Basically, the documents on your desk, on your PC or network, and in your file cabinets are one of three things:
Still not certain what's a record and what isn't? Then work through the following three step process:
Step 1: Determine the purpose, value, and adequacy of the documentation.
What is the purpose of the documentation?
- Was the material mandated by statute, administrative rule, or any other state or federal regulation?
- Does the material support a financial or legal claim or obligation?
- Is the material required to operate the department's programs or provide program support functions?
- Was the material created or received in the conduct or transaction of official University business?
What is the value of the documentation?
- Does the material have administrative, operational, fiscal, legal or evidential value?
- Does the material have historical, research, or information value?
Is the documentation adequate?
- Does the material provide evidence of, or verify:
- the department's actions that ensure its continuity?
- the department's actions that demonstrate the consistency of those actions?
- formulation of policies, procedures, or decisions?
- board, committee, or staff meeting minutes?
- Does the material protect University and individual rights and interests (financial, legal, or other)?
- Does the material provide information required by statute, or any other state or federal regulation?
Step 2: Ask yourself the following series of questions:
- Have you answered "yes" to any of the questions in Step 1?
- YES - Go to question 2
- No - Go to question 5
- Are you or your department the creator or office of record for such documentation?
- YES - Go to Official Records
- No - Go to question 3
- Did you comment or take action on the document?
- YES - Go to question 4
- No - Go to Non-Record Materials
- Is the retention of the document necessary to support the decision trail of your comment or action?
- YES - Go to Official Records
- No - Go to Non-Record Materials
- Have you answered "no" to all the questions in Step 1?
- YES - Go to question 6
- No - Go to question 2
- Does the material consist of non-official or private information which pertains solely to an individual's own affairs and does not relate to or have an effect upon the conduct of the department's business?
- YES - Go to Personal Papers
- NO - Go to Non-Record Materials
You may dispose of non-record materials when you no longer need them.
Treat personal papers in the same manner as non-record materials.
Office, division, or department that is responsible for maintaining the record copy of the material.
Activities associated with the department's primary functions as well as activities that document administrative matters.
This refers to the fact that the content and context of the material is what determines whether it's a record or not. The physical form, media, or format is irrelevant. Even a sticky note can be a record if it documents the official transaction of business.