HomeMy WebLinkAboutOrdinance No. 486 CITY OF THE COLONY, TEXAS ORDINANCE NO. ~/~
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF THE COLONY, TEXAS,
ESTABLISHING A RECORDS MANAGEMENT PROGRAM, PURSUANT TO
ART. 6574C, ESTABLISHING AUTHORITY AND ASSIGNING THE
RESPONSIBILITY FOR CARRYING OUT A RECORDS MANAGEMENT
PROGRAM; PROVIDING A SEVERABILITY CLAUSE AND DECLARING
AN EMERGENCY
WHEREAS, TEX. REV. CIV. STAT. ANN. ART. 6574c, provides that
any incorporated city may adopt an ordinance providing for the
microphotography, destruction, or other disposition of public
records, and
WHEREAS, the City of The Colony, Texas desires to adopt an
ordinance for that purpose and to provide for an orderly and
efficient system of records retention, retrieval, and
destruction;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE
CITY OF THE COLONY, TEXAS:
SECTION 1. DEFINITION OF CITY RECORDS.
All papers, correspondence, memoranda, accounts, reports, maps,
plans, photographs, sound and video recordings, files, microform,
magnetic or paper tape, punched card, or other documen6s,
regardless of physical form or characteristic, which have been or
shall be created, received, filed, or recorded by any city office
or department or its lawful successor, or officials thereof in
pursuance of law or ordinance or in the conduct, transaction, or
performance of any business, duty, or function of public
business, whether or not confidential or restricted in use, are
hereby declared to be records of the City of The Colony, Texas,
and shall be created, maintained, and disposed of in accordance
with the provisions of this ordinance or procedures authorized by
it and in on other manner. Library and museum materials acquired
solely for reference, exhibit, or display and stocks of
publications shall not constitute records for purposes of this
ordinance.
SECTION 2. CITY RECORDS DECLARED PUBLIC PROPERTY.
All city records as defined in Sec. 1 of this ordinance are
hereby declared to be property of the City of The Colony, Texas.
No city official or employee has, by virtue of his or her
position, any personal or property right to such records even
though he or she may have developed or compiled them. The
unauthorized destruction, removal from files, or use of such
records is prohibited.
SECTION 3. POLICY
It is hereby declared to be the policy of the City of The colony,
Texas to provide for efficient, economical, and effective
controls over the creation, distribution, organization,
maintenance, use, and disposition of all city records through: a
comprehensive system of integrated procedures for the management
of records from their creation to their ultimate disposition.
SECTION 4. OFFICE OF RECORDS MANAGER ESTABLISHED
The City Secretary shall be designated as the Records Manager for
the City of The Colony, Texas, who shall administer the Records
Management Program and shall be responsible for citywide files
management and the direction and control of the city's records
disposition program.
SECTION 5. DUTIES OF RECORDS MANAGER.
The Records Manager shall have the following duties:
(1) Plan, formulate, and prescribe basic files management
and records disposition policies, systems, standards, and
procedures.
(2) Prepare records retention and disposition schedules in
cooperation with department heads for all city offices and
departments, define and identify vital and permanent records, and
establish retention periods for all records. Retention periods
shall be no shorter than desired by the originating office, but
shall be as long as deemed necessary by either the Records
Manager, the City Attorney, or the City Finance Officer.
(3) Review schedules annually and update or amend as needed.
(4) Coordinate the citywide files management and records
disposition programs and report annually to the City Manager on
program effectiveness in each city department.
(5) Provide records management advice and assistance to all
city offices and departments, by preparation of manuals of
procedures and policies and by on- site consultation.
(6) Develop, disseminate, and coordinate files maintenance
and records disposition procedures, including but not limited to
those prescribed by this ordinance, to meet the current and long-
term information needs of the city.
(7) Train departmental Records Offices and other personnel
in the fundamentals of records management and their duties in the
records management program.
(8) Carry out at the proper time actions such as
microphotography, destruction, and transfers that are required by
records schedules.
(9) Design and manage the operations of a Records Center for
the low cost storage of inactive records and as a facility for a
centralized micrographic program.
