For purposes of this chapter, unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the words and phrases used herein shall have the following meanings:
"Active records"means those records in current use, which are retained in various city departments or offices because frequent reference is necessary to conduct the city's day-to-day operations.
"City"means the city of Moreno Valley.
"City archives"means the collection of documents, pictures, writings, and memorabilia determined to be of historical interest and value to the city.
"City records"means all records, whether of public or private origin, maintained or retained by the city of Moreno Valley in the conduct of the public's business.
"Destruction of records laws"means, collectively, Chapter 3 of Division 7 of Title (commencing with Section 6200), and Article 4 of Chapter 1 of Division 1 of Title 4 (commencing with Section
34090), of the California Government Code, or any successor provisions thereto.
"Duplicate record"means a copy or reproduction of an original record, whether or not in the same physical form as the original, which is retained for personal reference or for operational requirement.
"Inactive records"means those records which are seldom referred to, but which are retained, temporarily or permanently, because of legal, fiscal, administrative, or archival requirements or value.
"Maintain"means to provide custody and care for a record.
"Non-record"means material, which is not retained in the normal course of business or is a temporary aid, not created for the purpose of preserving its own documentary or informational content for future reference. This includes, but is not limited to:
1. Transmittal letters and acknowledgments, which do not add any information to the material transmitted;
2. Requests for printed material after the requests have been filled;
3. Informal notes, worksheets, and rough drafts of letters, memoranda or reports;
4. Shorthand notes, including stenographic notebooks and stenotype tapes, and dictating media, which have been transcribed;
5. Miscellaneous notices of community affairs, employee meetings, or holidays;
6. Telephone or other message pads;
8. Unused blank forms that are kept for supply purposes only;
9. Tickler, follow-up or suspense copies of correspondence;
10. Extra copies of documents already in an official file;
11. Publications and reference materials (brochures, newsletters, etc.) received or acquired from outside sources such as professional organizations, conferences, seminars or workshops;
12. Letters and other documentation received or acquired from outside sources which are not specifically related to city business;
13. Published books, magazines, and pamphlets;
14. Library and museum materials made or acquired and preserved solely for reference or exhibition purposes.
"Official record"means any record containing information relating to the conduct of the public's business, prepared, owned, used, or retained by any city department, regardless of physical form or characteristics.
"Original record"means the first or initial documentation, that of which anything else is a copy or reproduction; or, a duplicate record with any original documentation.
"Public records"mean as defined in Section
6252 of the California Government Code, or any successor provision thereto, and includes any writing containing information relating to the conduct of the public's business prepared, owned, used, or retained by the city regardless of physical form or characteristics.
"Public Records Act"means Chapter 3.5 of Division 7 of Title
1 (commencing with Section
6250) of the Government Code, or any successor provisions thereto.
"Records management program"means a plan formulated to establish a citywide system that achieves integrated control of all departmental subsystems so that an orderly and efficient flow of paperwork is provided from creation to ultimate disposition.
"Records series"means records accumulated over a period of time and arranged in an organized file or set of files which can be described, handled and disposed of as a unit. A records series may consist of records of a single type or format, or of records kept together because they relate to a particular subject or result from one activity.
"Writing"means any handwriting, typewriting, printing, photostating, photographing, photocopying, transmitting by electronic mail or facsimile, and every other means of recording upon any tangible thing any form of communication or representation, including letters, words, pictures, sounds, or symbols, or combinations thereof, and any record thereby created, regardless of the manner in which the record has been stored.
(Ord. 618 § 2.1, 2003)