RECORDS MANAGEMENT PROGRAM--POLICIES ISSUES ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

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CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0
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RIPPUB
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S
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13
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December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 14, 2006
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5
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MF
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100090005 Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-R402~GFO Issues SUBJECT Records Management Program - Policies 13- Organizational Structure 1. Paragraph of this memorandum contains recommendations 2. Before 1961 responsibility for the Records Management Program was centralized in the Records Management Staff. In 1961 responsibility for establishing, maintaining, and directing records programs was assigned to the Deputy Directors and heads of independent offices. Decentralization was not absolute, however, because the function of the CIA Records Administration Officer was retained with a minimal central staff. He is charged with responsibility for furnishing staff guidance, assistance, and coordination of the Agency program, and for reviewing and monitoring the decentralized programs. Neither the centralized program that existed before 1961 nor the structure that has existed since has fulfilled the fundamental requirement of controlling the growth of inactive x record material maintained in the offices and stored at the Records Center. 3. The reasons the centralized program didn't work before 1961 are still valid and it appears that no useful purpose would be ss served by considering total centralization as a reasonable alternative now. There are also several reasons the program as established after 1961 hasn't worked either: $a4 Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 Program composed of decentralized programs and this is the begin- ning of the ambiguity. It is not clear how one program is expected to be constructed out of several. The ambiguity is intensified by is ambiguous. It says there will be an Agency Records the distribution of authority and responsibility. I,01Z A1k authority to establish, maintain, and controllrecords programs he ds of is delegated to the Deputy Directors and/independent offices and none is reserved for the "Agency program". The Agency Records Administration Officer (Chief, Records Administration Branch, SSS) is made responsible for furnishing staff guidance, assistance, and coordination of the "Agency program" but there is no require- ment that these services be used. He is responsible for "re- viewing and monitoring", but-there is no obligation to accept or respond to his comments and recommendations. The regulation seems to say that the Agency wants it both ways: decentralized programs but centralized control. A part of the problem is that there is no authority and no structure to make it wor'r either way or in combination. b. A second reason the program doesn't work effectively now is that we operate a central storage facility but exercise no control over what comes into it, how long it must be kept, or when and if it may be destroyed. Each of the decentralized authorities exercises$kas these controls and jealously guards LL Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 right to do so. Theoretically, completely decentralized programs would include provision.for separate storage facilities for each program. Clearly this is too outrageous to consider seriously but it does suggest that perhaps some central control should be exercised over the use of the Records Center, partic- ularly if the managers of the Records Center are to be held accountable for volumes retained, and charged with responsibility for reducing them to a proportion which will fit within the present space. c. A third reason the Records Program doesn't work is that storage is the only element of the Records Programs that attracts only gets attention when the avail- able space is used up. Other elements of the Program do not get attention because there is almost never a crisis which can be directly attributed to them. Managers like to have their records programs remain unobtrusive. They gxx prefer to let subordinates and deal with problems of correspondence, reports, forms, records ma:..gement maintenance. There are no RH effective and systematic/systems to deal with reports or forms in any of the records programs in the AgencyC computer produced reports are literally transported from computer centers on fork-lift trucks and external printing of official forms costs the Agency more than a quarter of a million dollars a year. We have no way of knowing how much is spent or how much record material is produced for ultimate storage through Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 the uncontrolled development and printing of unofficial, bootleg forms that are used in virtually every operation of the Agency. We have no Agency correspondence program and no control over copying machines yet these are probably the primary sources for the creation of records that will ultimately require storage. Moreover, there is no evidence that Agency management wants pro- these grams in tka vital elements of records management and control, yet until we find some systematic way of dealing with the elements of records creation we have no hope of dealing intelligently with storage and disposal. d. The Agency last issued reports and forms handbooks more than ten years ago and the correspondence manual was last published in 1955. They are out of date but the only demand for revision comes from the Clerical Training Faculty where they can be used as tools in teaching new clerical employees some of the fundamentals. Efforts to revise these publications in recent years have repeatedly bogged down in the coordination process because it has proven impossible to get agreement among the various echelons of management on the basic principles of uniformity and standardization. Reports are generated by subor- dinates to give the managern what they think he wants, not to give him what he says he really needs. Management attitudes toward correspondence are very largely esthetic and practices followed in different components are usually developed in terms of what is appealing to the eye of the senior manager or one of his closely associated subordinates. i~L'uJCI Yl Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 gained from uniform practices and the application of professional so standards are not/impressive in the