Filing Book
Filing Book
Filing Book
Management
Workbook
NEW YORK STATE ARCHIVES
Files Management
Agenda
BREAK
Introduction
• Files management
– Systematic control of active files
• Active files
– Used frequently
• Types of active files
– Case files
– Subject files
– Uniform files
1. Inventory Records
• List files in cabinets and on PCs
• Document how records are used
– And who are the primary users
• Gather data consistently
Exercise #1
Everyone knows the alphabet and how to put items in alphabetical order. But try to get these
unruly eighteen items in alphabetical order, following whatever filing rules make sense to
you. Then we will discuss any difficulties you had and what rules you devised for the
exercise.
2 O. P. Quincy &
Associates
3 Oh No! Productions
4 O’Don, Mariah
8 1 Way Cleaners
10 County of Oswego
11 O’Donnell, David
12 Odonnell, Douglass
14 Ossen Davis
16 0123 Gopher
Eradication
17 O’ The Town Dance
Hall
18 O. Patrick Peters
Entertainment
Subject Arrangement (2)
• Advantages
– Necessary for complex subject files
– Easily expanded
– Topical or hierarchical to fit needs
• Disadvantages
– Must develop classification system
– Must use classification outline to file
The Uniform Filing System works best when standards are maintained in every Town
Department. The following suggestions are provided to assist in maintaining these
standards.
Folder Arrangement
Arrange folders starting from the front of the drawer in the exact sequence of the
Master File Plan outline.
Prepare a minimum number of folders. Add more folders only as records accumulate
and more folders are needed.
Folder Additions
Use the new file folder form when adding new files into the drawer and database.
(See attached)
Unnecessary Categories
Use only the file codes established on the Master File Plan
ADM-Administration
LAN-Land Use
CRT-Courts
PUB-Public Services
FIC-Fiscal
Folder Capacity
Use the scoring on the folder to enlarge its capacity if necessary.
When more than one folder is required, use the same folder heading but number the
folder (such as 1 of 2 )
Drawer Capacity
Allow approximately four inches of empty working space in each drawer.
Pay close attention to retention schedules, sending inactive files to the Inactive
Storage Areas, and consistent periodic purging should alleviate the need to purchase
additional file cabinets and save departments money.
Folder Labels
The label should show the full file code, heading, series title, beginning/ending dates,
and drawer location.
3. Use a computer generated File Folder Year Code and drawer Location
Number. This label is a white AVERY label (8160), size 1” x 2 5/8 and
landscaped. The font is Arial 25 pts. and centered.
Ex. 97/98
Ex. 5
7. For case files, the series title should be the last name, first name, and date of
birth.
8. For the project files, the series title should be the tax map number followed by
the location.
Drawer Labels
The outside drawer label should show the year(s) of coverage (if applicable) and the
file code of the first and last folder placed in the drawer.
Classifying Documents
This is the process of deciding where a document should be filed within the system.
That is, choosing the correct file classification and file code for such.
Scan the document to determine its major subject.
- Look for key words. If the subject cannot be easily located, consider why the
record was created.
- Refer to previous records on file to be sure of the file code selection.
- Read the contents. The subject line of the correspondence may be
misleading.
- If all else fails, ask the author or somebody familiar with the files for more
information.
- Be consistent.
- Write the file code in the upper right hand corner of the file copy. This coding
does not decrease the value of a document. If you wish, enter the code on
the back of the document.
Filing Hints
Set standards that work for your office. Here are some suggestions:
- After the document has been properly marked with the filing code, file it. ·
- Group like documents to be filed together to eliminate going from file drawer to
file drawer.
- File records with the most current documents in front.
- The top of the documents should all lay in the same direction in the drawer as the
reader faces them.
- Avoid paper clips, clamps, and binders
- Don’t keep duplicate copies.
Retrievals
The proper tools and standards will make your system work and help you to locate
documents as quickly as possible. Always make it a practice to:
- Obtain sufficient information to identify the document, such as the subject name,
agency, and date.
- Be familiar with the codes. It will augment the retrieval process and allow you to
go directly to the file.
- When removing a folder always place the appropriate “File Out” card to make re-
filing much easier and to track files.
