§1.17
Archives and Records Management

Responsible Manager


Section Renumbered 8/06

  1. General
  2. Legal Requirements
  3. Responsibilities
  4. Program Components and Services
    1. Training and Workshops
    2. Records Inventory
    3. Records Scheduling
    4. Program Survey
    5. Information in Electronic and Optical Form
    6. Vital Records
    7. Disaster Recovery
    8. Disposition of Personal Papers and Official Records
    9. Privacy and Access Laws
    10. Access to Laboratory Records
    11. Quality Assurance
    12. Central Records Holding Area

A. GENERAL

The Laboratory and the University of California recognize the importance of appropriate treatment of records. Every Laboratory employee has responsibilities for Laboratory records. Records management is a line-management function at Berkeley Lab, and the Laboratory Archives and Records Office assists line management in meeting its records management responsibilities.

Records management provides a rational basis for making decisions about recorded information, including what should be saved and what should be discarded. These decisions are necessary to support the legal, fiscal, administrative, and other research needs of the Laboratory, University, federal government, State of California, and general public. The ultimate goal of records management is to identify and maintain records that adequately and properly document the organization, functions, policies, decisions, procedures, and essential transactions of projects and research.

Additional information about records-keeping requirements can be obtained by calling the Laboratory Archives and Records Office.

B. LEGAL REQUIREMENTS

All records generated by the Laboratory under terms of the DOE/LBNL Contract with DOE are considered institutional. As such, all Laboratory records are owned by the United States government, with the exception of the University's fiscal and administrative records.

According to the DOE/LBNL Contract, "University administration and fiscal records" are owned by the University of California and are therefore subject to the California Public Records Act and the Information Practices Act. All other Laboratory records are federal records. Four primary laws relate to federal records management: the Federal Records Act of 1950, as amended; the Freedom of Information Act; the Privacy Act; and the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980.

The Laboratory records management program is mandatory.

C. RESPONSIBILITIES

The Archives and Records Office must:

Each Laboratory division/department must:

D. PROGRAM COMPONENTS AND SERVICES

1. Training and Workshops

The Archives and Records Office offers training and workshops on records management, including records disposition, vital records protection, files management, electronic records retention scheduling, and disaster preparedness.

2. Records Inventory

All Laboratory divisions, departments, and research groups are responsible for completing and keeping current inventories for their records, and should share the information electronically with the Archives and Records Office.

3. Records Scheduling

Records must be maintained according to the retention schedules approved by the National Archives and Records Administration. The schedule is the legal instrument by which records are evaluated and decisions are made about their storage, preservation, availability, or transfer to the National Archives and Records Administration. The Archives and Records Office is responsible for developing retention schedules that accurately reflect the nature and content of the Laboratory's records.

After the schedule is prepared, it is sent to DOE and the National Archives for review and approval. It is critical to note that records may not be destroyed unless they are covered by an approved schedule.

4. Program Survey

To establish accountability and to assess the Laboratory's records management practices, the Archives and Records Office will survey each division, department, project, and research group's area using National Archives and Records Administration guidelines and requirements. Reports of the records surveys will be given to the Records Liaison Officer and appropriate line management. Line management and the Records Liaison Officer are responsible for correcting the deficiencies within a reasonable amount of time.

5. Information in Electronic and Optical Form

Scientific and technical records may consist of laboratory notebooks, raw observational or experimental data, text files, software, or modeling and design systems recorded on electronic or optical media. According to the law and National Archives and Records Administration regulations, records may consist of any media, including microfilm, magnetic tape, floppy and hard disks, and optical cards and disks. Information on these media must be covered by an approved records schedule and handled according to the terms of the schedule.

Federal law and regulations require the Laboratory to schedule electronic and optical record retention by information system (including inputs, outputs, documentation, and magnetic or optical media). Unscheduled records or records scheduled for permanent retention in hard copy may not be destroyed without National Archives approval. Before a division, department, project, or research group creates electronic or optical data systems, the records liaison officer should contact the Archives and Records Office about disposition requirements.

6. Vital Records

Vital records should be inventoried and identified. Scientific groups and departments must take appropriate measures to protect vital records.

7. Disaster Recovery

If records are damaged by fire, water, or other natural or manmade hazards, the Laboratory Archivist and Records Manager should be contacted to assess the damage, determine whether in-house methods can be used to recover the information, or find additional records disaster recovery expertise.

8. Disposition of Personal Papers and Official Records

The DOE/LBNL Contract between the University of California and DOE specifies that all records, except the University's fiscal and administrative records, are federal records. Individuals do not own Laboratory records and do not have the authority to dispose of them or transfer records to another institution. If individuals maintain personal files at the Laboratory, they must not mix Laboratory records with their personal records. Individuals may make convenience copies of appropriate Laboratory records for their personal files in reasonable quantities.

9. Privacy and Access Laws

Laboratory records, except for the University's fiscal and administrative records, are subject to the procedures outlined in the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act. University fiscal and administrative records are subject to the California Public Records Act and the Information Practices Act. For assistance and clarification about these laws, call the Archives and Records Office.

10. Access to Laboratory Records

Laboratory records that are permanent, historically valuable, and noncurrent are open to research, subject to Freedom of Information and Privacy Act provisions. Researchers are encouraged to call the Archives and Records Office to make arrangements to use these records.

11. Quality Assurance

Laboratory Quality Assurance Policy (LBNL/PUB-3111) addresses quality assurance records. The records liaison officer must carry out records responsibilities according to procedures established by quality assurance guidelines, Laboratory policy and procedure, and federal laws and regulations. The Archives and Records Office will assist divisions, principal investigators, departments, projects, and research groups in understanding and meeting their quality assurance records obligations.

12. Central Records Holding Area

The Laboratory Archives and Records Office operates the Laboratory's Central Records Holding Area. All offices are required to retire semiactive records series to the Archives and Records Office. The Central Rrecords Holding Area facility standards are set forth in 36 CFR 1228.222 and 1228.224, and ASME-NQA-1 §17.


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