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The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) has extended the comment period on NFPA 232: Standard for the Protection of Records to January 14. If you would like to submit comments, the following overview of NFPA’s process and the recent history of this specific standard will help you be more effective.
The NFPA 232 technical committee began revising the 2000 edition of the standard in 2002. The article “Records Under Fire” (The Information Management Journal November/December 2002) provides an excellent summary of the controversy regarding varying levels of records protection as experienced in the previous revision cycle, during which the revision was appealed to NFPA’s Standards Council. The Standards Council reaffirmed the 2000 edition of the standard and reconstituted the technical committee in 2004.
NFPA 232: 2000 is currently in the period where proposals to change existing text or add new text are being accepted. Proposals must be specific as to the section of the standard being addressed and the specific text to be added or changed. Each proposal must be supported by a substantiation statement.
If you wish to submit a formal proposal, you must use NFPA’s proposal submission form. Everything you will need is available on the NFPA Web site (www.nfpa.org):
• Purchase a copy of NFPA 232:2000 through the NFPA online bookstore It is available in PDF or print form for $28.75. • Download the proposal submittal form (http://www.nfpa.org/assets/files/PDF/docprop.pdf). • Learn more about NFPA’s codes and standards process, is available on their web site at www.nfpa.org. You’ll have to follow the links for “Codes and Standards”; Code Development Process; Proposals (ROP) and Comments (ROC). You can also find an article there that summarizes the NFPA process.
The technical committee will meet in February to discuss the proposals and to accept, reject, or revise them. These decisions are preliminary, since the committee conducts a written ballot on the committee decisions. If this process meets the NFPA requirements for balloting, the document proceeds to the report on comment (ROC) stage.
After the proposal is successfully balloted, there is a 60-day period during which individuals can comment on the committee’s decisions regarding the proposed changes. Once again there is a specific form and format for this stage.
ARMA involvement with NFPA 232 ARMA has maintained a membership in this committee for the past four years. We have sent a delegate to each of the technical committee meetings during that time and have submitted proposals that reinforce the records management perspective while also offering alternatives that will hopefully facilitate consensus among the committee members.
In addition, ARMA is forming an advisory task force within the Standards Development Program to specifically address this standard. The task force will review the proposals and assist in determining ARMA’s response to the proposals and comments. If you are interested in serving on this advisory task force, please contact Diane Carlisle, CRM, director of professional resources, at [log in to unmask]
List archives at http://lists.ufl.edu/archives/recmgmt-l.html Contact [log in to unmask] for assistance
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