individual organizational unit that they become effective selling points in attempting to particular f f =i,-i persuade the manager that a P1M7.i2 Zt1 practice should be adopted. The fact that a bloc format justified flush left (the Federal Government standard) will save several seconds of a typist's time by eliminating tabular indentation, and the fact that a particular kind of file folder costs two instead of thirty cents and can save one hundred dollars worth of space in a safe are regarded as statistical minutiae when presented to individual managers. In the Agency aggregate, however, hundreds of man hours and thousands of dollars might be saved daily by the adoption of a few scientifically proven standards. e. The Agency has been getting along without the benefits of professional records management standards for a number of years and can xxnxxn continue to get along without them if Agency management wants it that way. If that is the decision, however, we should not retain a centralzs staff with pseudo-Agency respon-. sibilities assigned to it. We should be content to allow each of the several diaxnE decentralized programs to deal with them in their own way. The Records Administration Branch should be cupL~ji \ i`._ Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 relieved of all responsibility for an Agency Program and should become the records management unit for the Support Directorate with authority and responsibility prescribed accordingly. This does not seem to be a reasonable alternative, however, because it would not only perpetuate, it would intensify the problems we k now have with records management. 3. The problems of the Records Program in the Agency wxx? will not be overcome by decree. They can only be overcome by clear state- ment of policy, objectives, and ixta intent, and the creation of a realistic structure to make the program work. We need: a. The xx strongest possible expression of support from the highest levels of Agency management for axiaxa a totally integrated AgxxxyHw Agency-wide Records Management Program in- cluding all of the elements of creation, maintenance, and dis- position. b. To formalize the existing structure, which is composed in positions around of some sixty - sixty-five people xxxxxg the Agency charged with records management responsibilities; to provide for the staffing of these position with S fessionally competent pxxpia personnel; and, ideally, to provide a career service mechanism for the personnel management of these people and positions. Q-1 T Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 c. A formalized, gx regulated system governing the coordination and approval of all actions relating to any element of the Records Program. d. An authoritative monitoring and review system re- porting to the proper level of management with a regulatory re- quirement for response to recommendations, implementation of recommendations, and follow-up action. e. A systematic way of exercising xxihmxity authoritative control over materials accepted into the Records Center for storage and the length of time that they will be held. 4. The Records Administration Branch and the Records Management Board are reasonable management instruments for the implementation of the Program. A clear statement of Agency records management policy is required together with a sharp definition of the authorities and responsibilities of each issued inregulatory format. ._ Many xi parts of the records managemenfunction r"e closely related to the information processing function of system analysis and design. Competent records management officers are systems analysts capable of dealing with the design aNA improved manual systems. This is, in fact, what records management officers do in the process of evaluating records systems in the offices. In principle the design of a hard copy file is as integral a part of the overall information C" 'Wet a?V; Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 processing system as is a computer file in systems which require automation, t e analyst must be able to deal with .,accordingly. Manual systems have input, output, processing and filing procedures and the competent records management officer must be able to deal with all of these parts of the systems. Modern records officers must also be capable of recognizing the need and potential for automating systems and for designing manual systems which will interface with them smoothly. Conversely, systems analysts dealing with computer systems should have an understanding of, and appreciation for, the skills of records managers. Computer systems analysts must have an appreciation of the technical requirements for forms design in order to take ad- vantage of the most effective methods of preparing k? input and output. They should at least be conscious of the basic principles of reports management and records skga storage and maintainence since the automated systems they develop are intended primarily to produce reports which be controlled, managed, and eventually stored in accordance with sound records management principles. /". The records management function is also closely related to, but should be separated from, the archives function. The records created, processed, maintained and stored today become the archives of tomorrow. Careful and prudent selection of archival material is facilitated by and dependent upon a well designed and effectively managed records program. Early and systematic identification of record Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 material to be retained for archival preservation in a manner which does not negate the requirement that records storage be minimized requires that the records and archives program be compatible and care- fully integrated even though they are separate functions. Archives are the tools of the historians, who are students and scholars. Occasionally the less xunsainx conscientious among the historians may be inclined to dispose of a document after its substance has been used and recorded in whatever historical account is being written. This is a superficial attitude and not a prevalent one. It is mentioned only to suggest that while there are significant areas of interest common to the historical, archival, and records management functions, there can also be some areas of basic conflict of interest having of the kind which can be most effectively dealt with by/all of these functions under a single management. 