Posts Tagged ‘document retention policy’

Canadian Lawyer Magazine has two articles on e-discovery

Monday, June 28th, 2010

The June 2010 issues of Canadian Lawyer and its sister-publication In-House each has an article about e-discovery. The Canadian Lawyer’s article by Gerry Blackwell, is the second and last part of the “e-Discovery – Are you in or out?” series about the question facing Canadian law firms as to whether insource or outsource e-discovery processes (the current issue is not online yet). The article is based on a quick case study of Bell Canada’s insourcing of all phases of the E-Discovery Reference Model (EDRM). Bell may decide whether to perform all these phases internally or outsource the later parts, depending on many business factors. The whole system, software and hardware, paid for itself in a year and is back by a multidisciplinary team of legal, IT and Information Security. Dominic Jaar, quoted in the article, stresses that the first step – information management – is a “crucial pre-requisite for economical e-discovery” that can only be taken internally. He noted that the cost argument is pretty straightforward: “There are huge costs involved in piling up data, even though we’re told storage is cheap and getting cheaper. Yes, the hardware is cheap, but the indirect costs are high”. Indeed, data management isn’t free, neither e-discovery data processing, nor losing a lawsuit because a silver bullet was found in documents one didn’t need to preserve… The In House article The e-discovery shift is based on a first e-discovery roundtable featuring Justice Colin L. Campbell, of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice,  Alan D’Silva of Stikeman Elliott, Kelly Friedman of Ogilvy Renault and chairwoman of Sedona Canada, Laurie MacFarlane of CIBC Legal Department and Melanie Schweizer of Bell Canada. Many topics were discussed: proportionality, personal information, cross-border issues, and document-retention policies, among others. Reading as a transcript of an open discussion between experts putting ideas to debate, some excerpts are great food for thought. Two of them come to mind. On the importance of a data-retention policy, Melanie Scheizer underlines that companies should be able to :

“[show that steps have been taken] to audit the policy and measure compliance. It’s not just a piece of paper that nobody has read. Document retention is becoming more important because of the links between that policy and the cost containment issues on e-discovery. So when you can make a business case how it is going to save the company money to have a very efficient document retention policy, there may be some more resources thrown at that issue than in the past where it was a nice thing to do but what is the benefit in doing that.”

On the cultural shift need to migrate from crisis mode to planning mode, Justice Cambell shares his thoughts on how discovery law in Canada must develop differently than in the United States :

“I think the one thing that Canadian lawyers are attuned to is our obligation to reduce relevant documents, whereas in the U.S., their rule is you only produce what you are asked for. And I think that is what drives a lot of their confrontation… So the big knock on what we’re all doing is, are we destroying civil litigation? We have invented industries to take care of the growing amount of information that is available. It does have to be controlled and tamed, and I think I go back where Melanie started, with the meet and confer, changing the culture right at the beginning, so people don’t feel that it is so adversarial. […] Big task, but hopefully we’ll get there.”

The Effective eDocument Retention Program – Policies, Processes and Solutions

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Shaun Saldanha, eDiscovery Manager (Litigation Risk) at the TD Bank Financial Group, and Rob Gerbrandt, Senior Consultant with Ledjit Consulting Inc. looked at the development and implementation retention program.

Types of data:
Structured and Unstructured

Where a document resides is irrelevant: a document is a document is a document

Instant messages: some companies deals with them as ephemeral and transitory documents. At TD, they divided the documents in a regulatroy framework and equated instant messages and emails as one type of document.

The idea is to retain the right information, in the right location for the right amount of time

COSO framework

Key player is people: without people, the system falls apart. Employees need to be involved at all stages of the process to identify all the risks that need to be managed, from planning to implementation and auditing.

Key drivers:

  • Regulatory needs (Banks, SEC, SOX, etc.)
  • Industry
  • Business needs

One can’t focus only on the applicable laws, but also and perhaps most importantly, on the needs of the organization, hence the necessity to involve employees at all levels.

Most attendees’ organisations do not have a direct channel and opened communication between IT and legal. They need to talk when handling urgent issues. It is important to develop a clear process with continuous dialog. However, the process will depend on the organization and its risks profile.

How often is legal involved in the planning of technology implementation? What about decommissioning systems?

Federated cost : IM benefits to the whole enterprise. No particular group, particularly the legal department which is already a cost center without a prefixed budget, wants to foot the bill… Furthermore, many lawyers feel that legal is now forced to pay the price of historic information mismanagement! “Wasn’t it the IT department taking care of information? – No, IT only cares about the “T”, i.e. technology; the “I”nformation belongs to the end-users…” So, one of the first questions that needs to be answered is who pays what and how? Retention might be an opportunity for green initiatives and vice versa.

Primary challenges of retention programs is:

  • Lack of clear ownership
  • “Why not keep everything? Storage is cheap”
  • Not a “sexy” initiative

The best way to get buy-in is to start small by grabbing the low-hanging fruits and quickly show the ROI.