Introduction

Welcome to my Weblog. This site is dedicated to my thoughts, views and understanding on anything that touches upon records management, archives management as well as information management in Malaysia. I believe in becoming a 'functional and meaningful' information professional, the term I refer to as person who can function in many ways possible for the betterment of this discipline. Interested parties, may reproduce or quote materials published with the condition that they are credited to alwiyunus.blogspot.com Comments must be accompanied by names or pseudonyms. Anonymous postings and those containing profanities and obscenities will be rejected. http://adf.ly/8Y1UN
Showing posts with label records disaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label records disaster. Show all posts

Thursday, November 5, 2015

My organization is jammed....

Dear all...


One fine day, i received an email. Somebody who happened to be my former student sent me an email. The email stated like this;




Stacks of Veterans Affairs claim folders overtake a regional office in Winston-Salem, N.C. These photos were included in a 2012 report from the Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General. (Somewhere in USA not in Malaysia)


"Dear sir, How are you? I am now working with one academic institution at the northern state in Peninsular Malaysia. I am now in charge of the records in this organization. However though, I have an uphill task of managing all those paper records. Space is scarce and I have nowhere to store the records. Could you please shed some opinion on how I could go about it? Can I just dispose off all records so that I can save some space for other records? Or is there any modern equipment to be installed so that the current space can accommodate more? Please advise, thanks".....


I read through with amusement. I recalled last time when I was called for a talk by the same organization, and had a fruitful discussion with a few top persons in that organization, the problems had been resolved. During which I believe, at that time, my former student who sent me this email has yet worked there. The incident was much earlier then.


When receiving this email, now I realize that, those compounding problems are far from solved. It surprises me a bit. I could just imagine how much backlogs now then before. Surely they are struggling to keep all records. When asked previously, they said they do not have budget to have new space built for it or allocate for and even to engage offsite storage providers.


That is the problem now and before. I look at it as a disaster... a record disaster. Everything is jammed. Backlogs are there, and organization cannot operate efficiently and effectively. Everything seem to be slowing down...I mean the operation of organization. Access and reference is difficult to be done. I could just imagine, stack of records are everywhere in that organization. I think I read somewhere of similar problems somewhere. if I am not mistaken there is an interesting article named "MY ORGANIZATION IS JAMMED.....".


Hence, after sometime, and after giving some thoughts, I managed to reply the email. I said to him;



"In your situation, which I do really understand that it has been for sometime, and you are employed to deal and manage it. I understand your constrains. The space is there, it is full now. If you installed moving rack, similar problem will occur in near future. It is just temporary. What you can do now is....get your top management certain budget. It must be done, otherwise, the problems will still be there and haunting you. It is like a ghost....a nightmare to you, especially when you are tasked and entrusted to deal with it. You can dispose off the records after appraisal process, and prior to disposal, you could do digitization. All the records must be digitized. Once done, dispose off all records necessarily as well as preserve records deemed of having continuing value...I can guide on that.




When doing digitization, be careful, it is not mere digitization...you have to prepare for the digitized materials to be stored digitally and electronically....so that it could be accessed, referred to later. With that, you need some investment; peripherals, and software. You can use locally developed software by one local company, their software has received endorsement from the National Archive of Malaysia, and compliance with the functional requirement of electronic records management and MS2223 Part 1&2 as well as ISO 16175 and 15489....no worry about it. Their software are also used in more than 31 government agencies as for now with more than 20,000 users in the Federal Government of Malaysia (as far as I am concerned).....for your information, I also use their software for teaching and learning purposes at my ERMS lab...my student are exposed to this electronic records management software when I teach them electronic records management subject...."


That is my answer to him. I gave him a contact number to that company so that he can make arrangement with them.






Soon after, I received a reply email from him; "Thank you sir....I am considering to use the software and to do digitization to the records at my holdings....please advise me on that later. I will keep in touch with you sir"


I believe my answer is such a relieve to him now. I hope his backlogs will soon disappear and the 'records disaster' will be gone. That is records.....if we ignore them now, later it will haunt us all. It must be managed right from the very beginning.

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Records and Disaster....

Dear all...



Malaysia faced major flash flood disaster recently and few states in Peninsular Malaysia were slumped in flood. Everything was in stand still. People were left with nothing. They took shelter in higher land area or hill or survived in whatever means. The flood had cut down access and cut off connection. All were stalled and people are awed at the unprecedented event. It had never happened before to such an amazing and unimaginable scale. 

The aftermath of the biggest massive flood occurrence in Malaysia post an alarming issue on disaster preparedness and disaster recovery program on records and non records items to organization, companies and everyone who are involved directly and indirectly....what say you?

I believe many have lost personal belongings more so with personal records in this horrendous worst flood ever in the affected state. I have no idea the sum of all lost but surely it is huge and very huge lost. A friend of mine, close friend at Pondok Sg Durian somewhere in the district of Kuala Kerai, Kelantan has lost invaluable books and old 'kitab' or scholarly writings and references inherited from his forefathers. Tribute to Dr. Abdul Basit bin Abd Rahman for his lost. What to say about govt offices at districts level and villages level. It just could not be imagined the cost and the loss of memory too.

The Government of Malaysia has estimated around RM20 billion in total loss due to flood. Such huge amount of money!
Most importantly, things had happened though we knew the need for disaster planning and recovery program in relation to records and document prior to the event. Admittedly Malaysians always take lessons learnt in a very had way. It ingrains in the culture of our society, true enough the saying "dah terantuk baru terngadah"....disaster preparedness and disaster recovery program are not in place...I believe we had lost many records already....

Some says that we need to seriously undertake and revisit the existing Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) and develop "what if" analysis based on the worst case scenario. Hazard Effect Management Plan (HEMP) need to be developed and gauge the potential lost and analyse the cost cycle to execute and maintain the disaster planning program.

True enough, some of us cannot highlight the potential lost to the highest management and we cannot blame the management since we are not able to convince them. Maybe to help us we can read this book http://www.hubbardresearch.com/.../how-to-measure.../

Mr Khairul Nizam, one of my colleague said that "Malaysian National Archives had written a guideline on Disaster Management Plan for Records (PTB) and they have a disaster response team for this kind of crisis. You can find the PTB at their website. Shaluf and Ahmadun had already highlighted that natural disaster involving rain is the number one disaster in Malaysia, be it flood or landslide. Roof leaks can also cause disaster to records. I've been researching disaster management on records in Malaysia since 2010 and throughout this journey,i've encountered lots of alarming scenario regarding disaster management on records in Malaysia. Having a records disaster plan is one thing, we need to know the comprehensiveness of our disaster plan, action taken when disaster strikes is another issue, preventive measure before disaster occured is another thing, the question is how do you know whether you are ready to face disaster, I've written an article about disaster management for records in organization and it was presented by Kamarul Azwan Azman last year. Just remember one thing, every year we will be facing the flood situation, just the scale is different this time. Having a good disaster plan, prevention and recovery management may not be enough to save everything but at least we can minimze the damage. By not having anything may lead to total crisis."

In order to convince the management in getting additional budget for disaster management is to present them with list of cases involving disaster on records. Not only flood, but theft as well. Academic books had listed potential threats for records. Risk asseassessment must be accompanied by disaster plan. You can't cover everything so list down the risk,impact and probability.