- Always use the Active Records Master File Plan for proper file codes.
- If a current document cannot be located it may be among the yet to be filed
documents.
TOWN OF SALINA
Active Records Master File Plan
MAIN FILE FILE SUB- FILE SERIES TITLE ACTIVE RECORD
CODE HEADING RETENTION COPY
Chronological Arrangement
• Advantages
– Rarely prone to misfiles
– Filing is simple
• Disadvantages
– Rarely provides easy method of retrieval
– Sometimes used as a duplicate file
Simple
This is the most common filing arrangement and the one users are usually most comfortable
with. In such a system, simple unsubdivided titles are written in words. These words can be
names of people (McGillicuddy, Martha; Valmont, Clarence) or subject headings (Landfill;
Streets and Roads). Often, people develop such systems on the fly, adding files or subjects
as they occur. As with any alphabetical system, these files are prone to misfiles because of
the many rules that are necessary to maintain perfect alphabetical order.
Geographical
This is a subtype of alphabetical filing, where the subject headings are arranged
geographically. Such a system can be subdivided (for instance, the primary level might be
counties and the secondary level could be the towns and cities in each county).
Geographical filing makes sense when dealing with documents that users access by
geographical location, but this filing system has the disadvantage of requiring the user to be
very familiar with the geography and its divisions upon which the file is based.
Hierarchical
Hierarchical systems are subdivided subject filing systems. In such systems, there are
primary subject headings, which then have secondary and often tertiary subheadings below
them. The third, or tertiary, level
Numerical Systems
Simple
Sometimes called consecutive numeric, this system merely files numerically designated
folders in straight numerical order. This is the most common type of numerical filing but
usually has the disadvantage of bunching all the most current records at the end of the filing
sequence.
Duplex
In such a system, a number divided into two or more parts is used for filing purposes.
Sometimes, these systems serve as hierarchical subject systems, which are actually subject
numerical systems. In a subject numerical system, a coded numerical system (working in the
same way as the Dewey Decimal system) represents the subjects and levels of subjects in a
file. Examples of duplex numbering systems:
Middle Digit
In such a system, a file number is divided (either physically as in a duplex system, or merely
in the mind by the filer) into parts used as filing units, then records are filed first by the
middle digits, then by the first and third groups of digits. This allows files numbered
sequentially to be filed throughout the filing system, avoiding bunching all the most active
files at the end of the filing sequence. The disadvantages are that this system works best
with smaller numbers (those less than seven digits), it requires user training, and it is more
difficult to pull records for disposition or movement to inactive storage.
Terminal Digit
In such a system, a file number is divided (either physically as in a duplex system, or merely
in the mind by the filer) into parts, and records are filed first by the terminal digits, then by the
second and first groups of digits. Note that the numbers are read in small groups from the far
right of the number to the left. This system has the same advantages and disadvantages as
middle digit filing.
Alphanumeric
Really a type of duplex numeric system, this system uses a file number that is a combination
of alphabetic and numeric characters.
Chronological Systems
Chronological systems file records by date (usually date of creation or date of the event
being documented). These systems can be very broad (filing no lower a level than the year)
or be more detailed (and file at the level of day of the year), but they have only limited utility.
The advantage of these systems is that records are filed in the order they arrive in the office.
The disadvantage of the system is that they usually require an index for users to retrieve
information from records.
File Naming Conventions
• Use standard forms of names and avoid
redundancy
• Develop standard ways of ordering elements
– e.g., YYYYMMDD
• Establish standard ways to identify versions
– e.g., Minutes v2 draft
• Be consistent with document and folder titles
• Keep conventions simple and easy to use
4. Space Planning
• Prepare floor plan
• Evaluate workflow
• Calculate space needed
• Prepare layout templates of equipment
• Note locations of individuals
• Verify plan with management and staff
Workstations
Design areas so that people can move through the office to other areas. Avoid cul-
de-sacs whenever possible. These aisles should be about 48 inches wide to allow for
easy movement.
When possible, try to set aside one large area for all the filing in an office. Avoid
having many small areas scattered within a room or rooms, since these tend to
impede movement and not to make the best use of space.
