constant
temperatures and humidity is very important in the long-term
preservation of information in digital, as well as paper and
microfilm formats. Users can gain guidance for the storage and use
of optical disks in ANSI/AIIM TR25-1995, Use
of Optical Disks for Public Records.
Digitizing Existing
Records
Before beginning a digitization of
records, agencies should analyze the costs associated with
implementing and maintaining an imaging system. This includes the
cost of hardware, software, training staff, preparation of
materials, scanning current and future records and possibly
converting old files. While outsourcing may be cheaper than an
in-house program, agencies should be concerned about losing control
of their records.
Agencies should also plan for the
refreshing of digital data on a regular basis and for migrating and
converting images and corollary indices to new storage media as
needed to preserve the records "for subsequent reference at all
times while the information must be retained." Therefore,
agencies must remember to budget up to 20% of the original system
acquisition expense for the migration of digital records to newer
media, software and/or hardware. It is difficult to predict whether
this will need to be done every 3, 5 or 10 years to prevent the loss
of information. In fact, before embarking on any record conversion
project from paper to digital or microfilm, agencies would be wise
to perform a cost/benefit analysis that also factors in Local Record
Commission record retention requirements.
Based on the requirements of the new
law, agencies should establish operational practices and provide
technical and administrative documentation to ensure the future
usability of the system, continued access to all records, and the
foundation for assuring the system’s legal integrity. Any
procedures should comport to requirements for the legal acceptance
of records as outlined in AIIM TR31-1992, Performance
Guidelines for the Admissibility of Records Produced by Information
Systems as Evidence.
To ensure images are readable in the
future, agencies should require an open systems architecture for
electronic imaging or require vendors to provide a bridge to systems
with non-proprietary configurations. Also, if a proprietary digital
image file format is used, the vendor should provide a bridge to a
non-proprietary digital image file format. It is recommended that
agencies use a non-proprietary image file format to ensure the
ability to transfer successfully digital images between different
systems or to upgraded or modified systems. A definition for file
formats is found in: ANSI/AIIM MS53-1993,
Standard Recommended Practice, File Format for Storage and Exchange
of Images, Bi-Level Image File Format, Part 1.
While there are no formal Illinois
government standards in place to guide an agency that is considering
implementation of an electronic records storage system, there are a
number of accepted industry standards that can increase the
likelihood of long-term data accessibility. For example, the
non-proprietary American Standard Code for Information Interchange
(ASCII) has been a standard for text information since 1963 and is a
basic building block in practically every program involving text.
| It
is highly recommended that every textual record an agency
creates is reducible to the ASCII format. |
RTF (Rich Text Format) is another
transferable format. Its major advantage over ASCII is that it
retains spacing, bold, italic, and underlining commands when
transferring documents between most versions of Microsoft Word and
WordPerfect. RTF is also the default format for certain programs
like Microsoft’s Outlook e-mail software.
Hypertext Markup Language (HTML),
used for text on the Internet, also can be used as a medium of
exchange between word processing programs and other software
programs that display text. Most programs today automatically detect
HTML files and display them appropriately.
With regard to graphic files, since
1981 TIFF has become the standard, non-proprietary graphics
format and is widely used to transmit document information by
imaging systems, fax machines and software programs. However, even
though the Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) is a proprietary
standard, it has become the de facto standard for publishing
fully formatted documents on the Web. But in order to read these
documents a user must have a copy of the proprietary Adobe Acrobat
Reader, available free from Adobe, installed on their computer. The
creator of the document must have a copy of the full Adobe Acrobat
Writer installed on his/her computer. Adobe charges for the full
version of Adobe Acrobat. Unlike TIFF, PDF allows for the display of
the exact format of the original document on the Internet with all
graphics and text formatting intact.
The resolution of scanned images
shall be sufficient to permit the recording of an accurate image of
the public record. Agencies should refer to AIIM TR26-1993, Resolution
as it Relates to Photographic and Electronic Imaging for
guidance concerning resolution criteria. Standard office text
documents should be scanned at a minimum resolution of 200 dpi (dots
per inch). Drawings, maps and plans require 300 dpi, while
deteriorating documents or those with fine detail require 600 dpi to
capture the record. Many digital technicians believe that a good
image comes from a high-resolution scan that is scaled down to a
workable storage size. When deciding on scanning resolutions,
agencies should be guided by the law that requires a system that
"legibly reproduces the original record in all details."
Therefore, each agency should perform a visual quality control
evaluation of each scanned image and related index data before any
records are disposed of. Standards for ensuring scanner quality can
be found in ANSI/AIIM MS44-1988 (R1993), Recommended
Practice for Quality Control of Image Scanners.
