HomeMy WebLinkAbout2014-02-25 TSSERR Meeting Minutes
Tompkins Shared Services Electronic Records Repository Group
Meeting Minutes
February 25, 2014
Location: Town of Groton
Present:
Town of Caroline: Marilou Harrington, Christine Wilbur
Cayuga Heights: Joan Mangione, Angela Podufalski, Jennifer Zawislak
Town of Danby: Pamela Goddard
Town of Dryden: Bambi Avery
Village of Dryden: Debra Marrotte
Village of Freeville: Ron Campbell
Town of Enfield: Alice Linton, Sue Thompson
Town of Groton: April Scheffler, Robin Cargian, Rosemarie Tucker
Village of Groton: Charles Rankin, Vicki Marks, Deb Barron
City of Ithaca: Sarah Myers, Alan Karasin
Town of Ithaca: Lisa Carrier-Titti
Town of Ulysses: Carissa Parlato, Patricia Halloran
NYS Archives: Suzanne Etherington
Tompkins County: Maureen Reynolds, Alanna Congdon, Greg Potter, Loren
Cottrell
Tompkins County Soil & Water: Jon Negley
1. Introduction of New Members:
Ms. Reynolds introduced the newest members to join the TSSERR group: the Villages
of Cayuga Heights, Dryden, Freeville, Groton, Lansing, and Trumansburg; and
Tompkins County Soil and Water Department
Ms. Reynolds reviewed the Laserfiche Repositories on the County’s server (through a
Power Point Presentation) so everyone could see what it looked like and how it is set
up. She noted that the Tompkins County Clerk’s website has every deed from 1817 to
present available electronically. She encouraged everyone to take a look at the site and
make use of it.
Ms. Reynolds further reported that Ms. Congdon, from the County Clerk’s office, has set
up a TSSERR Group website that will contain agendas, minutes, the by-laws, and
information on grants. Ms. Congdon also created TSSERR business cards, which were
distributed during the meeting. The business cards provide Ms. Reynolds and Ms.
Congdon’s contact information so that everyone can contact them directly with any
questions or needs. Ms. Reynolds is also working on getting information on either tee
shirts or bags for members of this group that will showcase the TSSERR logo and
hopefully, generate attention and interest in the work of the group.
Ms. Reynolds then reviewed the TSSERR agreement and by-laws for all the new
members. She noted that work is needed to develop policies and procedures; she has
the majority of that work done but would like volunteers to assist her in this effort as
well.
TSSERR Meeting Minutes February 25, 2014
Mr. Potter, Tompkins County IT Director, explained that the by-laws define the TSSERR
group and how it will work. The by-laws will allow the TSSERR group to add/change
membership and policies and procedures without having to go through the Tompkins
County Legislature for approval. As such a document, it requires that formal positions of
Chairperson and Vice-Chairperson be elected each year in January to oversee the
meetings and activities of the group. In addition, formal minutes of this group will be
needed, approved, and posted to the County’s website each time the group meets. The
by-laws also require that this group establish a work plan for each year and provide a
brief presentation annually to the Tompkins County Governance Committee on that
plan.
Nomination for Chairperson of the Tompkins Shared Services Electronic Records
Repository Group
By Pamela Goddard: Seconded by Sarah Myers
RESOLVED, That Maureen Reynolds be nominated as Chairperson of the Tompkins
Shared Services Electronic Records Repository Group with a term to expire December
31, 2014.
Carried Unanimously
Nomination for Vice Chairperson of the Tompkins Shared Services Electronic
Records Repository Group
By Greg Potter: Seconded by April Scheffler
RESOLVED, That Bambi Avery be nominated as Vice Chairperson of the Tompkins
Shared Services Electronic Records Repository Group with a term to expire December
31, 2014.
Carried Unanimously
Minute Taker for Tompkins Shared Services Electronic Records Repository
Group
Sarah Myers, City of Ithaca, volunteered to be minute taker for the TSSERR group
meetings.
Mr. Potter encouraged everyone to re-read the by-laws and group agreement so that
they fully understand their contents and each municipality’s responsibilities as members
of the TSSERR Group. He stated that the by-laws define the representation by
municipality which allows for one vote by a designated person for each municipality.
The vote can be made by the designated person or a stand-in for the designated
person. In order to increase membership requires a 2/3 majority vote of the entire
group. At this point, the villages and soil and water conservation district need to be
formally voted into membership of the TSSERR group.
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TSSERR Meeting Minutes February 25, 2014
Nomination of All Tompkins County Villages and the Tompkins County Soil and
Water Conservation District to the Tompkins Shared Services Electronic Records
Repository Group
By Bambi Avery: Seconded by Pamela Goddard
RESOLVED, That the Villages of Cayuga Heights, Dryden, Freeville, Groton, Lansing,
and Trumansburg and Tompkins County Soil and Water Division be approved for
membership into the Tompkins Shared Services Electronic Records Repository Group.