If you calculate your space needs only during normal use, you may end up designing
an area that is inadequate to your needs during peak use. This can lead to too little
space for movement, causing confusion and grief during peak use.
After determining the quantity of records that will remain, always add 20% to that
number to ensure you have adequate space for growth.
Any filing system is a human system, so always consider people’s needs for comfort
and consider how they work together.
Space Planning: Centralize or
Decentralize Filing?
• Completely decentralized
• Departmentally centralized
• Organizationally centralized
Common
Filing
Equipment
Filing Equipment
Vertical Filing Cabinets
This is the type of filing equipment that we are most familiar with. Almost every office has
one of these cabinets, which have between two and five pull-drawers and are designed to
store either letter-size or legal-size paper. In general, it is better to use letter-size cabinets
and fold any legal-size papers to fit in the folders (especially if the quantity of legal-size
papers is less than 15% of the total). But vertical filing cabinets make the most inefficient use
of space, are more expensive than filing shelves, and have moving parts that may break
down. These cabinets are most effective for small quantities of records, especially records
overseen by one person in a small office.
These cabinets are very similar to vertical filing cabinets, the only difference being that the
drawers are wider than they are deep. These cabinets are usually short (two to four drawers
high), but they can reach up to six or seven feet high, if the front of the drawers can fold out
of the way to allow a user to see the files inside. These cabinets rarely provide better storage
density than vertical filing cabinets. Usually, their only advantage is that they have drawers
that are less deep, so that they do not require as much extra aisle space as vertical filing
cabinets. These are also expensive and also have moving parts.
Lateral Shelving
This is a more modern active files storage system, consisting of shelving upon which files
are stored sideways. To take true advantage of such a system, the folders have tabs on the
end of the folder and color-coded labels must be used. This shelving is cheaper than filing
cabinets, allows the users to file above their heads (providing better storage density), and
speeds up retrieval since the files are always visible to the user (as in a library) rather than
hidden in drawers. The main disadvantage of such systems is that all of them do not allow
the filing equipment to be closed or locked. However, some such systems do have closing
and locking doors or coverings, but these are a more expensive option.
Such filing equipment provides high-density storage because it provides only a single aisle
for a run of filing equipment, so you waste little space for aisles. The system works by
allowing users to crank shelving units to one side or the other, opening up an aisleway for
access. They can also be electrically powered. The disadvantages of such systems are that
they are very expensive and that they cannot be used for very active files since only one
user can use the system at a time.
Mechanized Files
These files (sometimes called rotary files) come in many formats. Some are known by the
brand name Lektriever. These systems store records in a rotating filing system and they
rotate, upon command, to the section of the files that the user needs. Their disadvantages
are that they are very expensive and allow only a single user at a time. They are appropriate
for large files systems with slightly active files and little space.
Rotary Shelving
These units are similar to lateral shelving but are double sided shelving units contained
within an outer frame. The shelving units rotate 360º within the frame and can be accessed
by two people at the same time, depending on placement of the unit. You simply spin the
unit until you reach the side you want; the shelving units are locked in position when you
rotate fully to a shelf and are released by a foot pedal. The middle position is the end caps of
the shelf and can be locked to provide extra security. They are known by the brand name
Times-2 Speed Files. They are more space efficient than filing cabinets.
Records Carts
Though often forgotten, records carts are essential in large filing systems. These allow a
clerk to easily transport a large quantity of records to and from filing areas. These also allow
the clerk a convenient place to hold records while filing or retrieving records.
Step Stools
Sometimes when using shelf filing or even when using vertical filing cabinets, step stools
that lock in place when someone puts weight on them can be essential tools. Use them
whenever anyone doing filing is having trouble reaching the upper areas of the filing
equipment.
Filing Supplies
Top-Tab Folders
Also called drawer folders, these are folders with their tabs on their top edges, allowing
users to read them from above. These are the only folders appropriate for use in filing
cabinets. They come in many different formats.
Full-Tab Also called a straight cut, this folder has a tab that covers its
Folders entire length, allowing more room for labeling information.
Because this type allows you to place labels in any location
on the tab, these are the most adaptable top-tab folder type.
These are designed to hold 3/4 of an inch of records.
