To delete or keep: E-mail is problem
By Alan Edwards
Deseret Morning News, Sunday, August 8, 2004
Hold it right there, pal.
I can see that finger quivering over the "delete" button. But you'd
better think carefully before you zap that e-mail message into cyberspace.
Rules requiring and regulating the retention of e-mail are proliferating,
almost daily it seems. And businesses and government entities at all levels are
still struggling with what and what not to keep.
Congress handed accounting firms stringent new electronic record-keeping rules
in the wake of the Enron scandal. And just this past week, the National
Archives announced that it is poised to pay two firms more than $20 million to
design an electronic records archiving system.
That's just the design phase. The actual building of the system will be worth
hundreds of millions more.
"The entire records management profession is grappling with how to handle
e-mail" and other electronic records such as Web page content, word
processing documents, spreadsheets and the like, said Salt Lake County records
manager Terry Ellis.
Grapple with it the wrong way and
you'll pay. Prudential Insurance was fined $1 million in 1997 for deleting
e-mails that it shouldn't have. Then-governor Mike Leavitt was sued in 2002 for
routinely deleting his e-mails. The Legislature has attempted to come to grips
with what to save and what to toss, with mixed results.
"Everyone is so focused on how to handle e-mail because it's so
pervasive," said state archivist Patricia Smith-Mansfield.
Smith-Mansfield's department has been trying to come up with a policy governing
e-mail retention for two years, with no conclusion so far. Salt Lake County has
been doing the same thing almost as long.
To be fair, it's not as easy as it might seem: An explosion of electronic
communication has complicated the already complicated tangle of state and
federal laws regarding record retention.
Consider the nature of e-mail. Is it akin to a phone call fleeting and
ephemeral or more like a written letter substantial and fixed?
There are still a lot of people who tend to think of e-mail as just a
communication tool, like a telephone," Ellis said. "But it can
generate a record, too."
Another problem is that the courts have ruled that "meta-data" on
electronic records is part of the record and must be kept too. Meta-data
consists of things such as when and by whom the record was created, who saw it
and what servers it has been on or sent to.
There are almost as many different e-mail record-keeping policies as there are companies
and government agencies. Salt Lake City employees, for example, may delete
e-mail that is personal or routine (what experts refer to as
"transitory"), but they must save anything relating to programs,
policies or decision making. Steve Fawcett, deputy
director of management services, said he is unsure whether the program retains
meta-data along with the messages.
Salt Lake County is looking at a system whereby employees would decide whether
the e-mail is a "non-record" (spam or personal; delete whenever you
want); "short-term record" (routine correspondence; keep up to 30
days); "medium-term record" (non-policy matters; keep two years); or
"long-term records" (policy or programs, keep indefinitely).
Unlike the city's system, which acts automatically once the employee chooses
the category, the county employee sending or receiving the record would have to
manually create electronic folders and put the records in them, or print them
out.
Absent installation of a $50,000 to $500,000 software system, Ellis said no
meta-data would be preserved.
Certainly no meta-data is preserved in the system the governor's office adopted
after it was sued: Print the e-mails out and
physically file them.
Call it generational record lag.
"You still have a whole generation of workers who still (are more
comfortable) with paper," Smith-Mansfield said. "A generation from
now, who knows what they'll be doing."
And
perhaps buy OpenIMS to be sure
and it wont cost you $20
million.