When using optical disks, the system
should provide techniques for monitoring and reporting verification
of the records stored on a digital optical disk as found in ANSI/AIIM
MS59-1996, "Media Error Monitoring and Reporting
Techniques for Verification of Stored Data on Optical Digital Data
Disks." Each year the agency should sample five percent of the
images from both the primary and backup storage media to verify
continued accessibility. They should also use an indexing database
that provides for efficient retrieval, ease of use, and up-to-date
information about the digital images stored in the system.
Since it is impossible to determine
content merely by looking at a disk or tape, all digital media and
storage containers should be clearly labeled identifying the agency,
department, type of records, date span, system and software used,
any access restrictions and the retention period assigned by the
Local Records Commission. The agency should maintain specific,
detailed documentation about the contents as well as the system
specifications needed to access each tape or disk.
Managing Electronic
Records
No matter what media or file
formats are selected for creation and storage of digital documents,
a system is needed that can organize and reliably retrieve all
electronic information. Such a system is usually referred to as
Records Management Application software (RMA). The RMA software must
dependably catalog and index all of the documents and images and
quickly retrieve those objects. To retrieve individual documents,
each must be uniquely identified and indexed in a database. The
United States Department of Defense has adopted standards (DoD
5015.2-STD) for what this software must be able to do in various
file formats. It is suggested that Illinois agencies use only
electronic records management software that meets the DoD
5015.2-STD that can be found on the
National
Archives and Records Administration web site.
However, the Archivist of the United
States warns that government agencies must understand "the move
towards electronic recordkeeping is more complicated than simply
purchasing a 5015.2-certified records management application.
Further agency analysis needs to be carried out to evaluate
technical and business requirements that must be considered when
automating records management, including human factors, ease of
integration, scalability, system performance, reliability and
provider stability."
Choosing the Right
Vendor
The importance of selecting a
highly qualified vendor when planning and implementing a records
imaging and indexing system cannot be over-emphasized. In your
Request for Proposals demand evidence the vender has a track record
of successful projects of the type you wish to accomplish and that
they can provide you with some of the same staff that worked on
earlier projects. Confirm that the vendor has the financial, human
and other resources available to actually finish your project. In
your contract, consider requiring your vendor to:
- Deposit a copy of the
imaging/indexing system’s application software codes and
associated documentation in an escrow account with an
institution acceptable to the agency for transmission to the
agency if the vendor’s business fails. The vendor must verify
that the code is updated every year. If the vendor goes out of
business, the agency must be given a copy of the source code.
- Notify the agency about the
discontinuation of the imaging/indexing system or its product
line, changes or upgrades to the imaging system, or the
cessation of service support for the digital system.
Summary
- "Regardless of physical form
or characteristics," any information produced or received
by a local government agency (including some e-mail) may be a
record. For examples of non-records see the Local Records Act,
50 ILCS 205/3. [Agencies using Internet web pages to transact
government business need to retain only the data from each
transaction and not capture a "picture" of the web
form used during each transaction. However, for legal
protection, agencies should save examples/documentation of each
web transaction page after the form has been modified or
replaced.]
- No public record may be disposed
of without the permission of the appropriate Local Records
Commission. Contact (217) 782-7075 for information about how to
adhere to this process.
- Just as record keepers in the past
have used safes and locks to provide security for valuable
records, agencies today must ensure that only those persons that
are entitled have access to digital information. Security
systems should be in place to ensure that electronic records
cannot be altered, deleted or changed without documentation.
- For the past two thousand years,
nothing has helped information survive natural and man-made
disasters more than redundancy, the preservation of the same
records in different formats at different locations. All
electronic records should be backed up in some manner at a
remote site.
- Digital information creation,
storage and preservation systems are constantly changing. It is
the responsibility of the local government agency to keep public
records accessible as long as required by law. Agencies must
plan for future refreshing, migration, emulation or reformatting
of existing digital records and budgets should anticipate and
reflect the necessary expense of this process.
- Extensive metadata (data about
your digital data) will help minimize the risk of your digital
information becoming obsolete. Information should be kept
separately from your digital records that identifies the record
group, who created it, when created, and what technical
environment is needed to access it.
- In the near future there will be a
need for local governments to send and receive information in
digital formats to and from the public and other government
agencies. Anticipating this, local governments should adopt the
most universally accepted digital formats and systems in an
effort to be compatible with other systems.
Questions about the creation,
preservation and disposal of all local government records,
regardless of physical characteristics or format, should be
addressed to the Local Records Unit, Illinois State Archives, (217)
782-7075, e-mail:
Illinois State Archives
Contact Form
(Choose Records Management as
the subject).
GLOSSARY
ASCII (American Standard Code for
Information Exchange) – The
ASCII character set is the basic set of characters that can be
displayed on a PC screen. When text documents are converted from
their original word processor file formats to ASCII they lose all
special formatting such as bold, italics, and underlining.
