
Section 30-1-10. Definitions.
(A) For the purposes of Sections 30-1-10 to 30-1-140 'public
record' has the meaning as provided in Section 30-4-20(c).
Nothing herein authorizes the Archives to make records open to
the public in contravention of Sections 30-4-40, 30-4-50 and
30-4-70, respectively.
(B) 'Public body' means any department of the State, any state board, commission, agency, and authority, any public or governmental body or political subdivision of the State, including counties, municipalities, townships, school districts, and special purpose districts, or any organization, corporation, or agency supported in whole or in part by public funds or expending public funds, including committees, subcommittees, advisory committees, and the like of any such body by whatever name known, and includes any quasi-governmental body of the State and its political subdivisions, including, without limitation, bodies such as the South Carolina Public Service Authority and the South Carolina Ports Authority.
(C) 'Agency' means any state department, agency, or institution.
(D) 'Subdivision' means any political subdivision of the State.
(E) 'Archives' means the South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
(F) 'Director' means the Director of the Department of Archives and History.
Section 30-1-20. Custodians of records; records officer. The chief administrative officer of any agency or subdivision or any public body in charge of public records or creating, filing, or keeping public records is the legal custodian of these records and is responsible for carrying out the duties and responsibilities of this chapter which are assigned to public agencies, bodies, offices, or subdivisions. He may appoint a records officer to act on his behalf.
Section 30-1-30 Unlawful Removing, Defacing or Destroying Records. Any person who unlawfully removes a public record from the office where it is usually kept, or alters, defaces, mutilates, secretes, or destroys it is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, must be fined not less than five hundred dollars nor more than five thousand dollars or imprisoned not more than thirty days. Magistrates and municipal courts have jurisdiction to try violations of this section.
Section 30-1-40. Records shall be turned over to
successor or
to Archives.
A person having custody of public records, at the expiration of
his term of office or employment, shall deliver to his successor,
or if there is none, to the Archives, all public records in his
custody.
Section 30-1-50. Penalty for failure to deliver
records.
Fifteen days after receipt of a certified letter from the legal
custodian of the record or the Director of the Archives, a person
in possession of a public record who refuses or fails to deliver
as required in this chapter the record to the requesting party is
guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, is fined not
exceeding five hundred dollars. In addition, the legal custodian
of the public records or the Director of the Archives may apply
by verified petition to the court of common pleas in the county
of residence of the person withholding the records and the court
shall upon proper showing issue orders for the return of the
records to the lawful custodian or the Director of the Archives.
Section 30-1-60. (reserved)
Section 30-1-70. Records shall
be protected and restored
when
damaged.
The legal custodian of public records shall protect them
against deterioration, mutilation, theft, loss, or destruction
and shall keep them secure in vaults or rooms having proper
ventilation and fire protection in such arrangement as to be
easily accessible for convenient use. They must be kept in the
buildings in which they are ordinarily used except in cases where
they may be transferred for retention or disposal in accord with
Sections 30-1-10 to 30-1-140 or for special public display by the
appropriate authority. The director may order the removal of
public records from any facility which does not meet records
storage standards approved by regulations promulgated by the
Archives. If public records of long term or archival value are
in danger of loss due to negligence, deterioration, theft, or
unauthorized disposal or destruction, the director may order that
the records be transferred to suitable storage for the purpose of
security microfilming or other necessary preservation measures.
Records must be maintained, copied, or repaired, renovated,
rebound, or restored in accordance with standards required by
regulation and approved by the department if they are worn,
mutilated, damaged, difficult to read, or in danger of loss at
the expense of the public body having custody or responsibility
if these records are of long term or archival value as determined
under the provisions of this chapter.
Section 30-1-80. Records
management program.
A records management program directed to the application of
efficient and economical management methods and relating to the
creation, utilization, maintenance, retention, preservation, and
disposal of public records must be established and administered
by the Archives. It is the duty of that department to establish
and develop standards, procedures, techniques, and schedules for
effective management of public records, to make continuing
surveys of recordmaking and recordkeeping operations, to
recommend improvements in current records management practices,
including the use of space, equipment, and supplies in creating,
maintaining, and servicing records, to institute and maintain a
training and information program in all phases of records and
information management to bring approved and current practices,
methods, procedures, and devices for the efficient and economical
management of records to the attention of all agencies and
subdivisions. The head of each agency, the governing body of
each subdivision, and every public records custodian shall
cooperate with the Archives in complying with the provisions of
this chapter and to establish and maintain an active, continuing
program for the economical and efficient management of the
records of the agency or subdivision.
Section 30-1-90. Archives shall
assist in creating, filing
and
preserving records, inventories, and schedules.
(A) The Archives may examine the condition of public records
and give advice and assistance to public officials in the
solutions of their problems in creating, filing, preserving, and
making available the public records in their custody. When
requested by the Archives, agencies and subdivisions must assist
the Archives in preparing an inclusive inventory of records in
their custody and establishing records
schedules mandating a time period for the retention of each series of
records. These schedules must be approved by the governing body of each
subdivision or the executive officer of each agency or body having custody of
the records and by the Director of the Archives.
(B) In addition, general schedules for records series common to agencies and subdivisions may be issued by the Archives. Agencies and subdivisions must be allowed to opt out of these general schedules and proceed pursuant to the provisions of subsection (A) in the establishment of specific records schedules.
(C) The Archives has express authority to review all public records for appraisal and scheduling purposes, including those records designated as closed, confidential, and restricted by law. However, in certain cases the department may waive its authority to review certain records after its approval of procedures developed by the executive officer or public official in charge of the records to provide the department with information needed for appraisal and scheduling purposes.