(10) Establish and monitor compliance with standards for
filing and storage equipment and supplies in all city offices and
departments, and repor6 to the City Manager any failure of any
officer or department to comply with standards. Keep careful
records of savings in equipment, supplies, and staff costs
realized by each department of the city through implementation of
the records management program. Report annually such cost
savings to the City Manager; the report shall include the amount
of storage space and equipment released for other uses.
(11) Develop a citywide forms design and control system.
(12) Establish in cooperation with other responsible city
officials a disaster plan for each city office and department to
insure maximum availability of records for re-establishing
operations quickly and with minimum disruption and expense.
(13) Develop procedures to insure the permanent preservation
of the historically valuable records of the city.
(14) Protect privacy and assure availability of public
information from records stored in records center; bring to
attention of City Manager any office not in compliance with laws
or ordinances regarding public access to information or
protection of privacy.
(15) Prepare and submit annually to the City Manager the
budget requirements of the Records Management Office to enable it
to fulfill the records management goals of the city.
SECTION 7. RESPONSIBILITIES OF CITY DEPARTMENT HEADS
All city office and department heads are responsible for the
implementation and operation of effective files operations,
records transfers and dispositions, and other activities in
accordance with the provisions of this ordinance within their
areas of responsibility. They shall designate Records Officers
within their offices and provide the Records Manager the names of
such designees and of all file stations and files custodians
under their supervision. Persons designated as Records officers
shall report directly to the head of their department on matters
relating to the records management program and should have full
access to all files in their department.
SECTION 8. RESPONSIBILITIES OF RECORDS OFFICERS.
The Records officer is each office and department is responsible
for providing coordination between the Records Manager and
personnel in his or her office to ensure that provisions of this
ordinance are complied with. This responsibility shall include
overseeing the application of records schedules within the office
or department.
SECTION 9. CITY OFFICES TO USE RECORDS SCHEDULES.
All city offices and departments shall adopt records retention
and disposition schedules and destroy, transfer, or otherwise
dispose of records only according to such schedules.
SECTION 10. DEVELOPMENT OF RECORDS RETENTION AND
DISPOSITION SCHEDULES.
Retention periods to be included in records schedules shall be
submitted by the Records Manager to the City Finance Office and
City Attorney, who shall notify the Records Manager within 10
working days of his approval or of any objection to a retention
period. At the expiration of the ten day period, if no objection
has been submitted, the records schedule shall be adopted and
shall have full force as sufficient authorization for records
destruction or other action. If objection is made, the Records
Manager shall determine a retention period satisfactory to the
office or department concerned, to the Finance Officer, and to
the City Attorney.
When a records retention disposition schedule is adopted, it
shall thenceforth constitute full authority to destroy, transfer,
microphotograph, or take other actions, and the City Council
hereby directs that such action be taken by the Records Manager
or under his supervision. The Records Manager shall notify the
State Librarian of intended destruction, as required by law, but
no further notice to the City Council or other city office shall
be required.
Revision of retention periods shall be submitted for review
to the City Attorney and City Finance Officer in the same manner
as the original retention periods.
SECTION 11. ONE-TIME DESTRUCTION OF OBSOLETE RECORDS.
Prior to adoption of records schedules for an office, one-time
destruction of accumulated obsolete records of that office may be
made by or under the supervision of the Records Manager. Prior
to such destruction of the Records Manager shall submit lists of
records to be destroyed to the City Finance Officer and the City
Attorney, who shall give notice within 10 working days of any
records they believe should not be destroyed, and such records
shall be retained for a period suggested by either. The Records
Manager shall also submit notice as required by law to the State
Librarian. Obsolete records shall include those no longer
created by the office or department and no longer needed for
administrative, legal, fiscal, or other research purposes.
SECTION 12. RECORDS CENTER.
The Records Center operation shall utilize one or more buildings
to store inactive records; to insure the security of such records
from deterioration, theft, or damage during the period of
storage; to permit fast, efficient retrieval of information from
stored records; and to provide facilities for a centralized
micrographics program.
SECTION 13. PRESERVATION OF PERMANENT RECORDS.
