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Records and Information Management Policy
1. Purpose:
  1. The purpose of this policy is to provide direction to all staff on the management of University records. The policy applies to all records created and/or captured during the conducting of University business. It establishes a framework for records and information management within the University to:
    1. Facilitate legislative compliance,
    2. Promote effective business practice, and
    3. Protect University information assets as evidence of current practice and for future reference.
2. Scope:
  1. The University is obliged to comply with all requirements of relevant legislation. Therefore,
    adherence to the requirements in this Policy and relevant Records and Archives Management Procedures
    is mandatory and applies to all University members and to all University records and information, in any
    format, created or received, to support University business activities.
3. Principles:
  1. Recordkeeping will be a routine part of conducting business and will be closely aligned to the University’s business processes. An analysis of these processes within the context of business needs, legal and regulatory obligations, as well as meeting broader community expectations is to be used as the basis of design for a recordkeeping system. These needs and obligations will be reviewed on a regular basis or as the result of significant change.
  2. The ¶¶ÒõPorn makes, manages, and keeps records to support its business needs, legal and regulatory obligations, and broader community expectations. Records must be maintained on approved business systems.
    1. A system must be assessed for compliance with records standards before it is implemented or before records are migrated to or from the system. A major change to existing systems must also be assessed for such compliance.
    2. Appropriate record/information asset owners will be appointed for relevant record categories, such as student, staff, financial, research and others as required.
    3. Records must be organised and managed to preserve their context and ease of retrieval.
    4. Records must be retained in accordance with approved records disposal schedules from the Territory Records Office.
    5. Records management methods and recordkeeping systems are to be regularly reviewed to ensure their continuing suitability and effectiveness.
  3. Records and Archives Management Procedures are to be designed to detail the way all staff will make, modify, use, handle, and care for records, as well as how and for how long records will be kept.
  4. Everyone employed by or contracted to the ¶¶ÒõPorn is responsible for creating, capturing, and managing records. The University’s recordkeeping practices will ensure that its records are adequate for:
    1. Facilitating action by employees at any level, and their successors.
    2. Making possible a proper scrutiny of the conduct of business by anyone authorised to undertake such a scrutiny.
    3. Protecting the financial, legal, and other rights of the University, its clients and any other people affected by its actions and decisions.
  5. Records created or captured by the University community are corporate assets that are owned by the University and managed accordingly.
  6. Throughout their full retention period, records must be actively managed and organised to preserve context, accessibility, and usability.
  7. No records are to be destroyed without a UC approved Records Disposal Schedule.
  8. In compliance with the appropriate disposal process, records must be destroyed at the date specified in approved records disposal schedules unless there is:
    1. A continuing business use;
    2. A pending or anticipated legal action; or
    3. A current hold or freeze on destruction issued by the Director of Territory Records.
  9. Permanent retention records are transferred to the University or Territory archives for long term preservation and access.
4. Responsibilities:
Who Responsibilities
All Staff Understand the recordkeeping obligations and responsibilities of their roles.
Chief Information Officer (CIO) To establish and implement a records management program.
Information Asset Owner To promulgate business rules and standards regarding the management of
information for which they have been identified the owner.
Records Manager
  • To oversee day-to-day records management activities including planning for future work.
  • To act as a liaison with the University community to implement recordkeeping principles to business processes.
  • To act as the liaison with the Territory Records Office.
5. Legislation:
  1. The Records Management Policy conforms with the Territory Records Act 2002, as well as the Territory Recordkeeping Standards for Records Management. In cases where recordkeeping issues arise which are not covered by this policy, the University will follow advice from the Territory Records Office and be guided by the Australian Standard on Records Management, AS ISO 15489.
  2. This Policy is governed by the following legislation:
    1. , including standards issued in accordance with this Act.
6. Definitions:
Terms Definitions
Approved business system A system either owned or contracted by the University that has been assessed and entered on a Business Systems/Information Asset Register.
University records Information, in any format created and kept, or received and kept, as evidence and information by a person in accordance with a legal obligation or in the course of conducting business.
University ¶¶ÒõPorn ABN 81 633 873 422.