(D) No records of long term or enduring value created, including those filed, kept, or stored electronically, or those records converted from paper to magnetic, optical, film, or other media in the transaction of public business may be disposed of, destroyed, or erased without an approved records schedule. All records disposals that are carried out in accordance with duly approved records schedules must be documented and reported in accordance with procedures developed by the Archives.
Section 30-1-100. Additional powers and duties of
Archives.
(A) In cooperation with the executive officer of each public
agency or body and the governing body of each subdivision, the
Archives shall establish and maintain a program for the selection
and preservation of public records considered essential to the
operation of government, for the protection of the interests of
the public and for the preservation of the state's documentary
heritage. The Archives has the authority to determine in what
medium records of archival value must be retained and transferred
to the department. Within the limits of available funds, the
Archives shall require preservation duplicates to be made of
essential or historical records including those retained on
electronic or optical disc systems or designate as preservation
duplicates existing copies of these records including security
copies on microfilm, computer output microfilm, or other media
acceptable by the department or select certain original records
for permanent preservation.
(B) In order to make public records more available for research the Archives must honor reasonable requests for copies of public records of research value by reproducing and selling them as provided by Section 30-4-30. All monies received from the sale of such copies must be deposited with the State Treasurer to be used for making available copies of other public records of research value as determined by the Archives; provided, that their reproduction is not otherwise prohibited by law.
(C) Any public official having records and official correspondence in his custody may turn over to the Archives any public records no longer in current official use, and the Archives may in its discretion receive the records and provide for their proper administration, preservation, reproduction, or disposition; provided, that any record placed in the custody of the Archives under special terms or conditions restricting their use shall be made accessible only in accordance with such terms and conditions. Upon receipt of the records, unless otherwise prohibited by law, copies of them may be made and certified under the seal of Archives, which certification has the same force and effect as if made by the official or agency which transferred them. The Archives may charge reasonable fees for such copies.
(D) The Archives may promulgate such regulations as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of Sections 30-1-10 to 30-1-140. The director may withhold from public access records restricted under the provisions of Chapter 4 of this title or restrict use of original records in danger of damage or loss from handling and use when in the opinion of the director the physical condition of the public records or other documents is such that they would be damaged by handling. Any decision of the director to withhold public records or other documents from inspection may be appealed to the Archives and History Commission, or through the relief procedures outlined in Section 30-4-100.
(E) When any public records have been destroyed or otherwise disposed of in accordance with the procedure authorized in Sections 30-1-90 and 30-1-110, any liability that the custodian of the records might incur as a result of the official action shall cease.
Section 30-1-110. Destruction or other disposition of
records.
The director may approve the destruction or other disposition
of accessioned records of any agency or subdivision which are in
the custody of the department and which, after due appraisal
according to archival principles, are determined not to be of
archival or continuing administrative, legal, or fiscal value.
Section 30-1-120. Inventorying,
repairing and microfilming
records.
(A) The Archives may execute a program of inventorying,
repairing, and microfilming for security purposes the public
records of the agencies and subdivisions which it determines have
permanent value, and of providing safe storage of microfilm
copies of those records.
(B) The legal custodian of public records may have records in his custody removed from his office to be microfilmed by the department for preservation purposes, provided the filming does not interfere with the transaction of public business.
Section 30-1-130. Custodians may
microfilm or photocopy
records; preservation or disposition of such copies.
Any custodian of public records as defined by Sections 30-1-10
to 30-1-140 is authorized to photocopy, microfilm, or reproduce
on film or by electrostatic method any part of the records kept
by the office concerned unless otherwise prohibited by law or
withheld from reproduction in the public interest. These copies
may be used only in equipment or systems which accurately
reproduce and preserve the original record in all details in a
durable form. Each agency or subdivision shall preserve these
photocopies, electrostatic copies, or films in conveniently
accessible files and shall provide for preserving, examining, and
using them. If the records are of permanent value to the agency
or subdivision concerned or are determined to be of archival
value by the Archives, one master copy of each record filmed must
meet standards approved by the
Archives
and be deposited there.
Custodians of public records may destroy the original records
from which the photographs, microphotographs, films, or
electrostatic copies have been made, or any part of them if the
records are of no value to the agency concerned, and the Archives
certifies that the records may be destroyed through this
procedure or retention schedules approved by the Archives. The
records microfilmed or reproduced and approved for destruction
must be reported to the Archives in such manner as it may direct.
Section 30-1-140. Penalities for refusal or neglect to
perform
duty respecting records.
A public official or custodian of public records who refuses or
willfully neglects to perform any duty required of him by
Sections 30-1-10 through 30-1-140, including the transfer of
records to storage facilities approved by the Archives, is guilty
of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, must be fined not less
than two hundred dollars nor more than five thousand dollars.
Section 30-1-150. (vacant)
Section 30-1-160. (vacant)
Section 30-1-170. Use of loose-leaf record books.
All officers of the State and of counties and municipalities
who are required to keep books of record may make use of
loose-leaf record books for these purposes. The loose-leaf
record book used must be one that can be locked and sealed when
the book has been filled to its capacity with the proper pages of
records, and the key to the book must always remain in the
custody of the official in charge of the books of record.
Section 30-1-180. Designation of major religions shall
include
Eastern (Greek) Orthodox Church.
Where the names of major religious faiths, Protestants,
Catholics, and Jews, are used in resolutions, acts, or official
papers of the State, or any of its political subdivisions, the
name of the Eastern (Greek) Orthodox Church must be included."
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