Email Management : Keeping & Deleting
Who is responsible for managing email messages?
Organizing and managing email is the responsibility of the individual
University employee, and can be quite a challenge considering the
volume of email sent and received on the campus every day.

Why do I need to keep certain emails?
Many campus units utilize email to transmit reports, meeting minutes,
drafts of policies, official memorandum and other information without
realizing that their email correspondence is a public record, according
to the North Carolina Public Records Law (GS 132). Unauthorized
destruction of public records is a Class 3 misdemeanor punishable
by imprisonment and/or fine, and can increase risk for the University
if records can't be accessed during litigation.
University employees should be aware of their responsibility to
keep electronic messages accessible to the public throughout their
established retention period.

Why do I need to delete certain emails?
Response Coming Soon...

What email should I keep?
Does the email message or attachment have permanent or continuing
value? (ie, such as those messages that document administrative
decision-making, committee, faculty, and campus activities)? If
no, delete and purge once its value ends (purpose has been concluded).
Who else received this message? If there are multiple recipients,
are you the primary keeper of this document? Example: You are the
chair of a committee and receive meeting minutes from a committee
member; as chair retention of the document would be your responsibility
until transferred to Archives or into an electronic records keeping
system.
Is the email or attachment a work in progress (such as a draft)?
If yes, do you need all versions? Retention of drafts can depend
on whether you are the creator or recipient and on the type of document.
As a general rule keep drafts only if they are needed to document
the process, such as evidence when negotiating an agreement. In
most cases, the final version is sufficient for long term retention.
Messages with continuing value, such as those that document administrative
decision-making, committee, faculty, and campus activities, should
be retained in paper or electronic copy until no longer administratively
useful, and then transferred to the University Archives. Electronic
copies can be deleted if paper copies are maintained. Examples of
messages that may have continuing value are those which :
- approve or authorize actions or expenditures;
- are formal communications between staff, such as correspondence
or memoranda relating to official business;
- signify a policy change or development;
- create a precedent, such as messages issuing instructions or
advice;
- relate to the substantive business of the work unit or University;
- involve negotiations on behalf of the University;
- have value for other people or the work unit as a whole.
- Faculty correspondence, research data, and external scholarly
communications which are not of an administrative nature may still
have significant archival value. Electronic copies may be deleted
if paper copies are maintained.
Messages whose loss would pose a significant fiscal, legal, or
administrative risk to the university if they could not be accessed
or read should not be deleted unless retained in an acceptable paper
format.

What email should I delete?
Personal messages. These should be minimal and retained only as
long as necessary.
Messages with short term value (only needed for a limited time
or purpose) should be deleted and purged once their purpose has
concluded. Such messages include:
Those distributed to a number of staff for information only, such
as:
- news bulletins, circulars, meeting notices, copies of extracts
of documents
- Drafts
- Those created solely as part of preparation for other records
- Personal messages and announcements not work related
- Junk mail
If you manage your routine email correspondence and inter-office
memoranda by printing and filing it, you can purge and delete electronic
copies.

Should I keep attachments to email? How would
you recommend doing this?
Remember to file and existing attachments with the email, unless
you have already saved them to a different location.
If the email message provides context for the attachment, the answer
is yes. IN most cases where the attachment has continuing value,
the email should be kept as it supplies the date, sender, and recipients
as well as any cover message.
Can I save the email and attachment as paper only? Yes, if transmission
data is retained on the print-out (date, sender, recipients, subject
and message body).
If the email and attachment have legal or evidential value, storing
them together, either as part of your email environment or in an
electronic records keeping system that retains email header (transmission)
data, is the most authentic storage.

How long should I keep email?
University employees should be aware of their responsibility to
keep electronic messages accessible to the public throughout their
established retention period.

When should I transfer email to the archives?
Messages with continuing value, such as those that document administrative
decision-making, committee, faculty, and campus activities, should
be retained in paper or electronic copy until no longer administratively
useful, and then transferred to the University Archives.

Where should I store email?
Response Coming Soon...

How would you recommend storing emails that
I need to keep?
Response Coming Soon...

In what format should I keep email?
Many email users retain sent and received messages with value by
printing them and filing them with other related paper documents.
This is an acceptable method for retaining the message, if there
exists no digital solution, ie a method for retaining the messages
electronically over time.

If I print an email, can I then delete it?
If you choose this management technique for maintaining physical
and intellectual control over your email, it is not necessary to
retain the original electronic mail message. It is advisable, however,
to document this practice of printing and purging as a regular business
practice.
If you manage your routine email correspondence and inter-office
memoranda by printing and filing it, you can purge and delete electronic
copies.

Why do I need to include metadata in print
outs of email?
Email messages that are printed must include certain components
of the original electronic version. Those components include:
- Addresses not names of distribution lists of specific
recipients (the To:),
- Including addresses in cc: and bcc:
fields.
- Addresses of the sender (the From)
- The subject line
- The body of the email message
- All attachments
- The date and time the message was sent and/or received
- Some organizations may require the sender to include a signature
block or a disclaimer on each sent message. Those components also
should be included on printed messages. Similarly, a vCard file
that a sender attaches to the message in lieu of a signature block
should be printed.

When should I print an email?
Many email users retain sent and received messages with value by
printing them and filing them with other related paper documents.
This is an acceptable method for retaining the message, if there
exists no digital solution, ie a method for retaining the messages
electronically over time.
If you choose this management technique for maintaining physical
and intellectual control over your email, it is not necessary to
retain the original electronic mail message. It is advisable, however,
to document this practice of printing and purging as a regular business
practice.
If you manage your routine email correspondence and inter-office
memoranda by printing and filing it, you can purge and delete electronic
copies.

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