9. In the critical review I submitted ?ss late in January I said that it is not tovearly to hE? begin considering the ultimate disposition of the SIPS Task Force. The notion that DDS management us must have full responsibility for DDS systems regardless of whether they use com- puters, desk calculators, or quill pens is just as valid now as it was the when we began/systems studies which have grown into the SIPS project. We set out deliberately to develop the skills necessary to become self sufficient, We acknowledged from the outset that we would have to rely on the Office of Computer Services for technical support in Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 the skills of xxmf computer systems design and programming in order to get the scope of our information processing system requirements operational in some reasonable time frame without waiting to develop these specialized skills for ourselves. Experience in recent months has demonstrated that system responsibility for on-going applications is just as intense as it is for new system development. The formation of the SIPS Task Force acknowledges that skills in computer systems design and programming and analytical skills representing knowledge of the subject matter and functions for which systems are being designed and operated must be responsive to a single management structure. Maintenance of on-going systems, the development of new ones, the adju- dication of priorities among them, and the allocation of available resources to meet all of these demands can only be reasonably managed within a single management chain. This says that we should not be looking forward to the Ls lu-s+ rr of the SIPS Task Force, but should be planning for its absorption into the Support Directorate. 10. Absorbing the task force into the Support Directorate immediately raises the question about the location of the hardware. We have said from the beginning that we see no need for the Support Directorate to have its own hardware provided that the Office of Com- ade uate puter Services continues to be able to furnish kgkh support. Whether computer systems designers and programmers have to be under the same management structure as the hardware i/ a debatable issue, but there is a great deal of argument to support the premise that they do not. Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 Computer service bureaus operate all over the country where centrally located hardware services a large number and wide variety of computer government applications. Many/organizations have hardware facilities to serve customers in other organizations. We have used some of these mxisa? ourselves for back-up from time to time and of course, parts of our payroll application has been run on hardware at the Treasury Department for several years. It doesn't seem too unreasonable to suggest that the Operations Division could function as a service bureau in the same way. In a sense it operates that way now. Systems designers and pro- grammers in the Management Support Division, now a part of the SIPS Task Force, and other divisions of OCS are required to submit requests for service almost as though they were part of another organization weight entirely. In any event the w xt of the arguments supports much more conclusively that the analysts, designers and programmers should be responsive to the manager who has the problem to be solved and then that they should respond to the manager who controls the hardware. While probably it is not prudent to pursue this now I believe our plan- ning for the future should anticipate that it will occur he question of whether or not the Support Directorate should have its own hardware, however, need not be addressed now. If our applications, when imple- mented, require some stand-alone configuration of computing equipment it may make sense to have the whole thing in the DDS structure. Whether this occurs or not, I don't see that it needs to affect our planning now. Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 11. The reason for mentioning the information processing the organization in this paper is not only to identify relationships and similarities with records management but to lead up to the suggestion may that you/want eventually to consider the establishment of an Assistant xapty Deputy Director for Support for Information Processingy who would have responsibility for the Support Directorate information processing activities, records management activities, archives, and Agency history. If that is a reasonable suggestion, actions you take now should be consistent with that objective. an 12. The long term objective of such/organizational structure would be to provide single management direction to the interrelated functions dealing with manual and automated information processing systems; creation, maintenance, and disposition of their products; and the identification and preservation of those products which have his- torical and archival value. It should be at a level of the organization which permits it to function across organizational lines and deal adequately with systems which have an Agency-wide impact, to adjudicate priorities, xx and allocate resources accordingly. 13. Acknowledging that the creation of such a position and com- the question one ponent is not a practical step to be taken now/becomes xxuiF of selecting actions which will not be inconsistent with accomplishing that objective later if you choose to go in that direction, and which may be practical now. In an earlier paper the point has been made that Approved For Release 2006/12/16: CIA-RDP73-00402R000100090005-0 archives should the Records Program although the archives function is closely related to the records management function. The archives function is also closely related to the historical func- tion. Each of these units should be brought together under a single management. If this can be accomplished now, it should be but if it isn't practical for any reason I would suggest that the archives be established as a function separate from the Records Center and responsi- bility for it to be assigned to the Historical Staff. The main reason for suggesting this as a first step is to reinforce the notion that archives are aapaa separate from records. Preferably, the archives function would not be subordinated to the H historical function. There could be an archives division and an historical division under a single manager. 14. Another option might be to have a records division, an archives division and a historical division under the single management of a "Director of Documentation". If this combination of functions can be accomplished in one action, it would be desirable to do so. If it is not reasonable to accomplish this in a single action, the archives and historical functions should be combined first with the records function added later. 15. A third option would be to separate the archives from the records function as a separate divisions under the same management. The principle disadvantage of this arrangement as a first step is that