End-Tab Folders
Also called side-tab folders or shelf folders, these are folders with their tabs on their right
edges, allowing users to read them from the side. These are the only folders appropriate for
use in lateral shelving. Disadvantages of these folders are that, because of the side tab, they
do not fit easily in standard records storage cartons and are difficult to read once they’re
stored in boxes. Below is a list of some other formats available for these folders.
Full End-Tab The most common type of end-tab folders, these have a tab
Folders the full height of the folder.
Notched These are end-tab folders with full tabs except for a notch at
End-Tab the bottom of the tab. These folders are designed to be used
Folders in roll-out cabinets that have a lip on the rollout shelf. This is
a good example of why you need to make sure that you
choose your filing supplies to fit your filing equipment.
Four-Inch End-tab folders with a four-inch tab along the bottom half of
Bottom Tab the folder. This allows the upper part of the folder to be free
of obstruction, allowing easy viewing of any file guides
Classification Just as with top-tab folders, these end-tab folders have fixed
Folders subdivisions within them, allowing the contents of each file
to be divided into different sections.
Hanging Folders
These folders are designed to hold a small number of file folders upright within them. These
are available for use in filing cabinets and shelving. However, they are very expensive and
can waste up to 25% of all the filing space in a system, so they are only recommended for
small filing systems of a drawer or two maintained as the personal, very active files of a
single individual.
Color-Coding Supplies
These are any of the supplies available for color-coding systems and designed almost
exclusively for use in end-tab filing systems. These supplies include the color-coded labels
themselves, machines for applying the labels, software for producing the labels or tracking
files within the system, and barcode wands for logging and tracking files. The use of tracking
software and barcoding is recommended only for large filing systems.
File Guides
These are folder-shaped sheets of cardboard or vinyl designed to mark the major
subdivisions in a file to improve filing and retrieval. For instance, file guides could mark the
beginning of each letter of the alphabet in an alphabetic filing system.
These are folder-shaped sheets of cardboard or vinyl designed to mark the place of a folder
that has been taken out of the file and to note the person who currently has that file. Their
purpose is to make sure all files are easier to locate, whether they are resting in their normal
filing sequence or lying on someone’s desk.
Labels
These come in many sizes, colors, and shapes and should be used to mark each folder in a
filing system and drawers in a vertical filing cabinet. Whenever possible, these should be
machine-printed to improve legibility. You should also experiment with labels to determine
which labels adhere best to the folders you are using. Although sometimes difficult to find,
foil-backed labels have the best adherence properties.
Paper Filing Tips
• Train staff properly
• Follow office retention schedules
• Use as few folders as possible
• Establish file breaks
• File frequently
• Use uniform labels and folders
e-Records Filing
• Manage centrally
• Manage electronically, as much as
possible
• Simplify filing structure
– And rely on search engine
• File by retention
5. Document the File System:
The File Manual
• Control records systematically
• Improve access
• Reduce misfiles
• Reduce bulk
• Train personnel
• Testify in court
_ Refiling Files
_Weeding Files
_ ___________________________________
_ ___________________________________
Appendix
Indexing and Tracking
_ Description of File Index (kept on database)
_ Signing Out Case Files _ Case File Retention Sheet (listing retentions)
People sometimes believe that procedures manuals are a bureaucratic waste of time
that serve no useful purpose, but such manuals can help you remember the rules you
developed while embarking on a certain project and can be an easy way for you to
communicate these rules to others.
The following procedures manual is meant as a sample only. Do not feel compelled
to follow each of the decisions codified within this manual, but use these as guidelines to see
what kind of information may be important for you to include in your own manual. You need
to develop a manual to suit your particular needs and the range of your own records
management program.
Also, keep in mind that you can use any numbering system you want for this
manual—including none at all. You can include whatever parts of this sample manual seem
useful to you and exclude the rest. You can develop your manual with any style that seems
useful and usable to you. And you can make your manual as long or short as you see
necessary, because you are making the decisions for your own program.
The following procedures manual is merely a sample, but for you to know best what
to do with it you need to understand the conventions that it follows. Below are explanations
of the various fields that occur in each of the manual’s entries, along with a brief description
of the information these fields contain and a few notes on how you might use these fields.