Carried Unanimously
TSSERR Group Meeting Schedule:
Ms. Reynolds proposed quarterly meetings or webinars for the group throughout the
year, which was fully supported by everyone. She will develop a 2014 meeting
schedule and e-mail it to all members in the near future.
2. Laserfiche Empower 2014 Conference:
Ms. Reynolds reported that she and Greg Potter from the County; and Julie Holcomb,
Sarah Myers, and Alan Karasin from the City of Ithaca attended the Laserfiche
Empower 2014 Conference in Anaheim, California the week of January 13th. She went
to the conference with the goal of learning more about the Forms Module of Laserfiche
and to network with other users and information technology staff. She is also interested
in the Workflow Module, which works with Laserfiche Forms.
Ms. Reynolds stated that she would set up a meeting at Tompkins County with
representatives of General Code Publishers to provide some basic training on
Laserfiche Forms and Workflow for anyone interested in that information.
Mr. Potter noted that the County’s IT Department still needs to do some coordination
within the County’s network and with General Code on the development and use of
Laserfiche Forms and Workflow which are pretty sophisticated programs. He would be
very interested, moving forward in determining whether or not there are common forms
and processes that all municipalities use that could be developed within Laserfiche
Forms and Workflow so the designing of the programs could be done once and then
tweaked to meet individual needs.
He further noted that the County IT Department also needs to coordinate with General
Code regarding the Public Portal program of Laserfiche. A determination needs to be
made whether each municipality should have a separate page for the public to access
information or whether there should be a common page with a link to each municipality.
There is much more work needed this part of the program. In addition, individual
municipalities will need to make decisions as to what it wants available for the public
through the web portal. As the default setting, for now, everything is considered private.
Research is needed to determine what data sets are clearly public; for now, they will
start with just minutes on the public portal side.
He further stated that County staff are here to assist and not dictate how or what the
records management portion of the program should be for each municipality.
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TSSERR Meeting Minutes February 25, 2014
Mr. Potter provided a status update on the current grant project, which is the County
and Challenge are finishing the work with all the Towns, and starting work on scanning
and importing into Laserfiche the City of Ithaca records. The County will work on an
ongoing basis to assist the towns and villages to get them up and running on how to use
Laserfiche and their repository.
Ms. Congdon provided a brief PowerPoint demonstration of the Town of Dryden’s
repository in Laserfiche to show everyone what their repository will look like, what will
be there, and the need to develop a plan for what to do going day forward from here.
Ms. Reynolds stated that they are considering what might be included in the next grant
application; she feels that the town court records would be a great place to expand to;
or the highway department records. Another possibility for a grant is to look at scanning
the larger format type maps, since those are more expensive to scan and store.
She reminded everyone that the County has a large scanner that is available anytime
for anyone to come in and use for scanning large maps and documents. She noted that
all the minutes done through the grant process were OCR’d – but not the building
permits. Mr. Potter stated that when documentation is OCR’d, queries can be run based
on any text within the documents.
Ms. Reynolds reported that she will be conducting a Continuing Legal Education class
for attorneys in this area soon. She plans to show them what information is on the
County’s website, talk about Laserfiche, and future plans for records management.
Ms. Reynolds reminded everyone that Ms. Congdon is available anytime to provide
software assistance, and to call Mr. Potter for IT type questions or server problems. Ms.
Congdon can set up custom searches for anyone too that then can be saved for future
use.
Mr. Potter reported that as part of the last NYS archives grant, Tompkins County
upgraded the storage area on their network equipment and devices. They also are
working to have complete redundancy of their network. Each storage location has a
generator to provide for an uninterrupted power supply so that if power were lost, there
would be access to records and information where needed. He assured everyone that
their data would be safe and secure. They also do routine back-ups of the network, and
are considering a fourth off-site storage location for data, so that the information is
available at up to 4 data centers at anytime. They also will have the ability to
incrementally add space to that network to build capacity loads as time goes by and
more information is put into Laserfiche.
Public portal: - who is interested/what records are important that the public have access
to at anytime? Ms. Reynolds will send an e-mail to everyone for an answer to those
questions, and she will also work with Mr. Potter and Mr. Karasin to determine what will
work best for everyone.
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TSSERR Meeting Minutes February 25, 2014
Forms:
Ms. Reynolds asked if there are common forms, such as dog licenses, marriage
licenses? It was noted that most clerks use a different software for marriage licenses
with forms provided by New York State so they might not work; however, Ms. Reynolds
will talk with New York State to see what/if any changes can be made to those State
forms and programs. She is actually working with the Court system on that same
question.
Mr. Potter asked if we could identify a piece of paper that people are filling out by hand
that becomes a cover sheet for something submitted. The use of Laserfiche Forms
would convert hand writing to digital which can create an index that could be queried in
the future. As subsequent information comes in, it can then be dropped into same
location for completion of the associated task.
