(1) The purpose of the RMIT Retention and Disposal Authority (the Standard) is to provide the business with a set of consistent rules to facilitate efficient and compliant practices of retention and disposal of records in alignment with legislative and business needs. (2) The Standard: (3) The Standard applies to electronic records only. The RMIT Retention and Disposal Authority may be used for hard copy or paper records, however business requirements and costs of storage should be taken into account after making this decision. (4) For further advice on retention and disposal of physical and paper records, please refer to RMIT Archives (archives@rmit.edu.au). (5) The Standard applies to all persons involved in the creation, use and disposal of RMIT records existing in an electronic format. It includes (but is not limited to) salaried staff, non-salaried staff and contractors. (6) This Standard is applicable to all RMIT entities operating within Australia. It can be used for RMIT entities operating outside of Australia as a guideline only, with legislation of the relevant jurisdiction taking precedence. (7) Authority for this document is established by the Information Governance Policy. (8) RMIT University has obligations under the Public Records Act 1973 “to carry out a programme of efficient management of public records and information” in alignment with Standards prescribed by the Public Record Office Victoria (PROV). (9) This standard has been developed with the primary focus to provide staff with a consolidated, simplified and consistent set of business rules, that provide a single point of reference to support the business with implementing and/or undertaking efficient and compliant retention and disposal processes. (10) In alignment with Disposal Standard 10/13, the destruction of records must be authorised and documented with the exception of records classified as normal administrative practice (NAP), which can be destroyed without requiring authorisation. This standard is to be used in conjunction with the Destruction of Information Procedure. (11) This standard identifies and provides authorisation for the destruction of records not covered by Normal Administrative Practice (NAP). For any other records not covered by NAP or this Retention and Disposal Authority (RDA), please contact the Data and Analytics team. (12) For current guidance on records associated with contact tracing or drug and alcohol testing, please contact the Data and Analytics team. (13) The following, lists all the PROV RDAs incorporated into this standard, in compliance with Public Records Act 1973 (Vic): (14) The development of this standard, included (but is not limited to) consideration of retention requirements from the following: (15) Special thanks and acknowledgement to the University of Melbourne for consenting the use and adaptation of University of Melbourne’s Retention and Disposal Authority. (16) The Summary Schedule provides a summary of the retention periods for the different functions and activities covered by this RDA. (17) The Detailed Schedule provides the detailed descriptions, examples and minimum retention period after which the records may disposed of. (18) For the purposes of this Standard:Retention and Disposal Authority
Section 1 - Purpose
Section 2 - Scope
Section 3 - Authority
Section 4 - Standard
Background
Records Destruction
Retention and Disposal Authorities (issued by PROV)
Other Standards and Legislation
Special Acknowledgement
Section 5 - Schedules
Section 6 - Definitions
Disposal
The destruction or deletion of records from organisational systems; the migration of records between systems; and the transfer of records to internal retention and discovery systems, and/or to State Archives (PROV).
Normal administrative practice (NAP)
Defines ephemeral material of a facilitative or duplicate nature created, acquired or collected which can be destroyed without requiring authorisation.
These include:
Record
Information in any format created, received and maintained as evidence and information by an organisation or person, in pursuance of legal obligations or in the transaction of business.
Records include (but are not limited to) emails, documents, websites, photographs, conversations undertaken via Instant Messaging clients, meeting minutes, research data, posts to RMIT social media sites.
‘University’
All references to the ‘University’ within this standard refer to RMIT Australia entities, unless explicitly stated.
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