
| Archives & Records Management Handbook |
Chapter 2 Records Management General Information
Every office and department on campus is faced with problems of storage space, as well as decisions about which records to keep and which to discard. The Oregon State University Archives and Records Management Program assists offices and departments with these problems and decisions. It strives to achieve economy and efficiency in the creation, use, maintenance, and disposal of public records. Records management also affords legal protection for the institution as well as satisfying federal and state statutory requirements.
Economy
After personnel costs, records keeping is the largest expenditure
of government. Record creation, maintenance, filing, office storage
space, filing supplies, and equipment all contribute to the high
cost of keeping records. Certain strategies can greatly reduce
these costs.
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Efficiency
Good records management makes records keeping easier and more
productive. Having fewer files in the office filing system makes
individual record retrieval and refiling easier and faster, and
reduces the number of misfiles. Nearly 14 percent of all records
are misfiled at some time, at a cost of more than $165 per misfile.
A file check-out procedure for both active and inactive files
also makes refiling easier and more accurate.
Legal Protection
Records management reduces nuisance litigation by reducing the
quantity of records that attorneys may subpoena through the legal
process of discovery. Following records retention schedules assures
courts, litigants, and auditors that records are being disposed
of properly and in a routine manner, not maliciously or in a capricious
way.
Statutory Requirements
Records management is mandated by state law. Several state statutes
and administrative rules pertain to public records:
| Oregon Administrative Rule (OAR) 166-30-016 states that each state agency will establish a records management program by designating an agency records officer to "organize and coordinate records scheduling, retirement, central storage, and destruction." At Oregon State University, the University Archivist is the designated agency records officer and is charged with implementing records management policies. | ||
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Oregon
Revised Statute (ORS) 192.105 allows the State Archivist
to authorize the retention or disposition of public records in
the custody of state agencies, based upon the legal, administrative,
and research value of the records. The statute also directs the
State Archivist to establish rules for the retention and disposition
of public records. |
Men in an Office Training class, School of Commerce, ca. 1923. Office training was not limited to women. Anyone seeking a bachelor's degree in the School of Commerce was required to take at least twelve credits of Office Training classes -- six credits each of Typing and Office Methods & Appliances. [OSU Archives #882.] |
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| ORS 192.420 gives every Oregonian the right to inspect any public record of a public body in the state; exceptions are noted in ORS 192.496 and 192.501 to 192.505. ORS 192.430 requires custodians of public records to furnish reasonable access to the records in their offices during regular business hours, and to furnish facilities for reviewing the records. | ||