N.M. Admin. Code § 1.13.3.11

Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 21, November 5, 2024
Section 1.13.3.11 - SYSTEM RELIABILITY, THE CREATION AND CAPTURE OF ELECTRONIC RECORDS AND THE MAINTENANCE AND ACCESSIBILITY OF THE RECORDS
A. The electronic records system should be administered and configured with the best practices in mind for information and resource management to ensure the reliability of the records being produced. Towards this goal of reliability the life cycle of the records shall be taken into account where some records may finite life spans others may have an indefinite life may have to be viewed or regenerated forever. To this end there are four aspects: preservation- the information shall be in a form that can be physically preserved; the information shall possess the quality of accessibility; the information shall be able to be read (readability); and the information shall retain its comprehensibility - to be read and understood in their original context without question.
(1) Information shall be physically preserved. The information in an electronic system shall be preserved in a physical media that is of sufficient quality and capacity to contain the information being preserved. There are many ways to accomplish this and the commission of public records (state records center and archives) does not endorse, warrant, certify, or approve any particular hardware or software product or product combination used in any electronic records management activity. The implementation of these processes, including the specifications for products used therein, remains at the discretion of the individual public agency. However, the records should be full and accurate to the extent necessary to: facilitate action by current and future employees, at all levels; allow for proper scrutiny of the conduct of business by anyone authorized to undertake such scrutiny; and protect the financial, legal and other rights of the agency, its clients and anyone else affected by its actions and decisions. The agency shall provide convincing, documented evidence that the electronic records were created, protected, and otherwise managed in accordance with systems and procedures designed to ensure the reliability, accuracy, and security of both the records and the process or system used to produce the records. Many paper records are being eliminated when the information has been placed on magnetic, optical, or other data processing media. In these cases, the information on the data processing medium shall be retained for the length of time specified in records retention and disposition schedules and is subject to the same confidentiality and access restrictions as paper records.
(2) Information shall be accessible. When conducting transactions electronically, the first challenge is to maintain records in a way that will enable retrieval of all documents relevant to a transaction when they are needed. The second challenge is to ensure that the records are not retained for any longer than necessary, in order to avoid both overloading systems and to avoid indiscriminate dumping. A special problem with electronic records is that they lack familiar physical and visual clues about their origins, such as official letterhead, or their authenticity, such as written signatures. Special measures shall be taken to ensure that they are also reliable and authentic. Paper record-keeping systems have traditionally been employed to file letters, minutes, reports, spreadsheets, invoices, notes, etc. These systems employ classified and indexed files at a subject or transaction level to consolidate and co-locate the documents generated or received in the course of a business activity. Separate folders provide a business context and link the individual documents to a particular transaction and into the wider agency record-keeping system. In recent years, agencies have adopted records management, document management, workflow and imaging software. Regardless of the technology, however, the objective remains the same: capture records so that they can be easily retrieved at a later date, understood, and interpreted as evidence of what transpired in an agency.
(a) the record shall have information content that is (and continues to be) an accurate reflection of what actually occurred at a particular time in the function, activity or transaction in question; and
(b) be able to be reconstructed electronically when required, so that each component is brought together as a whole and presented in an intelligible way; and
(c) possess a unique identifier or indexing that facilitates in the access of the information through the use of folder naming conventions or through searches or queries; and
(d) have been officially incorporated (either actively or passively) into an agency's or person's record-keeping system.
(3) Information shall be readable. Electronic records may exist independently of their physical format; however, by reducing records to their essential characteristics, we can allow for the existence of records, regardless of the current technology. Systems shall link the content of a record to its administrative or business context. In electronic environments, the essential characteristics rarely sit neatly together in a single, format-based package. Though all of the elements of an electronic record may exist within a single computer file, they may also be distributed across the entire state network. The integrity of these elements and the links between them are much more important than where they physically reside. If one is not able to place records in their appropriate administrative context, then they have seriously diminished value as evidence. In order for records to serve as evidence, three essential characteristics shall be maintained. Whenever one of the characteristics is altered, the ability of records to accurately reflect the activities of an agency is diminished. This means that records shall posses the following essential characteristics:
(a) content, that which conveys information (e.g. text, data, symbols, numerals, images, and sound);
(b) structure, appearance and arrangement of the content (e.g. relationships between fields, entities, language, style, fonts, page and paragraph breaks, links and other editorial devices);
(c) context, be able to be placed in context so that the circumstances of its creation and subsequent use by an agency or person can be understood in conjunction with its information content.