Number: The unique number for that section
This sample manual uses a consistent numbering system. You may decide to
do away with a numbering system altogether.
Title: The topic for that section of the manual
Titles help the user understand the information in the manual more quickly.
The titles of each section are italicized to make them easy to spot on the
page.
Date: Date that section was approved
This manual doesn’t include dates, but dates are important because
they help you distinguish an obsolete entry from a current entry. Some
manuals also feature a field that includes the first date any entry was
approved. Although we did not include dates in this sample manual, we
encourage you to include them in any manual you produce.
Purpose: The purpose for this section or this policy
Some manuals include the purpose as a separate field in each entry of the
manual. This manual doesn’t explicitly include such a field. Think of the
purpose field as an explanation for why you needed this policy in the first
place. You should use it to explain the necessity of any policy in the manual.
Exhibits: Any attachments needed to clarify the policy, including sample forms,
illustrations, and lists
This manual assumes that all exhibits are filed in the appendices to the
manual. Note that the manual mentions whenever there is such an
attachment.
Procedure: The procedures to follow for that policy
Along with the title and date fields, this is one of the most important fields to
include in any procedures manual. This field isn’t specifically labeled in this
manual, but the procedure consists of a description of the actual steps
someone must follow for an established policy.
To help ensure that records in town offices are well organized and records retrieval is
quick and easy, town departments should follow some basic file management practices:
a) Use the same size and type of folder consistently.
b) Use guides or dividers to separate files into sections.
c) Use hanging folders as guides only, filing other folders within them.
d) Label file folders with printed labels.
e) Maintain a (electronic and paper) file list of any subject files.
f) Use color coding whenever possible.
g) Purge files regularly (at least annually).
h) File names for electronic files should be easily understandable for all
potential users, not merely combinations of letters and numbers.
i) File names for electronic files should mirror those for the paper files. This
will ensure that users will be able to retrieve both paper and/or electronic
files easily.
Electronic file folders and subfolders should be named and organized in a consistent and
easily recognizable manner, on personal computers, a LAN, or in an Electronic
Document Management System (EDMS).
a) Don’t file a piece of paper unless it is an integral part of the file; do not file
envelopes and buck slips.
b) Avoid using legal-size folders except for legal documents.
c) Don’t overfill folders; instead, break a file into more than one folder or use
expanding (accordion) file folders or file wallets.
d) Never transfer hanging folders to record storage cartons; replace them with
standard file folders.
V.1.3 Purchase of Filing Equipment
Equipment is expensive and should not be purchased unless these tools will so help
manage the information that they repay or justify their costs.
All purchase requisitions that include records storage equipment and supplies must be
sent to the Town Clerk (as Records Management Officer) for review and written
authorization prior to submittal to purchasing.
Records storage items include acid-free archival storage boxes, file cabinets, map
cabinets, high-density mobile storage systems, micrographics equipment, microform
reader/scanners, and shelving. Any questions regarding whether a particular item falls
into this category should be directed to the Town Clerk (as Records Management
Officer).
The Town of Big Thunder will use only letter-size file folders for most files. All efforts will
be made to use only letter-size paper as well. Legal-size folders and paper will be
avoided where possible.
Last Name First: In the case of personal names, each part of a person’s name is a
separate unit. The units are alphabetized in this order: last name, first name or initial, and
middle name or initial (if any).
Nothing Comes Before Something: When filing, town employees should follow the rule
that nothing comes before something. For instance, a title having a single letter comes
before a title having a word that begins with the same letter, and a name of one word
comes before a name with the same word plus one or more other words. For example:
“G” comes before “Green”; “Green” comes before “Greene”; “Green Stores” comes
before “Greene” (since the space between “Green” and “Stores” is counted as a
character).
Numerals: When numerals appear in a title, they should be alphabetized before any
letters.
Punctuation: Ignore apostrophes and other punctuation when alphabetizing.
Any department that maintains a subject file should develop a uniform filing system for
the records series that organizes the records by subject.
To develop a subject filing system, first evaluate the current system and its subjects:
Then, working with the users of the current filing system, develop a preliminary subject
filing structure that outlines
a) main subjects
b) related secondary subjects
After finalizing a preliminary filing structure, use it to convert the current system.
