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Disposal Facts
Risk Management Series
Information Disposal
Audit and Advisory Publications
1. Every Business Has Information That Requires Destruction.
All businesses have occasion to discard confidential data. Customers lists,
price lists, sales statistics, drafts of bids and correspondence, and even
memos contain information about business activity which would interest any
competitor. Every business is also entrusted with information that must be
kept private. Employees and customers have the legal right to have this data
protected.
Without the proper safeguards, information ends up in the dumpster where it
is readily and legally available to anybody. The trash is considered by
business espionage professionals as the single most available source of
competitive and private information from the average business. Any
establishment that discards private and proprietary data without the benefit
of destruction exposes itself to the risk of criminal and civil prosecution,
as well as the costly loss of business.
2. Stored Records Should Be Destroyed On A Regular Schedule.
The period of time that business records are stored should be determined by
a retention schedule that takes into consideration their useful value to the
business and the governing legal requirements. No record should be kept
longer than this retention period. By not adhering to a program of routinely
destroying stored records, a company exhibits suspicious disposal practices
that could be negatively construed in the event of litigation or audit.
Also, the new “Federal Rule 26” requires that in the event of a law suit,
each party provide all relevant records to the opposing counsel within 85
days of the defendants initial response. If either of the litigants does not
fulfill this obligation, it will result in a summary finding against them.
By destroying records according to a set schedule, a company appropriately
limits the amount of materials it must search though to comply with this
law.
From a risk management perspective, the only acceptable method of discarding
stored records is to destroy them by a method that ensures that the
information is obliterated. Documenting the exact date that a record is
destroyed is a prudent and recommended legal precaution.
3. Incidental Business Records Discarded On A Daily Basis Should Be
Protected.
Without a program to control it, the daily trash of every business contains
information that could be harmful. This information is especially useful to
competitors because it contains the details of current activities. Discarded
daily records include phone messages, memos, misprinted forms, drafts of
bids and drafts of correspondence.
All businesses suffer potential exposure due to the need to discard these
incidental business records. The only means of minimizing this exposure is
to make sure such information is securely collected and destroyed.
4. Recycling Is Not An Adequate Alternative For Information Destruction.
To extract the scrap value from office paper, recycling companies use
unscreened, minimum wage workers to extensively sort the paper under
unsecured conditions. The “acceptable” paper is stored for indefinite
periods of time until there is enough of a particular type to sell. The
sorted paper, still intact, is then baled and sold to the highest bidder,
often overseas, where it may be stored again for weeks or even months until
it is finally used to make new products.
There is no fiduciary responsibility inherent in the recycling scenario.
Paper is given away or sold and, by doing so, a company gives up the right
say in how it is handled. There is also no practical means of establishing
the exact date that a record is destroyed. In the event of an audit or
litigation, this could be a legal necessity. And further, if something of a
private nature does surface, the selection of this unsecured process could
be interpreted as negligent. For all these reasons, the choice of recycling
as a means of information destruction is undesirable from a risk management
perspective.
If environmental responsibility is a concern, materials may be recycled
after they are destroyed or a firm can contract a service that will destroy
the materials under secure conditions before recycling them. Any recycling
company that minimizes the need for security has its own interests in mind
and should be avoided.
5. A Certificate Of Destruction Does Not Relieve A Company From Its
Obligation To Keep Information Confidential.
Any company contracting an information destruction service should require
that it provide them with a signed testimonial, documenting the date that
the materials were destroyed. The “Certificate of Destruction”, as it is
commonly referred, is an important legal record of compliance with a
retention schedule. It does not however, effectively transfer the
responsibility to maintain the confidentiality of the materials to the
contractor. If private information surfaces after the vendor accepts it, the
court is bound to question the process by which the particular contractor
was selected. Any company not showing due diligence in their selection of a
contractor that is capable of providing the necessary security could be
found negligent. And from a practical standpoint, if proprietary or private
information is lost or leaked by the fraud or negligence of a vendor, the
obligations of that vendor are irrelevant. The firm whose information falls
into the wrong hands stands to lose the most, either from loss of business,
prosecution or unfavorable publicity.
Since a business cannot transfer its responsibility to maintain
confidentiality, it must be certain that it is dealing with a reputable
company with superior security procedures. Unfortunately, there are those
information destruction services that provide "Certificates of Destruction"
while having no semblance of security and, in some cases, no destruction
process available to them. Anyone interested in contracting a data
destruction service is advised to thoroughly review their policies and
procedures, conduct an initial site audit and conduct subsequent unannounced
audits. "On-Site" document destruction is also an option in most cities.
6. Most Records Storage Companies Do Not Have The Equipment To Provide
Shredding Services.
Many commercial records storage facilities offer records destruction as a
service to their customers. However, in a survey conducted by the National
Association for Information Destruction (NAID), a majority of the commercial
storage firms were found lacking the equipment necessary to provide the
service themselves. It is a common practice in that industry to subcontract
the destruction of the records. In some cases, dis-reputable storage firms
were found misleading their customers by charging for secure records
destruction, while the materials were being sold to a recycling company for
scrap.
Any business using a commercial records storage firm should inquire as to
the nature of the destruction services that are available. It is an
unacceptable risk to permit a storage firm to select a subcontractor to
provide the records destruction service. The owner of the records is
ultimately responsible for their security and therefore, should be selecting
the vendor directly.
7. Internal Personnel Should Not be Responsible To Destroy Certain
Information.
Common sense dictates that payroll information and materials that involve
labor relations or legal affairs, should not be entrusted to lower level
employees for destruction. But beyond that, competition sensitive
information is best protected from them as well. It has been established,
time and again, that employees are the most likely to realize the value of
certain information to competitors. And lower wage employees often have the
economic incentive to capitalize on their access to it. The only acceptable
alternatives are to have the materials destroyed under the supervision of
upper management or by a carefully selected, high security service.
8. Information Protection Is A Vital Issue To Senior Management.
In a survey conducted by the Conference Board, top executives from 300
companies ranked the security of company records as one of the top five
critical issues facing business. When asked which issues required immediate
attention and policy development, the security of company records ranked
second only to employee health screening.
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