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how are unscheduled records categorized?

Unscheduled records are generally treated as if they are permanent records until an official authority decides how long they should be kept and how they should be disposed of.

What “unscheduled records” means

  • In government and institutional records management, “unscheduled records” are records that are not yet covered by an approved records retention schedule.
  • Because no final retention rule exists yet, rules typically require that these records must not be destroyed until a schedule is approved.

How they are categorized

  • Many public-sector guidelines state that unscheduled records must be categorized and handled as permanent records for management purposes until they receive an official disposition.
  • Practically, this often means they are:
    • Flagged or tagged in systems as “unscheduled” or “permanent (pending schedule)”
    • Kept in active or long-term storage with controls similar to permanent records.

Why they’re treated as permanent

  • Treating unscheduled records as permanent avoids accidental loss of material that might have archival, legal, or historical value once evaluated.
  • Once a records authority approves a schedule, unscheduled records are then re‑categorized as either temporary (with a defined retention period) or permanent (to be preserved indefinitely).

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.