The Keeping of Business Records for Law,
Audit and Archives:
A Report on the Experts' Meeting
June 10-11, 1999
Ottawa, Ontario
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
I. Introduction
II. Day One:
Presentations by Experts
III. Day Two: Opening Plenary
IV. Reports from the Breakout Sessions
V. Final Plenary Discussion
VI. A Proposed Forward Agenda
Annex One: Terms of
Reference
Annex Two: Meeting
Agenda
Annex Three: List of
Participants
It is widely recognized that the keeping of authentic and
reliable records presents a significant challenge for the legal, audit, and
archival communities, among others. On
June 10-11, thirty experts drawn from these three communities met at the
National Archives in Ottawa to consider the multitude of issues at stake in
this area.
The legal
community is concerned not only about the admissibility of electronic
records as evidence in a court of law, but more generally about legal
authenticity of records for purposes such as electronic commerce or ordinary
interchange among people. The
legal community is also concerned, as it should be, about the validity of
electronic documents during their whole life cycle, in order to provide the
citizens with sufficient legal security to enter into contracts and other
business without having to go t the courts to determine whether the document
that expresses the deal or the contract is valid.
This is related to the concern of those involved in the
development of electronic commerce applications
where the formulation of requirements for the transmission and management of
authentic and reliable electronic business records has been difficult.
The audit
community is concerned about the capability of organizations to create and
maintain audit trails of their activities within an electronic environment. The
challenge of keeping authentic and reliable records of Year 2000 conversions in
anticipation of potential litigation and audit is but one of several examples
of why this concern has been raised.
The archival
community is concerned about the preservation and long term accessibility
of electronic records that have been designated as having archival value. How
can these be maintained as authentic and reliable records in the face of
changing software and hardware technologies?
The major conclusions from the discussions at the experts’
meeting were the following.
- The legal, audit/evaluation, and archival professions share
common perspectives on the attributes of records authenticity in the electronic
age.
- Yet most senior policy makers, managers of business
activities, chief information officers and others are largely unaware of the
issues associated with the management of records or with records authenticity.
- Policies and standards, especially those which have formal
sanction (e.g. via a nationally or internationally recognized standards
development process), would be helpful to address the issues.
- Existing initiatives in each of the domains of law,
audit/evaluation, and archives could benefit from multi-disciplinary
contributions.
- Participants agreed that there are benefits to be derived from
inter-disciplinary collaboration. These will be pursued as a result of the
meeting.
This meeting of experts brought together over thirty
lawyers, auditors, archivists and records specialists at the National Archives
of Canada to explore issues concerning the authenticity of records from a
legal, audit and archival perspective. The meeting was prompted by the realization that a multi-disciplinary
approach to these issues would be far more productive than if each discipline
approached the issues on its own.
The meeting was co-hosted by the National Archives and the National-Provincial-Territorial
Archives Council. Lee McDonald, Acting
National Archivist opened the session and Ian Wilson, Archivist of Ontario,
served as the Chair of the sessions. James Mitchell of Sussex Circle moderated the discussions.
The experts meeting was intended to provide a forum in
which representatives from each of the three communities would have the
opportunity to:
- exchange information on records authenticity among
concerned individuals from the audit, legal and archival communities;
- identify the requirements for establishing the
authenticity of records based on the perspectives of each of the audit, legal
and archival communities and, if feasible, identify common requirements shared across the communities; and
- identify opportunities for inter-disciplinary
cooperative ventures and partnerships designed to address records authenticity
issues shared across the communities.
The meeting itself was organized into three parts.
- the first part was
in the form of brief presentations by selected participants on planned or
current records authenticity related initiatives underway in each of the
communities (speakers were from the Office of the Auditor General, the Attorney
General’s Office in Ontario, the Ministry of Justice in Quebec, the Archival
Studies program at the University of British Columbia, and the Treasury Board
Secretariat);
- the second part took
the form of focus groups where participants had the opportunity to discuss the
issues associated with establishing records authenticity, to identify general
requirements, and to propose inter-disciplinary approaches to solutions based
on current and planned initiatives underway in each community;
- third part consisted
of brief presentations by the facilitators in the breakout groups and by the
Moderator who presented a synthesis of the deliberations over the previous two
days; these were used to stimulate plenary discussion of both the issues and
the next steps following from the event.
Acting National Archivist Lee McDonald began with the fact
that both the private and public sectors increasingly are using electronic
records. Yet records-creation technology has leapt ahead of records retention technology. This creates a concern over the long-term
survival and utility of electronic records.
This problem presents practical problems for the National
Archives of Canada. The Archives has collected electronic records for two
decades now. But it is still grappling with issues at stake in their long-term
retention.
The issue of the long-term authenticity and integrity of
electronic messages crosses institutional boundaries - while archivists select
and store documents, auditors, lawyers and many others both inside and outside
government require credible, reliable electronic records.
The two
representatives of the Office of the Auditor General (OAG) described how the
OAG conducts independent audits and examinations that provide objective
information, advice and assurance to Parliament. To perform these functions, the auditor must
rely on management in the department or agency being audited to maintain
accurate, complete and reliable information and records on matters relevant to
the use of resources and the results achieved during any particular time
period. In the past, the OAG has been able to rely on systems of recording
information that had appropriate controls built up over the years, but now
changes are happening.
We are
witnessing the dawn of the knowledge-based economy, a series of developments
every bit as significant as the invention of the printing press and the industrial revolution.
This knowledge-based economy is enabled primarily by microchip technology and pervasive global networking.
In terms of information management, this change takes us from paper-based
documents to data-based records. In some cases we are seeing documents atomized
and stored in linked fragments that may even be geographically dispersed.
