a. Usage
University offices are encouraged, when possible and appropriate, to use all available electronic tecnologies that increase efficiency, reduce expenses, or otherwise improve the methods by which university records are created, processed, retrieved, or retained.
b. Reliability of Recordkeeping Systems
Electronic records shall be maintained in reliable recordkeeping systems. Recordkeeping systems must meet legal requirements, national and international standards, and best practices for recordkeeping in an electronic environment. Electronic recordkeeping systems shall have written policies, assigned responsibilities, and formal methodologies that fully and accurately document the overall management of the system. Further, electronic recordkeeping systems shall include adequate system controls such as audit trails, the routine testing of software and hardware, and procedures for measuring the accuracy of data input and output.
c. Retention
All university records, including electronic records, shall be retained or disposed of in accordance with approved records retention policies as described in university records retention schedules. All electronic recordkeeping systems must be capable of deleting records in order to be in compliance with established records retention policies.
d. Preservation
Electronic records shall be preserved without loss of any vital information for as long as required by law, policy, or best practice. Future usability of electronic records shall be ensured through the development of migration or conversion plans designed to update hardware, software, or storage media. Both the content of the record as well as the associated metadata, which provided the context and structure of the record, must be preserved.
e. Retrievability
Electronic records shall be accessible and retrievable in a timely manner throughout their retention period. They shall be easily accessible in the normal course of business in a usuable format, and shall be searchable and retrievable for reference and secondary purposes such as audits, legal proceedings, and historical research.
f. Security
University officies shall take measures to prevent unauthorized access to private and confidential electronic records by identifying records that are subject to legislative, regulatory, and instiutional policy restrictions. Further, university offices shall define the rules governing access to private and confidential records within the context of state open records laws and federal FOIA requirements.
g. E-Mail
Electronic mail is to be managed like any other university document and based on the content of the message. If the message meets the criteria of a type of university record as defined in university retention schedules, (e.g. academic program record, financial record, administrative record, personnel record, legal record etc.). It shall be retained as per the retention policy described in the records retention schedule. Please refer to the records retention website at www.wright.edu/cats/rr/ or contact Special Collections and Archives for copies of university records retention schedules.
h. Scanning
Document imaging is the conversion of paper-based documents to digital images, making them readily accessible electronically and thereby enhancing the business processes and workflows of university offices. Once imaged, the original paper records may be destroyed only after measures have been taken to ensure the digital images are protected and accessible for the time period stipulated in the records retention schedule, as required by state law. Of particular concern are imaged records that need to be retained for a long period of time, i.e. 10 years or longer, as digital images present significant preservation challenges over the long term and must be managed accordingly to very specific procedures. For any office where scanned images are to be considered as official records, no original paper records may be disposed of until a 100% quality check of each scanned document is completed to verify document authenticity and completeness. University offices interested in pursuing digital imaging projects are to do so in close consultation with CaTS and in accordance with established State of Ohio Digital Image Guidelines to ensure the information remains available for the legally required retention period. More information on specific prodecures and legal guidelines for document imaging best practices can be found at: http://ohsweb.ohiohistory.org/ohioerc/index.php?title=Guidelines