(4) Information shall retain its context. One of the major differences between electronic records and those on traditional media is that electronic records are not human-readable, thus their physical appearance alone does not provide sufficient information to determine their origin, purpose, uses or other aspects of the context in which they were created and maintained. Maintaining content, structure and context of electronic records is, therefore, both more vital and difficult than with traditional records. Meeting these conditions requires high quality records management and a sustained commitment, on the part of state agencies and the SRCA.
B. The creation and capture of electronic records.
(1) Strategies for capturing electronic records will differ, depending on the opportunities presented by an agency's hardware and software environment. The complexity of electronic records and the rapid acceleration of new formats and technologies provides the background for the creation of the myriad of electronic records that are being created from simple text records to modeling simulations. Even records that might be perceived as simple record formats can contain a complexity that underlies the information, for example a spreadsheet can be viewed on a monitor as figures; however, within the spreadsheet formulas can be found. Additionally, some records may require several elements at one to become a coherent record, for example a multimedia presentation consisting of audio, text, and video. The organizational environment will influence the point at which records are captured. This will include perceptions about what constitutes a record, assignment of responsibility, agency requirements to create records, and staff understanding of the technology involved and when and where a record should be captured and when a draft or non-record crosses the threshold and becomes a record.
(a) Local environment, where the initial work is done to create a draft. Often time, in the creation of correspondence the local environment will hold a copy of a finalized product, which is then printed, and the official copy is placed in a paper folder. What remains in the local environment is then a copy and can be considered a non-record.
(b) Group environment, where recognizable drafts are produced and maybe shared with peers and unit management. The record creator is responsible for capturing his or her own records and assigning management practices to them at the point of creation. This could be implemented as a screen the user fills in before documents can be saved or messages can be sent. A user interface could be designed so that users can choose between a number of icons representing business tasks or style templates, e.g., "send policy" or "make appointments." The choice of icon can engage the appropriate application, distribution lists, style sheets, and records disposal authorities. The sender thus affects scheduling but need not make conscious decisions about assigning retention periods to records.
(c) Corporate environment, where centralized applications such as databases and corporate level wide information are found.
(2) The reliability of a record, whether it is a traditional paper based record, analog or digital is dependent to varying degrees on a level of competence or skill of the creator of the record and formal training or support programs can ensure that staff understand and adhere to established policies and procedures. In the past, the need for grammar, spelling and typing skills were required in the business realm, currently the entry level skill of a person in a business environment requires a rudimentary understanding of computer systems. To this end varying levels of training, education, and skill are required from those creating records to those who are administering or maintaining electronic records systems. Training for the management of electronic records, all records creators should have, based on their level of responsibility in their respective agency, training in basic records management, advanced records management and archival preservation.
(3) Audit trails can provide a means to assist in accomplishing security related objectives such as individual accountability, the reconstruction of events, intrusion detection, and problem identification. An audit trail should include sufficient information to establish what events occurred and who or what caused them. The audit trail can also be used to document the reliability of a system as well as attest to the integrity of the records maintained in the system. Ideally, the audit trail should be generated by the system to include such things as the transaction, maintenance and disposition of records as well as the modification of records, fields or of the system itself.
(4) The storage of records on electronic media. Draft finales (or official copies of record) may be created and maintained solely in electronic media. Electronic records with a set retention that can be destroyed within 10 years may be sent to the SRCA for storage in the electronic media vault and upon meeting their retention may be destroyed by the SRCA per 1.13.30 NMAC Destruction of Public Records.
(5) Draft finales (or official copies of record) may be created and maintained solely in electronic media.
(6) Preservation- the records shall be in a form that can be physically preserved. Records created and maintained on local hard drive(s) are the working copies or draft copies of official records created by and for state government. Once a draft final is produced (paper, microfilm, electronic), these working copies or draft copies are no longer needed and are considered non-records. Final drafts shall be generated in paper, microform, or electronic media. Draft copies or working copies shall be transferred to recycle bin for destruction after no longer needed for reference.
(7) Records may be created and maintained on a system network drive(s). Records placed on a network drive(s) are meant to be shared by the users of the network. Users not creating a record (document) may only have read and copy access to the record. Records on the network drive(s) may be draft copies or final drafts of agency documents. Electronic records from outside sources may also be placed on an agency's network drive(s) as a means of disseminating information. Records placed on network drive(s) are not the agency's official copies of record. They are placed on network drives to disseminate information only and are considered non-records. Non-records may be destroyed by the custodial agency when the record no longer has any informational value to the agency. However, if a record has been created on a network drive, it shall be copied to paper, microform or electronic media and maintained until its retention has been met. To ensure that records maintained on a network drive(s) are accessible and to ensure that proper records and information management principles are followed, the following guideline shall be adhered to.