Accuracy,
security and reliability of information is a management responsibility. The OAG expects management to
continuously examine risks and update controls on data as necessary. This would include employing modern
standards, tools and practices to provide assurance that all important financial and non-financial
data is being retained
appropriately.
The
auditor is required to obtain sufficient and appropriate evidence to support an audit
opinion given. The nature of evidence available to the auditor is changing
quickly. Being able to see audit trails, logs and metadata1 help the auditor to see the context
in which records and other data have been created. It is very important that departments and agencies have awareness of, and
access to, advice and standards for record keeping in a rapidly-changing business and technological
environment.
John Gregory opened the legal part of the presentation
with remarks focused on the common law system. He noted that legal documents are those that state or change the legal
relationship between people, or between the state and people. They share some authenticity questions with
audit and archival documents, but unlike them, legal documents have someone who
decides their authenticity definitively: the judge.
Authenticity is relative, not absolute. As with audit and archive documents, there
are no guarantees, there is just greater or lesser certainty. This means that imperfectly authenticated
documents may have legal effect. A signature is the traditional way of authenticating
a document, though there are many ways of signing, some more secure than
others. However, unsigned documents may
be shown to be authentic, from their content or their context. The key question is not whether there is a
signature, but how reliable is the authentication.
Authenticity and truth are different concepts. The contents of a record may be untruthful
even if the record is authentic.
Electronic documents are subject to the same
principles. The record-keeping system
is a key element of the context. People
have to learn how much authentication they need for different legal purposes,
and what electronic techniques will provide that level of assurance. Standards developed for such purposes will
be helpful rather than definitive. One
size will not fit all.
Sometimes legal rules seem to require paper, e.g., where
statutes call for writing, or signatures, or original documents. Law reform may be needed to ensure these
rules do not block appropriate electronic communications. Admissibility of electronic documents
in evidence is generally not a problem in practice. Some of the questions of
principle have been addressed in proposed uniform legislation.
Maître Jeanne Proulx focused her remarks more on the issue
of records than that of the file, because a file is composed of document. If each one of the documents in a file
authentic and whole, so too will the file be. She began by pointing out that, in Quebec, a Civil Law jurisdiction, the
concept of the document is the cornerstone of the legal infrastructure
necessary to establish confidence in commercial and other exchanges. Just as in
common law jurisdictions, people want to be able to use either electronic or
paper systems with the same degree of legal confidence.
In her remarks, Mme Proulx made the following major
points:
- The Civil Law notion of “signature” closely parallels
that of the common law. There is no
need for a new legal definition of what a signature is, and how it can be
accomplished in an electronic document; the addition of a new definition for
the purposes of electronic records would only contribute to legal
confusion. Indeed, the idea that every
time we change our technology of communication we need to change our concept of
signature would be utterly impractical.
- It should be noted that, while a document can exist,
and be authenticated, without a signature, the notion of a signature without a
document is meaningless. In this context, it is important to make the link
between signature and document, something often forgotten by those who would
propose new definitions of “signature”.
- There is an issue as to what the law must do to ensure
technological neutrality. The answer is, the law must provide standards that
are sufficiently clear that new technologies can respond to them. In this
context, the notion of technological neutrality presupposes that one is not
tying the legal authenticity of a document or signature to the employment of a
particular technology, but rather that the technology being used is able to
satisfy the legal definitions of
“document” and “signature”. Thus, in
terms of legislation, the law must be neutral with respect to technology (in
the sense of not favoring one technology over another).
- People must be allowed to use the medium of
communication - paper or electronic - with which they are most comfortable, and
for this reason the Civil Code has given to judges the right to demand a paper
version of an electronic document for use in legal proceedings.
- There has to be a way of ensuring the integrity of data
when they are migrated between systems, or printed out. When data are exported
they become “fragile”. Only when they are as stable as a written document can
electronic records be considered to be equivalent to those written on
paper. Until then, the electronic
record is weighed like a spoken document, which has a known weight in Civil
Law.
- In
Civil Law, electronic records are seen as 'material' objects, created within an
understandable electronic framework, and they are therefore weighed the same
way as paper documents. Thus the
electronic system within which a document is created and stored must be intelligible in the same
way as the environment in which a paper record is created.
- Electronic and paper records have a ‘common
spine’; they will co-exist for many
years and so they must be looked at as one document.
Heather MacNeil reported that
since 1994, a team at UBC has been involved in two research projects aimed at
identifying methods for establishing the reliability and authenticity of
electronic records.
Both projects are based upon two disciplines: diplomatics2 and archival
science3.
The first research project
entitled "The Preservation of the Integrity of Electronic Records,"
was carried out between 1994 and 1997 and resulted in the identification and
elaboration of requirements and methods for creating and maintaining reliable
and authentic electronic records that are needed for the usual and ordinary
course of business (i.e., records that are active and semi-active). The second
project, which began in January 1999, is an international and interdisciplinary
endeavour known as InterPARES (International Research on Permanent Authentic
Records in Electronic Systems). It focuses on preserving the authenticity of
electronic records that are no longer needed for the usual and ordinary course
of business but that must be kept for broader social purposes and that either
have been or will have to be removed from the original system (i.e., inactive
records).
It was noted that active and
semi-active records are key concepts here. Each will have different levels of
‘risk management’ associated with it.
In the projects’ terms,
reliability means that a record is capable of standing for the facts contained
within it; reliability is associated with the record’s creation and, more
specifically, with the completeness of its intellectual form, and the degree of
control exercised over its creation.
The term “authenticity” means
that the record is what it purports to be (i.e., it is genuine) and that it has
not been corrupted since its creation. Protecting authenticity requires secure
methods of transmission and storage.
In the first research
project, the investigators found that reliability and authenticity are best
ensured by
- embedding
procedural rules in an agency-wide record keeping system and by integrating
business and documentary procedures.
- instituting
procedures that tighten the archival bond, i.e., the connection between
records, such as classification, registration, and electronic record profiling;
and
- integrating
the management of the electronic and non-electronic components of the records
system. This integration reinforces the archival bond between records and
completes their documentary context.
The research team has written detailed rules designed to
meet the requirements identified in these findings.
The InterPARES project has been divided into four
interrelated domains of inquiry:
- Conceptual
Requirements for Preserving Authentic Electronic Records
- Appraisal
Criteria and Methods for Selection of Authentic Electronic Records
- Methods
and Responsibilities for Preserving Authentic Electronic Records
- Framework
for the Formulation of Policies, Strategies, and Standards
Some of the issues that the InterPARES project will
address are as follows:
- What
specific elements are associated with authenticity? Are the elements inherent
in the records themselves or do they exist outside the record?
- If the elements reside
outside the record, e.g., in the technological context, can they be removed
from where they are currently found to a place
where they can more easily be preserved and still maintain the same validity?
- Are
technology procedures sufficient to ensure authenticity or are external
procedures necessary? In other words, is technology alone enough to ensure a
record’s authenticity over time?
- How
can we remove permanently valuable records from the active system without
compromising their authenticity?
- Do our
current appraisal methodologies compromise the authenticity of records?
In remarks based on his experience at the National Energy
Board, Neil Levette talked about issues that arise when an institution moves to
a fully electronic interaction with its clients, and therefore to an archival
system that is largely if not entirely composed of electronic records. He observed that electronic systems are now
‘pageless’ - that is, the page is no longer the base concept for electronic documents. Today, electronic
data is fragmented and managed at the level of its component parts, rather than
expressed always as a “virtual page”. These components are then hyper-linked
together to represent the whole document.
Within this system, the printed document is, in effect, an
“artifact” of the original. In many
cases, there is no paper equivalent of the electronic document.
Among other key points made during his presentation:
- presentation per
se is not so important as the context
within which the records were created;
- people working with electronic systems not only must
work within the bounds of federal and provincial jurisdictions, but also within
the technological limitations of the electronic world;
- ISO standards are more reliable than those of a
commercial provider;
- software by itself does not provide sufficient security
for documents;
systems architecture, which is the most stable
environment in which to establish the legality of a record, needs to be
standardized. However, there are no generally-accepted standards for electronic
systems architecture at present;
- one issue that systems people (and others) wonder about
is whether the physical location of the server on which a document is stored -
off-shore, out of province, out of municipal boundaries - affects the legal
authority of the records;
- finally, we need a system that does not require that
its users have expert knowledge of either the system or archival science, or
even IT generally.
In the ensuing plenary discussion, participants debated
issues raised in the five presentations and explored a number of other
significant topics.
Standards
- Standards are being developed, including those which
will be applicable across jurisdictional boundaries.
- Although there are standards for microfilm images,
there is a lack of industry standards for electronic records.
- The swift pace of technological obsolescence is a great
problem for business just as it is for government; maintaining currency in
systems and technology requires constant reinvestment.
- Lawyers feel a need for minimum standards for the
conservation of electronic documents. Although they can (or should be able to)
outline what these standards should be4,
they are obviously not in a position to enforce them.
Terminology
- There is a need for consistent usage of language and
terminology across disciplines for
any standards to work. Terms like ‘reliability’ ‘trustworthiness’, ‘integrity’,
and authenticity’ have different meanings to members of different professional
communities. Lawyers require accurate language to carry out their duties.
Government and Industry
- One can ask whether we are masters of our own
destiny. Is it the computer industry or
government that is really in control of standards and regulatory procedures?
When we set standards and rules, will they have to be global in their
application or can we act in Canada alone?
- Meetings of this sort will become more common as the
problems of electronic records become more apparent. There is an issue as to
how to move beyond experts talking in
camera to discussing these issues with the wider community, and especially
with those who would have to implement, interpret and apply any regulatory
procedures.
- Another basic question is whether regulatory procedures
be implemented from the top-down or bottom-up.
Any regulatory infrastructure should be flexible enough to allow for
daily practical applications.
Archival Issues
- Archival decisions and concepts appear to be based upon
paper records. Are these applicable to electronic records?
- Are
our traditional concepts of records, files, series, etc. being turned upside
down or are we simply having difficulty applying these logical concepts to a
new increasingly electronic reality? Have textual records been replaced
entirely by electronic documents? Has
the concept of the document replaced that of the whole file?
- What is it realistic to expect from clients? Archivists must realize that files are
created for operational purposes and not for archival storage. In order to be
realistic, standards must not interfere with the daily operations of the
department or business. Departments and agencies need to be shown the immediate
benefits they can expect from the implementation of rigorous standards.
The second day of the meeting opened with a plenary
discussion of issues raised by the presentations on the previous day.
Meeting Chair Ian Wilson opened the discussion by
observing that, for him, the key areas of debate were the concepts of
‘verification’, ‘centralization’, and ‘personal enterprise.’ These concepts
relate to how our society is structured and to the tension between the
centralization of power and the empowerment of the individual. In the information age, traditional
distinctions between public and private are blurring. Many government functions
have been privatized. In this context, there has been a lack of consistency in
government policy about electronic documents. The key issues revolve less around information technology (IT) and more
around information management (IM).
Governments need to realize that information is an asset
that must be valued and managed like any other. One can help promote this awareness by relating ‘good stories’ of
how efficient management of records has aided the government in high-profile
litigation such as that related to residential schools.
Among the questions raised by Ian Wilson:
- Can we define standard requirements for records
retention and then enforce their adoption by government? (Perhaps this can be accomplished - or at
least begun - through the annual meeting of CIO’s or some other similar venue.)
- Who will take up the challenge to fill the policy
vacuum that surrounds Information Management?
After the plenary session, participants were asked to
propose topics that they thought merited further consideration in the small
group sessions. The following issues
and questions were proposed:
- How can we better
communicate with one another to develop interdisciplinary resolutions to common
interests and problems.
- How can there be
adherence to standards, through authoritative powers and processes (this was
referred to as “occupying the field”)?
- How can we overcome
professional jealousy to allow for frank discussion and effective work groups?
(A corollary of this being how to overcome fear of and resistance to new
technology.)
- Will we have to
influence the software industry in order to implement standards?
- How can we raise the
profile of archives? Do we need to develop an action plan to mobilize the
various interested communities to raise these issues with professional bodies
and with the government?
- How can we influence
the legislative agenda? How can we gain
government support for electronic records keeping issues?
- How can we use the
Web for our purposes?
- Are electronic
records essentially the same as paper records, or are they fundamentally
different?
- There are technical
problems associated with storage and retrieval. Are these merely practical
problems, or are they fundamental? Is technology affordable? Is technology
stable?
- Are existing
standards sufficient? Are the components of reliable metadata identifiable? Can
standards be developed and adopted in one country alone?
- How do we build an
Information management infrastructure that is user friendly? The gap between
managers and users must be closed by standards, to make users feel at ease in
complying with standards.
- What is involved in
raising the profile of records management within departments? Similarly, how can we expand the potential
of records management divisions?
- There is a need to
establish a research agenda and to uncover ways for the government to fund a
research agenda.
- We also need an agenda for immediate, short-term action. (Don’t forget short term solutions in favour
of long-term approaches.)
- Another issue is
addressing the policy vacuum. There is seldom a determined lead in records
management from senior policy makers.
- How can individual
liberties and rights be protected in the face of new technology?
- What is involved in
advertising the benefits of efficient records retention by showcasing positive
stories?
- How can we engage
politicians to take up efficient records management as a cause?
- Records management
is deteriorating at just the moment when the generation of records is expanding
exponentially. Will it take a catastrophe like Y2K to make people care?
- Do we have a shared
understanding about how to look at records?
- Is ‘authenticity’ a
characteristic embedded in the record itself, or is it in the electronic
system?
- There is an issue
with respect to location, custody and control of records. They may be in the
hands of other governments, or outside a particular jurisdiction. If records
are held in a foreign jurisdiction, access to them may be restricted.
- The issue of Risk
Management: what risks are acceptable?
- Should we portray
efficient records management as a strategic business investment?
After two hours in the small group discussions, the three
groups reported back with conclusions and recommendations.
Group One reported that they had examined two main
questions.
- the value and use of records in society; and
- the means by which this could be developed as part of a
policy agenda.
Members of Group One were concerned
with how to push this issue both politically and on a policy level. They
identified the use of ‘good news’ case studies and the establishment of a
champion as elements of this approach.
The key conclusions and
recommendations from Group One were the following:
- Participants in the experts’ meeting should work toward
heightening awareness of IM throughout government and in the private sector.
- There is a need to make the government better aware of
the value of its intellectual assets and the importance of managing them
properly.
- The issue of records authenticity is an
inter-disciplinary problem that can best be solved by building a cooperative
case that could be argued by a well-briefed champion5
- Solutions may be enabled
or driven by technology, but they should be embedded within broader
business practices and wider corporate plans.
Group One also felt strongly that the group of experts
should continue to meet to share information and should continue its work on
the key issue areas identified above.
This group focused on ‘occupying the field’, though
members acknowledged that the nature and extent of the field had yet to be
determined. The group noted that the legislative process had already begun (e.g.,
Bill C-54), but that there was still a need for initiatives in policy,
regulation and standards.
Group Two saw the need to enter the battle, but wondered
aloud where the first engagement should take place -- provincially? federally?
internationally? Members felt that an aggressive campaign to disseminate
information was needed, one that would be coordinated with ongoing, progressive
research.
Other recommendations from Group Two included:
- the need to show government and industry that secure
records mean a secure organization. This translates, in practical terms, into a
secure environment in which to conduct business;
- the need to get the wider public involved and to help
them understand the scope of the issues;
- the importance of overcoming ‘professional jealousy’.6
Group three was also concerned with “occupying the
field”. The group felt it imperative to
break down professional and disciplinary stove-pipes. Among the Group’s major
conclusions were the following:
- technology changes the methods of retaining records, but not the overall goals;
- citizens need to be reassured that electronic
technology is benign and will not be employed against them in a “Big Brother”
manner;
- politicians need to be brought on side through the
identification of practical issues concerning electronic records;
- key players have to be identified and approached,
especially in the areas of industry and standards. Existing agencies and
initiatives should be harnessed to this end;
- the National Archives can assert its role in the
legislative process if it does so early on;
- the move to management by results is a threat to
comprehensive records retention policies because the focus is on outcomes
rather than on how decisions were arrived at.
Group Three recommended an action plan, including striking
a steering committee to guide the experts’ group over the next 6-12
months. Two immediate tasks were
identified.
- research to identify
common areas of interest.
- the development of a communications
plan that would include “good news” stories of the results of proper
records management policies. This plan would be directed at CIO’s and at the
various professional associations.
Results of research would be publicized, and media
attention would be sought continuously. This could be accomplished in part
through posting information on a Web site and through the different
departmental Intranets. The state of the communications plan could be
communicated to the main group at a future meeting.
It was generally agreed that any initiatives arising from
this conference must be based on the collaborative efforts of all the
professions associated with the larger group.
The floor was then opened for discussion and for the
identification of overall conclusions. Facilitators had noted the desire in each group to identify and adopt
practical action steps, though all groups also had been concerned with policy
issues.
An Emerging Agenda
The Chair suggested that a sense of urgency, cohesiveness
and a shared agenda had begun to emerge.7 He observed that records retention has
always been narrowly defined as an ‘archival’ problem. However, the agenda that
may be developed out of this conference will have to demonstrate that this
problem crosses many disciplines, and is an ongoing business task.
In this regard, it was suggested that there were other
people who could usefully be included in any future forum on this subject:
- systems
specialists, government policy people
and business sectors such as the
pharmaceutical industry;
- users, as
they are the ones with the greatest need for solutions;
- politicians. (It was suggested that an interested
back-bencher might be approached to champion the cause of records
retention. Parliamentary interest would
be heightened if there were studies to clearly indicate the usefulness of
records retention to the wider public. )
Committees and Other Fora
Among groups with which participants can partner to
“occupy the field” were identified the Committees of Ministers and Deputy
Ministers of Justice, the committees of
CIO’s, the Association of Canadian Archivists, ITAC, and various training
groups. It was pointed out that the different disciplines and professions
represented in bodies such as these might have academic arms that already were
undertaking research into these issues. These should be identified. Similarly,
any “disasters” should be immediately capitalized upon for the purposes of
publicizing the issues identified at the experts’ meeting. It was noted that
professional associations often have educational components which might help
publicize the cause.
Existing government programs and achievements such as
those at NEB, Justice, DND and Health Canada should be capitalized upon. It was observed that participants need to be
masters of their individual domains before advertising the value of good
records keeping to the wider community.
It was pointed out that the National Archives alone does
not have the power to shape government policy. However, the Information Management Forum,
which was established by the National Archives, together with the NA itself,
might serve as a catalyst in helping to influence record keeping across
government. Currently, the Forum comprises representatives from 50 government
institutions and professional organizations and has been developing guidelines
and other products for government-wide use.
Communicating the Message
On the communications front, it was suggested participants
in the experts’ meeting should use their contacts and expertise within the
various professions to develop a concrete, understandable message that can be
promulgated to wider professional, government and private bodies.8 It was suggested that a great deal of work
needs to be done on issues of content, before the policy process gets under way.
Another concern was how to pressure industry to come on
board. Are technological issues too
big to be resolved, or can the computer industry be convinced of the value of incorporating record keeping
considerations into the design of their products? How can we deal with
the rapid pace at which technology becomes obsolete?
Records Preservation
The National Archives’ view is that electronic records can
be stable, and can be retrieved as long as we possess the proper documentation.
Archivists are concerned about
maintaining the authenticity of records through time. Authenticating records as
they are communicated from point to point across space is challenging but
trying to preserve records which are being communicated through time presents a
far greater challenge. The issue extends beyond archives and impacts on any
organization concerned about the retention of electronic records to meet their
business and accountability requirements.
This issue is the focus of
the UBC project as well as other projects established within the archival
community. While technical standards are being developed, attention is also
being paid to policies, management practices, and techniques such as those for
describing records in their original context. These issues are all of interest
to other non-archival organizations as well as the legal and audit communities.
But questions have arisen as to whether or not an archives have the capacity
and resources to maintain archival records. Should other organizations, including
the records creating organizations take on this job?
Data Migration
A debate is underway
concerning the extent to which the migration of records to account for changes
in technology is the best path to follow. Some have suggested that it might be
possible to create systems and technologies for emulating the original systems
environment thus permitting electronic records to be left in their original
format. Strategies for the preservation of electronic records must be based on
the resolution of this debate and the development of standards and practices to
support the most effective solution. But archives (or any organization for that
matter) cannot develop these in isolation. The ways and means of building
partnerships and joint ventures to address this issue should be explored.
Risk Management
Risk management was defined as a key area of concern and
one that is central to authenticity. In future, issues of authenticity will be weighed in part in terms of
how important is the risk engendered by the loss of a document.
The resources expended on records management will be
commensurate with the risk involved in their loss. Departments may well
segregate their records according to risk, devoting more resources to the
highest risk files. In this regard,
Treasury Board is about to publish updated guidelines for risk management. The
National Archives is also concerned with risk management issues.
Research
Participants considered the question of where more
research is needed. Some areas were
identified:
- How to integrate users into the equation in order to
get people to file electronic documents
- Long-term retention of electronic records
- Risk management
- Defining common, standard terminology. Can existing
standards be adopted and refined?
- What are the characteristics of metadata?
- How do documents alter when migrated? Does this affect
their authenticity?
- How to develop a business case or model. Can experimental economics help us resolve this
last problem?
The following agenda emerged from the points discussed in
both the larger forum and the smaller groups.
Continuing the Group
The National Archives and provincial archivists present
agreed in principle to sponsor a continuing forum on issues of records
authenticity and related matters, with representatives drawn from a wide
community of interested parties. They
also agreed:
- that a steering committee for the above purpose should
be struck immediately;
- that a time-frame for implementing the action plan
should be decided upon, in order to capture the momentum of this meeting;
- that a Web site on these issues (the NA site? IM Forum
site?) be established and maintained; and
- that the main conclusions of this meeting, as embodied
in the published report, should be widely disseminated and publicized to
professional bodies, through conferences and meetings of professional
associations.
Outreach
With respect to outreach, it was agreed that:
- a communications plan is necessary and that a
workshop/conference should be conducted to deepen relationships between
professional groups;
- participants should begin to raise the public profile
of these issues immediately.
- the proceedings of these discussions should be produced
as a public document.
- another meeting of the group should be scheduled for
6-12 months hence. This will be useful only if the steering committee has been
active. The annual conference of the Association of Canadian Archivists next
year might be a place to meet and to publicize the work of the group. The group
could also reach out to librarians, records managers and others through
personal invitations, which would help build up interdisciplinary contacts.
Substance
Notwithstanding the importance of good process, and the
vital contribution of an effective program of communication and outreach,
participants commented at several points over the course of the two-day meeting
on the need for a continuing focus on the substance
of these very difficult issues. What the experts meeting showed was that a number of exciting projects
and programs across the country have served to advance the thinking in various
disciplines - the UBC project, the Quebec legislative program, and the NEB electronic filing and archiving program
are but three examples highlighted in discussion at the meeting.
There is an issue as to how to integrate and advance this
kind of work, perhaps through the use of future gatherings of experts with an
agenda focused more on specific issues with accompanying workshops and the
like. This might be a useful topic for
consideration with the proposed Steering Committee.
In his closing remarks, Chair Ian Wilson noted that the
meeting had served to identify common problems and even some possible
solutions. In some cases, however, only further questions were identified. He
suggested that members of each professional community should take away their
impressions of the meeting and write them up for inclusion in professional
journals and newsletters. In his view,
members of the interested communities can indeed “occupy the field” by adopting
and promoting the ideas voiced over the past two days.
The Keeping of Business Records for Law, Audit and Archives
An Experts Meeting
June 10-11, 1999
Ottawa, Ontario
The National Archives of Canada
and the National, Provincial and Territorial Archivists Conference are
co-hosting an experts meeting on the keeping of business records from the
legal, audit, and archival perspectives. This one and one half day
inter-disciplinary meeting will be held on the afternoon of June 10 and all day
on June 11 at the National Archives/National Library Building, 395 Wellington
Street, Ottawa.
1. | Background |
1.1 | The Canadian public and private sectors are poised on the threshold of doing business
electronically. Almost all information
within any enterprise is first created in digital form. Communication networks for the transmission
of digital information between institutions are already in place. The production and keeping of a paper copy
“for the record” are increasingly viewed as redundant as organizations move to
an electronic mode of conducting business. |
1.2 | But a chasm
exists. The electronic business tools
available in the office cannot meet the expectations of society for a reliable
and authentic record. The efficient
infrastructure that is Canada’s competitive economic advantage in a global
economy will not be sustained if electronic records cannot serve purposes
beyond immediate communication (i.e. serving legal and social purposes;
establishing accountability for transactions of the past and build on existing
knowledge for the future). At the heart of the matter is the capability of
modern organizations to manage the electronic records needed to serve multiple
purposes in a manner that ensures their authenticity and reliability through
time. |
1.3 | The legal,
audit and archival sectors represent organizations where the keeping of
authentic and reliable records presents a significant challenge.
- the legal community is concerned about the
admissibility of electronic records as evidence in a court of law. This concern
is linked directly to the concern of those involved in the development of
electronic commerce applications where the expression of requirements for the
transmission and management of authentic and reliable electronic business
records has been difficult.
- the audit community is concerned about the capability
of organizations to create and maintain audit trails of their activities within
an electronic environment. The challenge of keeping authentic and reliable
records of Year 2000 conversions in anticipation of potential litigation and
audit is but one of several examples of why this concern has been raised.
- the
archival community is concerned about the preservation and long term
accessibility of electronic records that have been designated as having
archival value. How can these be maintained as authentic and reliable records
in the face of changing software and hardware technologies?
|
2. | The Issues |
2.1 | From the
perspectives of the legal, audit, and archival sectors, what are the
requirements for creating and maintaining authentic and reliable records? |
2.2 | How can closer
cooperation be encouraged among the legal, audit, and archival communities to
accelerate the development of solutions to meet the requirements for managing
authentic and reliable records? |
3. | The Experts Meeting |
3.1 | Objectives
- to provide a forum for the exchange of information on
records authenticity among concerned individuals from the audit, legal and
archival communities.
- to identify the requirements for establishing the
authenticity of records based on the perspectives of each of the audit, legal
and archival communities and, if feasible, to identify common requirements
shared across the communities.
- to identify opportunities for inter-disciplinary
cooperative ventures and partnerships designed to address records authenticity
issues shared across the communities.
|
3.2 | Participants |
3.2.1 | Individuals
with expertise in various aspects of the records authenticity issue from each
of the archival, legal, and audit communities will be invited to the meeting.
