Civic News
Marketing / Municipal government

Baltimore city government considering changes to 90-day email policy

Right now, city officials can delete emails after three months.

Baltimore City Hall. (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)

Right now, Baltimore city government deletes official emails after three months. That policy could be changing.
According to the Baltimore Sun, Solicitor George Nilson said the 90-day deletion is one of a number of document retention policies that are under review by a working group. The email regulation has been in place for 12 years. Here are the basics of the policy, as reported by the Sun‘s Luke Broadwater:

Through three mayoral administrations, city officials have adhered to a 2004 internet policy that allowed public officials to destroy electronic communications after three months instead of saving them for inspection by members of the public, journalists and historians. Elected officials can keep their emails if they choose not to delete them.

While official emails have been discussed as a matter of servers and security in the context of Hillary Clinton’s presidential run, on a local level emails obtained from public records requests frequently provide a window into the inner workings of government around specific issues.
While there were few details on what changes to the city’s email policy would be proposed, providing more time for emails to exist and potentially come to light would appear to be in the interest of transparency.

Companies: City of Baltimore
Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Baltimore daily roundup: Mayoral candidates talk tech and biz; a guide to greentech vocabulary; a Dutch delegation's visit

Baltimore daily roundup: Medtech made in Baltimore; Sen. Sanders visits Morgan State; Humane Ai review debate

Baltimore daily roundup: An HBCU innovation champion's journey; Sen. Sanders visits Morgan State; Humane Ai review debate

Instead of outsourcing to California, this Baltimore medtech company is now making its devices at home

Technically Media