Coordinate any necessary changes to the filing structure during the conversion.
Finally, develop a complete description of the filing structure and instructions on how to
use the filing system and make these available to all users.
The Town of Big Thunder will develop and maintain file plans for large active filing
systems (such as subject files and case files) that require especially detailed controls.
These manuals (available in the Appendices VIII.3) may include
a) responsibilities
b) steps in establishing a file
c) what records to include in a file
d) file order of records
e) updating files
f) retention periods for various records
g) purging rules
h) access restrictions
i) records storage
j) disposition
k) file list (of all files in the series)
For details of the Town of Big Thunder’s filing structure for its Local Area Network, see
the LAN itself.
At its highest level, the town’s LAN will include public storage space. At the next level
will be department storage space and workspace for individual departments. Files
maintained on the LAN include
a) general town records that are not restricted and are accessible to all town
departments and units, including blank forms, and policies and procedures
b) files that are permitted to be distributed to the general public
c) files related to specific projects and the work of specific town teams
d) records and information that have not been completed and are being
developed by individual departments or units
e) records and information that cannot be accessed by the public and
therefore must be maintained by individual departments or units
At the next level down, the town’s LAN includes personal workspace (files not stored on
the hard drive of the individual employee’s personal computer). Stored at this level are
backup copies of files that are being developed by individual employees that they may
wish other staff to consult.
Employees should maintain draft and working files that other staff members do not
regularly need to consult on their own personal computers. This frees space on the
Town’s LAN for public or corporate files.
For some records (such as special project files) that require detailed indices to ensure
that users can find all information they are searching for, the Town of Big Thunder may
develop an index to these records.
The Town Clerk (as Records Management Officer) will work with individual departments
to make sure that these indices contain the appropriate fields and design to provide the
access that users require. These indices will always be electronic indexes developed in
database format.
6. Maintain a Filing System
• Policies and procedures in place
• Control of duplicates
• Control of versions
• No maverick filing spaces
• Adhere to retention schedules
Train Staff
• Part of maintaining filing system
• Explain new policies and procedures
• Outline staff responsibilities
• Provide training on
– Using new equipment
– Using new filing system
Exercise #2
Exercise # 2: Case Files in a County Clerk’s Office
Situation
The Umbrage County Clerk’s office maintains about 400 cubic feet of civil actions in active
office space. These cases are filed by file number. Some of these records (such as divorces)
are confidential, but most of them are public records. However, a new county clerk has taken
office and she is concerned that none of these records should be left where they currently
reside: in the open area between the county clerk’s active “records room” for land records
and the office’s public service counter. The county clerk is concerned that these records are
too open to the public, making it possible that files or some of their contents could disappear.
The previous county clerk noticed great problems with access and retrieval from these
thousands of files, so he spearheaded a project to convert these records from top-tab files in
filing cabinets to end-tab folders on open shelves. This change improved retrieval
immensely, but some of the case files have grown faster than others. Some cases now fill
three folders, and whenever a file grows too large to fit into its old space, the filing clerks
move all the records in the filing system along to the right to allow for more space.
Sometimes this process takes an entire day.
The county clerk has a secure room that could be converted into a file room, but this room
has only 50% of the space currently used for storing these records. The office has not
recently reviewed these files to see if any of them can be moved to inactive storage.
Activity
Given this situation, what is the county clerk’s best course of action? Consider these issues:
confidentiality, security, filing practices, and space needs. If you want, use the “File Survey
for Paper Files” to take notes.
File Survey for Paper Files
Department: Unit:
Quantity: ____ filing inches ____ number of files ____ cubic feet
Arrangement:
__ alphabetical, by name __ numerical, by file number
__ chronological, by date __ ____________________
Is workspace cluttered? __ Yes __ No Floor space for equipment: _____ sq. ft.
Retention Requirements:
Access Restrictions:
Department/Unit
Indicate the department (and, if applicable, the unit within that department) that
maintains these records.
Quantity
Indicate the quantity of records in these different ways:
Filing inches:
This is a standard way of measuring files in an active filing system, because it
remains constant whether you use pull-drawer cabinets or open shelving for records
storage and whether you use legal- or letter-size folders. Measure filing inches by
measuring along the run of series of file folders. For example, a standard filing
cabinet drawer holds 25 filing inches of records.
