The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and Office of Management and Budget (OMB) set forth the government-wide policy M-19-21 as a directive to progress how government records are managed. Read on to learn what this directive is, who it impacts, and seven factors necessary to achieve compliance.
M-19-21 is a memorandum issued by NARA on June 28, 2019. A consolidation of the previous M-12-18 directive with some additional requirements, the purpose of this directive is to help the government transition fully to electronic records for increased efficiency, accuracy, and improved storage.
While the full mandate can be accessed here, some key points of M-19-21 are:
M-19-21 is a government-wide initiative that applies to all federal agencies.
The deadline for digitally managing all permanent records passed on December 31, 2019 – meaning many agencies have fallen behind already.
However, this initiative has been designed to transition agencies into managing government records (and metadata) entirely within an electronic environment by 2022.
In preparation for 2022 and then to ensure continued M-19-21 compliance thereafter, agencies should implement the following factors:
Proper systems and support are necessary to make the records transition to fully electronic. Using tools like auto-categorization, automated content lifecycle workflows, and advanced discovery can make the transition smoother for FOIA requests and to ensure your agency remains M-19-21 compliant.