HR Hero Your Employment Law Resource

HR Hot Topics

Home > HR Topics > E-Discovery | All Topics > A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

E-discovery


Additional HR Resources

Electronic File Retention
Learn what you must keep and what you can safely purge

E-Discovery and Retention
How to deal with e-discovery after a lawsuit or investigation has begun

Retention-Retrieval-Destruction
Cutting through the confusion of personnel record storage

Controlling E-mail Use
When you can limit e-mail use and what the NLRB has to say

Managing Technology at Work
How to limit your liability caused by employee use of technology

Workplace Blogging
The pros and cons of using social media in the workplace

Confidentiality Breaches
Reduce security risks from employees working off-site

Online Recruiting-Screening
Surf the net with care! Legal dos and don'ts for online applicant screening.

Employment Law in Your State
Latest state legislation, rulings, and requirements for documentation

On December 1, 2006, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were amended to include specific provisions for handling electronically stored information.

The old days: No shred, no foul

The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure govern how we exchange information with our opponents in a lawsuit. Even before a lawsuit is filed, you have an obligation to preserve information that may be relevant if you have reason to expect that a lawsuit may be filed (based on a government inquiry or a nasty letter from a lawyer).


Related articles on the E-discovery
E-discovery tools for Employment Law Letter subscribers


In the dark ages, that was simple. You sent out a memo instructing everyone not to throw away or destroy anything important. When the lawsuit arrived, you made photocopies of everything and gave them to your lawyer. Pretty straightforward.

More data than you can hit with a stick

Then along came the Internet, and things got complicated. Today, more than 95 percent of business information is generated and stored electronically, and more than half of that never is printed in paper form. Even when it is printed, the paper version contains only a fraction of the information contained in the electronic form — which often includes metadata -- data about when, how, and by whom it was created, modified, viewed, transmitted, and deleted.

To further complicate matters, the same document may reside in several locations in several different formats. The amount of information available is staggering.

In recognition of this complex reality, the Federal Rules were revised. When you suspect that you may be sued, it's no longer enough to print a copy of critical e-mails and put them in a file. You now have a duty to preserve the information in its various electronic formats. If you don't take adequate steps to preserve the data, it may cost you.

Plan now or you might pay later

If you wait until you're sued or even when you first suspect a lawsuit, it will be far too late. There's too much electronic information in too many places to try to locate and freeze it when you get your first nasty letter from an employee's lawyer. You need to have to plan now for how you'll react when the day comes (and it will come).

First, meet with your IT personnel or vendor and inventory all the possible sources of electronic data. