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Question

Laserfiche meeting storage standard

asked on February 19, 2016

Please review the below and let me know if there are any issues to meeting these requirements from  a Laserfiche perspective

 

From: Elmer Dickens
Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2016 9:03 AM
To: Sara Serna; Shawn Fischer
Subject: RE: Property/Evidence Receipt Retention

 

You each asked me a similar question yesterday – retention of specific records, and whether hard copies have to be maintained.    I have attached the full law enforcement retention rule for your convenience.  There are other rules for specific records – for example there is one on general HR records, and one on property and equipment – such as fleet records.  

 

Property and evidence records retention is section (71): ) Property and Evidence Control and Disposition Records: Records used to track property and evidence coming into department possession. Documents receipt, storage, and disposition of personal property and physical evidence from defendants, victims, and others. May include evidence photographs documenting crime scenes, accidents, and other incidents. Records often include receipt forms, evidence control sheets, property reports, destruction lists, property consignment sheets, seized firearm logs, homicide evidence inventories, and other documents. Information usually includes case number, tag number, date and time, property or evidence description, storage location, release date, and other data. (Minimum retention: (a) Retain cases involving crimes with no statute of limitations 75 years (b) Retain all other cases 1 year after statute of limitations expires)

 

 

IA files are section (52) Internal Investigations Case Files: Records documenting investigations of department personnel for violations of laws, rules, or policies and may include findings and dispositions of investigations. Records often contain complaints, correspondence, investigatory reports, interviews, hearing summaries and testimony, and related documents. Information usually includes name of employee investigated, reason, location of violation, date, accomplices' names and addresses, witnesses' names and addresses, action taken, and related data. (Minimum retention: (a) Investigations resulting in Termination: 10 years after employee separation (b) Investigations resulting in disciplinary action or exoneration: 2 years after resolution (c) Unfounded Investigations: 1 year)

 

There are separate rules about whether we have to keep hard copies if we have a digital imaging system.  The short answer is no, as long as our digital imaging system meets some requirements.  Unfortunately, I don’t know if it does – that would be a question for either Kevin Kane or ITS, or possibly Melanie Koch.    Here are a couple of the relevant rules.  My guess is that Laserfiche meets these standards, but that is a guess.   Elmer

 

166-017-0020 System Documentation

 

   All digital imaging systems that store digitized public records with a retention period of ten years or more shall have system documentation on file with the agency records officer. This documentation shall include a narrative description of the digital imaging system; the retention period of the original records; the header label used in the system; and an estimate of the life expectancy of the digital imaging system. If the life expectancy of the system is less than the retention period of the records it stores, system documentation shall also include a description of how access to digital images of records will be maintained.

 

 

166-017-0030 Image Quality

 

   Digitized documents shall be verified after digitization. Documentation describing each inspection shall be maintained for each digital imaging system and shall include the date of inspection, name of inspector(s), group of documents inspected, and sample size (if applicable). Scanner quality control procedures shall conform to ANSI/AIIM MS44-1988, Recommended Practice for Quality Control of Image Scanners , which is incorporated by reference and is available from Association for Information and Image Management, 1100 Wayne Avenue, Suite 1100, Silver Spring, MD 20910. In addition, the following standards apply to digital images:

 

(1) Office documents containing fonts no smaller than six-point shall be scanned at a minimum density of 200 dpi. Documents containing fonts smaller than six-point, architectural and engineering drawings, maps, and line art shall be scanned at a minimum density of 300 dpi.

 

(2) If documents are digitized using fax technology, the fax mechanism must be capable of transmitting and receiving both 200 and 300 dpi images.

 

(3) Digitized documents shall support CCITT Group 3 or 4 compression techniques. Digitized photographs and halftone images shall also support or provide a gateway to JPEG compression techniques.

 

 

 

166-017-0080 Retention

 

   (1) Public records with a scheduled retention period of less than 100 years may be stored on optical disks. The original record may be disposed of following verification of acceptable optical image quality. Images stored on optical disks shall be copied onto new optical disks after no more than ten years. Images must be recopied until the retention period of the original public records has been satisfied.

 

(2) Public records with a scheduled retention period of 100 years or more may be stored on optical disk devices provided that the original records are retained in hard copy or on microfilm for the entire scheduled retention period.

 

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Replies

replied on February 22, 2016 Show version history

I can summarize the relevant capabilities of Laserfiche as follows:

1. Laserfiche is capable of driving scanners to scan at multiple, configurable DPI, including 200 and 300 DPI.

2. Laserfiche by default stores black and white documents in TIFF-G4 (CCITT Group 4) format, and color images in either TIFF-LZW or JPEG. This last part is configurable and defaults to TIFF-LZW, but is easily modified to use JPEG via a trustee attribute set on the Everyone group.

3. Laserfiche supports configurable metadata fields for documents and folders, and these fields are stored along with the contents of the document, and are subject to the same retention rules which govern those documents.

4. Laserfiche supports storing image data on read-only optical media. It can also support storing data on removable media, both optical and magnetic.

In summary, it doesn't appear that Laserfiche will have any problem meeting the requirements you listed.

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