Digital dark age: Many fed e-records lost

Most federal electronic records of historical interest are not being adequately preserved and may be permanently lost, according to the GAO.

Most federal electronic records of historical interest are not being adequately preserved and may be permanently lost, according to a General Accounting Office report released June 17.

The report, "Information Management: Challenges in Managing and Preserving Electronic Records," was commissioned by House Government Reform subcommittee on government efficiency, financial management and intergovernmental relations and the Appropriations subcommittee on postal service and general government.

The House wanted the GAO to determine whether the National Archives and Records Administration, which is responsible for preserving documents of historical interest, was adequately saving the influx of e-records it was receiving from agencies.

Based on a 2001 NARA report, the GAO found federal agencies were not identifying and passing to NARA records of historical value. Guidance in handling these large volumes of complex records is incomplete.

It also found that agencies often give e-records low priority within records management, and that NARA does not have sufficient information to identify records management implementation issues.

"We found that archival organizations now rely on a mixture of evolving approaches that generally fall short of solving the long-term preservation problem," the report said.

The report detailed NARA's own plan to develop an advanced e-records archive, which, it reported, was behind schedule.

The report is available online at www.gao.gov/new.items/d02586.pdf.