Illinois Administrative Code
Title 44 - GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS, GRANTMAKING, PROCUREMENT AND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Part 4400 - STATE RECORDS COMMISSION
Section 4400.80 - Management of Electronic Records
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Born-digital Records - Born-digital records shall be subject to the same records schedules as those records originally created in other media.
b) Databases - Databases or components of databases may or may not be considered records, depending upon their function and contents. An agency's Records Retention Schedule, as approved by the Commission, will be used to make such a determination.
c) Permanent Records - Records scheduled for permanent retention must be stored in file formats approved by the State Records Commission (see Appendix E) at the time the records are permanently removed from the active system, at the time of active system decommissioning or at the request of the Commission.
d) Storage Media - Electronic records may be stored on a hard disk, magnetic tape, networks utilizing a combination of these, or other media approved by the Commission (see Appendix F). Stored records must be regularly migrated to new media in accordance with current industry best practices, such as, but not limited to, ANSI/ARMA 16-2007, The Digital Preservation Coalition's Digital Preservation Handbook and the University of Illinois' "Best Practices for Media Selection and Migration". If agencies are uncertain as to whether they are following appropriate best practices, they should consult with the Illinois State Archives.
e) Access - Electronic records must be maintained in such a way that each record is individually accessible for the length of the scheduled retention.
f) Backup Copies - A minimum of two total copies of all electronic records must be preserved for the length of scheduled retention. Copies must be stored according to current industry best practices for geographic redundancy, such as, but not limited to, NIST Special Publication 800-34 Rev. 1 - Contingency Planning Guideline for Federal Information Systems and the New York State Archives' "Records Advisory: Electronic Records Disaster Preparedness and Recovery". If agencies are uncertain as to whether they are following appropriate best practices, they should consult with the Illinois State Archives.
g) External Vendors -
h) Identification - Each electronic record must have a unique identifier to allow for ongoing management of that record. If electronic records are stored on discrete storage media, each physical unit must have a unique identifier.
i) System Requirements for the Management of Permanent Records -
j) Legacy Systems - Agencies must make efforts to bring existing systems used for the storage of electronic records into compliance with this Section. If systems are unable to accomplish some of the required functions, agencies must attempt to achieve the same results through separate processes. Vendor contracts for the storage or management of government electronic records must be updated for compliance when possible.