Number of files:
This is a useful number because it tells you how many individual files the office
manages. You can use this number to help estimate the filing and retrieval time in the
office.
Cubic feet:
This may be useful as a number in case you need to retire a good quantity of files to
inactive storage. You can, sometimes, ignore this number and just use this rule of
thumb: One cubic foot equals about 16.5 filing inches of letter-size files and 12.5
filing inches of legal-size files.
Arrangement
Indicate the current arrangement of the files. Provide more specific details, if
applicable.
Retrieval of Records
Indicate any of the ways in which you retrieve these records and any problems staff
have had with retrieval.
Storage Devices Used/Storage Supplies Used
Indicate any of the storage devices or supplies you currently use for these records in
the active office areas.
Workspace
Answer these questions about the attributes of the current workspace where these
records are stored and where the people filing and retrieving these records work.
Retention Requirements
Indicate the required retention periods for any of these record series or for different
types of records within the series.
Access Restrictions
List any access restrictions, including any that are only local in nature, such as rules
restricting access to only certain personnel.
Check off any conveniences that are present. The list below helps define these
items.
- File plan. Detailed set of instructions covering indexing, filing, retrieval, and
retention of files.
- Index to individual files. List or database of the names of and pertinent
information in files.
- System for accessing inactive records. Any method for retrieving individual
inactive files.
- File segments identified. File guides showing major file segments (such as
beginning of the C’s)
- Centralized filing. Records filed in one central location, with dedicated filing
staff.
- Close-out procedures. Procedures in place listing when and how to close out
files.
- Media conversion plan. Plan in place to convert files to microfilm or electronic
images.
- Case file retention sheet. Schedule listing retention of individual records
within case files.
- Obsolete records weeded from file. System for discarding obsolete records
from files.
- Subdivided file folders. File folders with internal divisions used to separate
parts of the file.
Check any problems that are present in these files, and list any others you discover.
The list below helps define these items. (Note that decentralized filing is not always a
problem.)
Conclusions
• Implement or improve a file system
carefully
• Employ consistency
• Implement controls
www.archives.nysed.gov
Answers to Exercise # 1:
How Easy is Alphabetical Filing?
6 O’s & Toes Daycare O. & S. Title Search O. & S. Title Search
Center
7 O Donnell, Zachary O. P. Quincy & O’ The Town Dance Hall
Associates
8 1 Way Cleaners O. Patrick Peters O’Clock Timepieces
Entertainment
9 O & S Service Station O’ The Town Dance Hall O’Don, Mariah
16 0123 Gopher Eradication Oh No! Productions O’s & Toes Daycare Center
• Scrupulously follow the “nothing before something rule,” which means that if you have a
space in a sequence of letters, alphabetize as if that space comes before any character. So
“O Donnell, Zachary” comes before “O’Donnell, Adam.”
• When sorting by text, items beginning with punctuation marks or symbols (such as—!, #,
$, %, or &—are sorted first; items beginning with numbers are sorted next; and items
beginning with letters are sorted last. Word treats dates as three-digit numbers.
• If two or more items begin with the same character, Word evaluates subsequent characters
in each item to determine which item should come first.
• When sorting by field results, if an entire field (such as a last name) is the same for two
items, Word next evaluates subsequent fields (such as a first name) according to the
specified sort options.
• Initials precede full names (so “Mitchell, A.” & “Mitchell, Q.” come before “Mitchell, Aaron”).
• Spell out a few common abbreviations, such as St. (Saint) and Ft. (Fort).
• Spell out numbers (so “1-2-3 Go!” is alphabetized as if it reads “One Two Three Go”).
[Note, also, that each spelling of “Mac” is alphabetized as spelled, not as if spelled the
same.]
• Relegate initial “The” in a corporate name to the end of the title: “Fifth National Bank of
Oswegatchie, The.”
• Alphabetize government names by name first, followed by title (so “Oswego, County of,” not
“Oswego County” and “Fulton, City of,” not “City of Fulton”).
When surnames can be spelled in more than one way, provide cross-references to the other
possible spellings.