(a) Electronic file folders shall be created on the network drive(s) for filing electronic records (documents). The electronic records may be draft copies (working copies) or draft finals.
(b) Names of electronic file folders shall correspond to record series listed and described in records retention and disposition schedules issued by the state records center and archives.
(c) If final draft has been created on network drive, generate copy in paper, microform, or electronic media and retain elsewhere until minimum retention has been attained. When retention has been met, destroy record per 1.13.30 NMAC Destruction of Public Records and Non-records.
(d) Electronic files that are located on a network share and are deleted from a user's desktop computer, they are deleted permanently and are never transferred to a recycle bin. For information on the destruction of records, see 1.13.30 NMAC Destruction of Public Records and Non-records.
(8) To insure the agency always has available the necessary electronic records to conduct its agency's program requirements, agency shall backup all electronic records and databases at appropriate time periods and in an appropriate manner to insure that electronic records and databases are protected from accidental or deliberate loss. Electronic records and databases should be backed up, at minimum, on a weekly basis. If major changes or additions are made to electronic records or database groups during the week, backups should be made immediately instead of waiting for the normally scheduled backup. Electronic records and databases that are seldom changed or updated would need to back up only as major changes to the information occur. For cycle rotation of system backup refer to RRDS for General Administrative Records, operations system backup1.15.2.302 NMAC.
(9) Different backup media (floppies, reels, cassettes, optical disks, disk packs, USB flash drives) retain information for different periods of time before deterioration of the information may begin. The longer the backup media will be retained without replacement of information, the more stable the backup media needs to be.
C. The maintenance and accessibility of electronic records. Agencies shall safeguard all electronic records to insure that individuals do not alter, erase, or in any way change the content of the record for fraudulent purposes. In addition to safeguarding against deliberate tampering with records, agencies shall also guard against storage media deterioration and technology changes that can leave electronic records inaccessible over a period of time because of hardware or software obsolescence. To eliminate the possibility of creating a situation where information can no longer be retrieved, agencies shall provide for future record accessibility by migrating all electronic records when there are major changes to the next generation of hardware or software; or migrating only current electronic records to new hardware or software, and converting records not migrated to "human readable form".
(1) The migration of information on electronic media. Agencies shall safeguard all electronic records to insure that individuals do not alter, erase, or in any way change the content of the record for fraudulent purposes. In addition to safeguarding against deliberate tampering with records, agencies shall also guard against storage media deterioration and technology changes that can leave electronic records inaccessible over a period of time because of hardware or software obsolescence. To eliminate the possibility of creating a situation where information can no longer be retrieved, agencies shall provide for future record accessibility by:
(a) migrating all electronic records when there are major changes to the next generation of hardware or software; or
(b) migrating only current electronic records to new hardware or software, and converting records not migrated to "human readable form".
(2) Backup of electronic records. To insure the agency always has available the necessary electronic records to conduct its agency's program requirements, agency shall backup all electronic records and databases at appropriate time periods and in an appropriate manner to insure that electronic records and databases are protected from accidental or deliberate loss.
(a) Backup frequency. Electronic records and databases should be backed up, at minimum, on a weekly basis. If major changes or additions are made to electronic records or database groups during the week, backups should be made immediately instead of waiting for the normally scheduled backup. Electronic records and databases that are seldom changed or updated would need to back up only as major changes to the information occur. For cycle rotation of system backup refer to RRDS for General Administrative Records, operations system backup1.15.2.302 NMAC.
(b) Backup media. Different backup media (floppies, reels, cassettes, optical disks, disk packs, USB flash drives) retain information for different periods of time before deterioration of the information may begin. The longer the backup media will be retained without replacement of information, the more stable the backup media needs to be.
(3) Permanent, permanent-archival, or long-term records on electronic media. Permanent public records are either maintained permanently by and at the custodial agency or by the custodial agency in an appropriate environmental setting. Permanent-archival records are scheduled in the custodial agency's records retention and disposition schedule to be transferred to the SRCA permanently or transferred to the SRCA for review and final disposition.

N.M. Admin. Code § 1.13.3.11

1.13.3.11 NMAC - Rp, 1.13.3.11 NMAC, 6/30/2008