CD-ROM (Compact Disk – Read Only Memory)
– A CD-based storage medium that cannot be altered.
Emulation – The
approach to save digital information by focusing on the applications
software rather than on the files containing information. Those in
favor of emulation want to build software that mimics every type of
application that has ever been written for every type of file format
and make them run on whatever the current computing environment is.
Both migration and emulation require refreshing of
data.
ERMS (Electronic Records Management System) –
An automated method of maintaining and making accessible electronic
records that includes retention values and disposal documentation.
GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) –
A graphics format using small images that are to be displayed in a
Web browser.
HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) –
A tag-based language used to display text on the Internet.
JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) –
JPEG is a graphics file format that utilizes compression to reduce
large image files into files that can be more easily stored and
transferred. JPEG files are usually used for display of photographs
on the Internet and also for digital photography.
Migration of Digital
Data – Involves periodically moving files from a previous
file-encoding format to another that is useable in a more modern
computing environment. Migration seeks to limit the problem of files
encoded in a wide variety of old file formats that have existed over
time by gradually bringing all former formats into a limited number
of contemporary formats.
PDF (Portable Document Format) –
A proprietary format owned by Adobe Corp. that has become the de
facto standard for displaying documents and forms on the Web.
Records Management –
Systematic control of all recorded information (regardless of
physical form or characteristics) created or received by an
organization. The system’s objectives are to provide accurate
information to the people who need it in a timely manner at the
lowest possible cost from the moment of record creation, through
safe storage and maintenance, to legal documented disposal.
Refreshing Digital Data
– Periodically moving a file from one physical storage medium to
another to avoid the physical decay or the obsolescence of that
medium. Since physical storage media (such as CD-ROMs) decay, and
because technological changes make older storage devices (such as
8" floppy drives) inaccessible to new computers, some ongoing
form of refreshing is likely to be necessary for many years to come.
RTF (Rich Text Format) –
An electronic text format that allows for preservation of special
formatting such as bold, italics, spacing and underlining.
Considered the best file format to save a document that will be read
by a different work processor program.
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) –
A raster-based (bitmapped) graphics file format that maintains high
resolution. TIFF files are much larger that JPEGs but allow for the
highest fidelity to the original. TIFF files are often converted to
JPEG files for display on the WEB.
WORM (Write Once, Read Many) –
Any compact disk system that imprints information that can not be
altered at a later date.
Websites on Imaging and
Electronic Documents
http://www.cyberdriveillinois.com/departments/archives/records_management/recman.html
(Illinois State Archives) State and Local Government Records
Management laws, rules and forms.
http://www.cyberdriveillinois.com/departments/library/who_we_are/bestpractices.html
(The Illinois State Library) Best Practices for Digital Imaging and
Model Requests for Digital Imaging Proposals.
http://nedcc.org/oldnedccsite/digital/dighome.htm
(Northeast Document Conservation Center) HANDBOOK FOR DIGITAL PROJECTS: A
Management Tool for Preservation and Access, First Edition. Maxine
K. Sitts, Editor. Northeast Document Conservation Center: Andover,
Massachusetts, 2000.
http://www.oclc.org/programs/ourwork/past/digpresstudy/final-report.pdf
(The Commission on Preservation and Access and the Research
Libraries Group, Inc.) "Preserving Digital Information: Report
of the Task Force on Archiving of Digital Information."
http://www.archives.gov
(National Archives and Administration) – Records Management
policies, regulations, publications and laws relating to records
management for federal agencies.
http://www.arma.org
(Association of Records Managers and Administrators)
http://www.aiim.org/standards.asp?ID=28639
(Association for Information and Image Management)
http://www.osta.org
(Optical Storage Technology Association) – Publications and
references on optical storage issues.
http://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/initiatives/dod-standard-5015-2.html
DoD 5015.2-STD Department of Defense records management
application software standards.
http://www.cslib.org/publicrecords/optical.htm
(Connecticut State Library) –"Standards for the Use of
Imaging Technology for Storage, Retrieval, and Disposition of Public
Records."
http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/waisidx_06/36cfr1234_06.html
(National Archives and Records Administration) Electronic Records Management Guidelines.
Download the Guidelines
for Using Electronic Records
The Guidelines for Using
Electronic Records can be downloaded in Adobe Acrobat
format. The guidelines can be viewed using Adobe Acrobat Reader 3.0 or
later in your web browser or the file can be saved to disk and used
with Adobe Acrobat Reader 3.0 outside your web browser. Macintosh
and Windows versions of Acrobat Reader may be downloaded free of
charge from Adobe.
| These
Guidelines have been reviewed and accepted by the Downstate
Local Records Commission and the Local Records Commission of
Cook County. |
Last Revision May 1, 2007
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