Knowledgeable individuals from other related communities will also be invited
to ensure that the discussions benefit from a wide range of views (e.g. private
sector, academic sector, etc.). The event will be opened by the Acting National
Archivist, and Ian Wilson, Archivist of Ontario, will serve as the Chair of the
meeting. A consultant will moderate the discussions and ensure the smooth flow
of the meeting. |
3.3 | Format |
3.3.1 | The experts
meeting has been organized into the following three parts:
- the first part will be in the form of brief
presentations by selected participants on those planned or current records
authenticity related initiatives underway in each of the communities (enhances
understanding of the context and issues which address the issue of records
authenticity);
- the second part will be in the form of focus groups
where participants will have the opportunity to discuss the issues associated
with establishing records authenticity, identify general requirements, and
propose inter-disciplinary approaches to the development of solutions based on
current and planned initiatives underway in each community; a facilitator will
be used to support the efforts of each group;
- the third part will be in the form of a brief
presentation by the consultant who will have prepared a synthesis of the
deliberations over the previous two days as a means of stimulating discussion
of both the issues as well as the next steps which should emerge from the
event.
|
3.3.2 | A report on the meeting will be provided to
the participants (distribution targeted for September, 1999), published on a
web site and made available widely to interested groups and individuals. |
A G E N D A
The Keeping of Business Records for Law, Audit and Archives
An Experts Meeting
395 Wellington Street, Room 156, Ottawa, Ontario
JUNE 10-11, 1999
Thursday, June 10, 1999 |
13:30 - 14:00 | welcoming remarks, introductions, context setting |
14:00 - 15:00 | brief presentations on
records authenticity related initiatives |
15:00 - 15:30 | coffee/tea/soft drinks |
15:30 - 17:00 | brief presentations on
records authenticity related initiatives cont.) |
18:00 - 19:15 | cash bar |
19:15 - 21:30 | supper hosted by the National Archives of Canada
Château Laurier (Renaissance Room) |
Friday, June 11, 1999 |
8:30 - 09:00 | coffee/tea/pastries |
09:00 - 10:00 | open plenary discussion
of the issues based on the presentations (to serve as a catalyst for the focus
groups) |
10:00 - 10:15 | coffee break |
10:15 - 12:00 | focus groups |
12:00 - 13:30 | buffet lunch |
13:30 - 15:15 | plenary (each focus
group presents a report back to the full group followed by a discussion
involving all participants) |
15:15 - 15:30 | coffee break |
15:30 - 16:30 | synthesis of the
discussions over the past day and a half within the context of the objectives
of the event (i.e. requirements for records authenticity; areas of potential
cooperation, etc.); |
16:30 - 16:45 | closing remarks |
EXPERTS MEETING
PARTICIPANTS
10 - 11 JUNE 1999
Eric Anttila
Office of the Auditor General of Canada
Principal
Informatics Audit Attest and Consulting
240 Sparks Street
West Tower, 10th Floor (10-15)
OTTAWA ON K1A OG6
Telephone: (613) 995-3708
Fax: (613) 941-8285
Gabrielle Blais
Directeur, Division des archives gouvernementales et
de la disposition des documents
Direction du développement et de la préservation des
archives
Archives nationales du Canada
344, rue Wellington
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N3
Telephone: (613) 996-3405
Fax: (613) 996-8982
E-Mail: gabrielle.blais@lac-bac.gc.ca
Richard Brown
Chief, Appraisal and Special Projects
Government Archives and Records Disposition Division
National Archives of Canada
344 Wellington Street
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N3
Telephone: (613) 947-1469
Fax: (613) 947-1546
E-Mail: richard.brown@lac-bac.gc.ca
Sue Bryant
Assistant Director Operations
Interdepartmental PKI Task Force
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
L’Explanade Laurier, Floor: 10EE,
140 O’Connor Street
OTTAWA ON K1A OR5
Telephone: (613) 957-0527
Fax: (613) 946-9893
Ken Chasse
Barrister and Solicitor
2289 Shardawn Mews
Mississauga (Toronto) ON L5C 1W6
Telephone: (905) 276-7760
Fax: (905) 276-4606
Diane Chisholm
Assistant Territorial Archivist
Yukon Archives
Box 2703
WHITEHORSE YT Y1A 2C6
Telephone: (867) 667-5641
Fax: (867) 393-6252
Jean-Maurice Demers
Responsable des lois applicables aux
archives
Direction des systèmes et technologies de
l'information
Archives nationales du Québec
1210, avenue du Séminaire
SAINTE-FOY QC P1V 4N1
Telephone: (418) 644-4802
Fax: (418) 646-0868
E-Mail: Jean-Maurice.Demers@mcc.gouv.qc.ca
Wendy Duff
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Information Studies
University of Toronto
140 St. George Street
TORONTO ON M5S 3G6
Telephone: (416) 978-3152
Fax: (416) 971-1399
E-Mail: duff@fis.utoronto.ca
John Gregory
General Counsel
Policy Branch
Ministry of the Attorney General (Ontario)
720 Bay Street, 7th Floor
TORONTO ON M5G 2K1
Telephone: (416) 326-2503
Fax: (416) 326-2699
E-Mail: john.d.gregory@jus.gov.on.ca
Jacques Grimard
Directeur général
Direction du développement et de la préservation des
archives
Archives nationales du Canada
344, rue Wellington
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N3
Vigi Gurushanta
Manager
CARS & Hybrid Image System Development
Systems & Technology
Royal Bank Financial Group
315 Front Street, 15th Floor
TORONTO ON M5V 3A4
Telephone: (416) 348-5688
Fax: (416) 348-5460
Hans Hofman
Director
Electronic Records Program
Rijksarchiefdienst, Postbus 90520,
2509 LM THE HAGUE
The Netherlands
Tellephone: 31 70 331 5518
Fax: 31 70 331 5555
Robert Kapitany
Information Services
Office of Management Services
Therapeutic Products Directorate
Health Canada
Tunneys Pasture
OTTAWA ON K1A 0L2
Telephone: (613) 941-1351
Fax: (613) 941-3338