The Records Manager shall develop procedures to insure the
permanent preservation of the historically valuable records of
the city. The Records Manager shall provide housing under
archival conditions for such records in the Records Center or in
another municipal facility and in such manner that the records,
unless their use is restricted by law or regulation, are open to
the public for research purposes. If city-owned facilities are
not available, the Records Manager shall arrange for the transfer
of the records to the Texas State Library for perpetual care and
preservation in one of its nearby Regional Historical Resource
Depositories, or shall make other arrangements for their
permanent preservation not contrary to law or regulation. In no
circumstances shall the permanent records of the city be
transferred to private individuals, to private historical
societies or museums, or to private colleges or universities.
SECTION 14. NON-CURRENT RECORDS NOT TO BE MAINTAINED IN
OFFICE FILES.
Records no longer required in the conduct of current business by
any office of the city shall be promptly transferred to the
Records Center or archives or the State Library, or be destroyed,
at the time such action is designated on an approved records
schedule. Such records shall no be maintained in current office
files or equipment.
SECTION 15. MICROGRAPHICS PROGRAM ESTABLISHED.
A centralized micrographics program shall be designed and
implemented by the Records Manager to serve all city offices and
departments. No office or department shall operate a separate
micrographics program, and no city funds may be expended to film,
or to contract with a service company to film, any city records,
except through the Records Management Office.
SECTION 16. RECORDS TO BE MICROPHOTOGRAPHED.
The Records Manager shall determine how long the various records
of the city could be stored before the cost of storage during
their retention periods would exceed the cost of preserving them
in microform. In making this determination the Records Manager
shall compare long-term lease of low-cost storage facilities, in
addition to or in place of any records storage building operated
by the city, with the cost of microphotography. In calculating
comparative costs, the Records Manage shall consider document
preparation and refiling time of staff, and other indirect costs
of micrographics, as well as the cost of separate archival
storage for master negatives of microform. Records determined to
be more economically stored on microform shall be
microphotographed and, in addition, the Records Manager shall
include the following types of records in the micrographics
program:
(1) Those which the Records Manager determines are of
historical value and whose preservation is best insured by
microphotographing the records on archival quality film.
(2) Those which because of the nature of the information
they contain are indispensable to the continued operations of an
office and, therefore, should be microphotographed to provide a
security copy.
(3) Those which because of high volume use require frequent
and/or large numbers of copies to be made which could be made
most efficiently or economically through microfilm.
SECTION 17. MICROGRAPHICS STANDARDS
Microfilm used for archival or security purposes as outlined in
Sec. 14 must meet the technical standards for quality, density,
resolution, and definition of the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) (formerly the United States of America Standards
Institute) as required by law. The master negatives of such film
shall not be used for making copies and shall be stored off-site
under the environmental and security standards of the ANSI.
Microfilm records must be indexed. The Records Manager or an
authorized deputy shall check and certify that a microform record
is true and accurate duplication of the original record and shall
cause to be included as part of the microform record
certification images to that effect~
SECTION 18. ACCESSIBILITY OF RECORDS ON MICROFORM.
The public is hereby given identical access to records on
microform to which they would be entitled under law if the
records were in any other medium.
SECTION 19. SEVERABILITY.
If any section, article, paragraph, sentence, clause, phrase or
word in this Ordinance or application thereof to any person or
circumstance is held invalid or unconstitutional by a Court of
competent jurisdiction, such holding shall not affect the
validity of the remaining portions of this Ordinance, and the
City Council hereby declares it would have passed such remaining
portions of this Ordinance despite such invalidity, which
remaining portions shall remain in full force and effect.
SECTION 20. EMERGENCY
The fact that the present ordinances and regulations of the City
of The Colony, Texas, are inadequate to properly safeguard the
health, safety, morals peace and general welfare of the
inhabitants of the City of The Colony, Texas, creates an
emergency for the immediate preservation of public business,
property, health, safety and general welfare of the public which
requires that this ordinance shall become effective from and
after the date of its passage and it is accordingly so ordained.
ATTEST:
Pat ~ ~j..8~Ci ty Secretary
Cit, ~