Maintenance - Day Forward Process:
Mr. Potter explained that the focus, so far, has been on archiving what records are in
place with grants to make them easy to find. The true value and future benefit is to
keep pace with those digital record sets so that are they're received we don't end up
with a lot of paper to then scan into Laserfiche. How can we incorporate scanning and
using Laserfiche on a day-to-day basis going forward to eliminate paper? We can't go
back and pay to re-scan records again, and documents received electronically now can
be put right into Laserfiche. He wondered if any municipalities were doing that now, do
they want to, and how can the County help with that process? Town of Ithaca and Town
of Enfield are doing that with minutes currently.
Ms. Congdon can take digital records and put them into Laserfiche if a municipality’s
connectivity is slow or provide assistance if there is a request for a large amount of
information to be e-mailed. Mr. Potter stated that everyone needs to pay close attention
to the size of documents, especially large format drawings because if a file is too large,
then it becomes a problem to e-mail it to anyone. He noted that is an issue the County
will need to determine how to manage.
Mr. Potter asked what everyone’s experience has been in using Laserfiche? It was
noted that it is very helpful in responding to FOIL requests because it saves time. He
further noted that the County GIS Department no longer has its big plotter, and they do
not produce maps anymore. He stated that the Tompkins County Assessment
Department has tax maps and those are available on the County Clerk's website.
One tip that was provided to help locate documents in the future – especially hand
written documents is to add a sticky note to the document. You will then be able to
search for that document because there is now text associated with the document.
Make sure to use an identifying word on the sticky note that would help you locate that
document when you perform a search in the future.
Mr. Potter explained that the County can help set up folder structures, and noted that
General Code provides great support and can help design file and folder structures that
meet a certain municipalities' needs.
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TSSERR Meeting Minutes February 25, 2014
NYS Archives Representative, Suzanne Etherington, asked what the audit trail and
history of searches looks like in Laserfiche.
Ms. Congdon responded that going forward that is something the County needs to work
on; it has not been done yet because it will take up a lot of space on the network.
Mr. Potter noted that audit trail capability was a key factor that differentiated Laserfiche
from other companies in that it has a very robust audit trail ability, and the ability to
create audit records.
Ms. Reynolds stated that the United States Department of Defense has certified
Laserfiche for its use; however, New York State still has questions about whether they
want to certify it or not. She did note that an audit trail is needed for admissible items in
a court situation.
Status of next grant: Ms. Reynolds stated that work has begun on the next grant
application. They hope to receive a grant to bring in the Villages and the Tompkins
County Soil and Water Division to the TSSERR group.
Ms. Reynolds further reported that she does not have the annual Laserfiche license cost
and license distribution information yet; she will let us know as soon as she does. She
stated that it has been great to meet and work with everyone through this process.
Going forward we will work to determine where there is redundancy and where there
might be similar information that could be shared between municipalities.
Ms. Etherington reported that everyone is watching this project from NYS Archives with
great admiration. They all think this is a wonderful records management project and that
it is wonderful to have all municipalities in Tompkins County working together on it.
Town of Groton Historian, Rose Tucker, stated that all the historians in New York State
are very interested in this project. Having all this information available electronically will
be so helpful to them as they assist the public in their research. She suggested to Ms.
Reynolds that if she could do a presentation to the historians that it would be well
received. Ms. Reynolds stated that Tompkins County Historian, Carol Kammen, is
thrilled with this project as well.
Next Steps:
Mr. Potter stated that the next thing to do is for this group to determine its work
plan/priorities, and develop policies/procedures. He feels that a sub-committee to work
on the policies would be the best way to proceed, and then their recommendations can
be presented to the larger group for review, input, and approval. He stated that some
structure to this process will be needed as well as defining the responsibility of the
county versus each agency. In addition, the groups’ 2014 Work Plan will need to be
quickly presented to the County’s Governance Committee, and then lastly, prioritization
of the county's time and direction it should go needs to be done. From his perspective,
the first priority is getting the public portal up and running, and having that information
available to the public. Everyone agreed that is a priority.
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TSSERR Meeting Minutes February 25, 2014
Next Grant application:
Ms Reynolds stated that she will need the following information from all the Villages for
the next grant application: when their records retention schedule was adopted and
date/information regarding appointment of records management administrator.
Digital signatures-Filing Dates:
A very brief discussion was held regarding digital signatures and filing dates, and what
constitutes a signature, and the official filing date of documents. Research will be
needed. Ms. Etherington stated that this is a gray area and that a written policy should
be established concerning both, and then that policy followed consistently.
Adjournment:
The meeting adjourned at 11:03 a.m.
Respectfully Submitted,
Sarah Myers, Information Management Specialist, City of Ithaca
March 6, 2014
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