Rhonda Lazarus
Counsel
Treasury Board Legal Services
Department of Justice
L’Esplanade Laurier, West Tower, 5th Floor
300 Laurier Avenue West
OTTAWA ON K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 952-3345
Fax: (613) 954-5806
E-Mail: lazarus.rhonda@tbs-sct.gc.ca
Julia Lelik
Office of the Auditor General of Canada
Principal
Chief Knowledge Officer
240 Sparks Street
West Tower, 10th Floor (10-15)
OTTAWA ON K1A 0G6
Telephone: (613) 995-3708
Fax: (613) 941-8285
E-Mail: lelikja@oag-bvg.gc.ca
Neil Levette
Infrastructure Investment Management Division
Chief Information Officer Branch
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
275 Slater Street, 6th Floor
OTTAWA ON K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 941-3132
Fax: (613)
E-Mail: Levette.Neil@tbs-sct.gc.ca
Andrew Lipchak
Coordinator, Policy and Planning
Archives of Ontario
Unit 300, 77 Grenville Street
TORONTO ON M5S 1B3
Telephone: (416) 327-1575
Fax: (416) 327-1992
Michael MacKinnon
Analyst
Provincial Archives of New Brunswick
P.O. Box 6000
FREDERICTON NB E3B 5H1
Telephone: (506) 453-3960
Fax: (506) 457-4992
Heather MacNeil
Assistant Professor
School of Library, Archival, and Information Studies
University of British Columbia
831-1956 Main Mall
VANCOUVER BC V6T 1Z1
Telephone: (604) 822-6365
Fax: (604) 822-6006
E-Mail: hmacneil@interchange.ubc.ca
Paul McCormick
Director General
Information Resource Management
National Library of Canada
395 Wellington Street
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N4
Lee McDonald
Assistant National Archivist
National Archives of Canada
395 Wellington Street
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N3
John McDonald
Senior Advisor
Office of the Director General
Archives Development and Preservation Branch
National Archives of Canada
344 Wellington Street, Room 5014
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N3
Tom McMahon
Counsel
Law and Privacy Section
Department of Justice
Room 3167, 284 Wellington Street
OTTAWA ON K1A 0H8
Telephone: (613) 957-4724
Fax: (613) 941-2002
Elizabeth Murphy-Walsh
President
Institute of Internal Auditors
c/o Environment Canada
10 Wellington Street
HULL QC K1A 0H3
Telephone: (819) 994-7736
Fax: (819) 994-7321
Rosemary Murray-Lachapelle
Acting Director
Office of Government Records
Archives Development and Preservation Branch
National Archives of Canada
344 Wellington Street
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N3
Thomas G. Parker
Director
Records Management Division
Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management
Government of Nova Scotia
P.O. Box 261
HALIFAX NS B3J 2L4
Telephone: (902) 424-3012
Fax: (902) 424-0129
E-Mail: parkertg@gov.ns.ca
Michael Power
Assistant Director
Policy
Interdepartmental PKI Task Force
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
275 Slater Street
OTTAWA ON K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 946-5056
Fax: (613) 946-9893
Jeanne Proulx
Ministère de la Justice du Québec
1200, route de l’Église, bur. 4.19
SAINTE-FOY QC G1V 4M1
Telephone: (418) 646-8242
Fax: (418) 643-9749
E-Mail: jproulx@justice.gouv.qc.ca
Joan Remsu
Senior Counsel
Public Law Policy Section
Department of Justice
284 Wellington Street, EMB-5
OTTAWA ON K1A 0H8
Telephone: (613) 946-3118
Fax: (613) 941-4088
E-Mail: jremsu@justice.gc.ca
Shelley Smith
Provincial Archivist
Provincial Archives of Newfoundland & Labrador
Colonial Building
Military Road
ST. JOHN'S NF A1C 2C9
Telephone: (709) 729-3065
Fax: (709) 729-0578
E-Mail: ssmith@gov.nl.ca
Al Whitla
Director, Internal Audit
Comptrollership Branch
Treasury Board of Canada, Secretariat
300 Laurier Avenue, West Tower, 9th Floor
OTTAWA ON K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 952-3363
Fax: (613) 952-3247
Ian Wilson
(Formerly) Archivist of Ontario
National Archivist
National Archives of Canada
344 Wellington Street
OTTAWA ON K1A 0N3
Telephone: (613) 947-1513
Fax: (613) 947-1500
E-Mail: ian.wilson@lac-bac.gc.ca
Footnotes:
[1]. Metadata are
data in the record which are about the record itself as opposed to being
part of the content of the record.
[2]. “Diplomatics” is an analytical technique, born in the seventeenth century, for assessing the authenticity of
records. The primary contribution of diplomatics to an understanding of
electronic records is its analysis of the common attributes of a record based
on concepts and principles that have evolved over centuries of detailed study
of the documentary process. Those concepts and principles have proven useful in
identifying electronic records generated within different hardware and software
environments and for developing standards.
[3]. The contribution of archival science is its analysis of aggregates of records in terms of their documentary
and functional relationships and the ways in which they are controlled and
communicated.
[4]. If this is so, it is clearly an area that would repay further work by members of the legal
and archival communities.
[5]. It was suggested that this person should be as high in the government as possible.
Suggestions included the Clerk of the Privy Council or perhaps an executive in
the pharmaceutical industry who would be acutely aware of the risks involved in
poor records management.
[6]. Delegates were asked rhetorically whether they would be willing to give up the records
they create to a common database, set of standards or records-keeping module.
Professional responsibilities have to be coordinated in order to enable
collaborative action.
[7]. Indeed,
there was some sense that small group discussions had tended to focus more on
processes by which the agenda could be moved forward as opposed to the hard
underlying issues themselves, though it was recognized that the latter was
difficult in the relatively short time frame of the meeting.
[8]. To this end,
the National Archives agreed to issue a communications release after the
meeting.
|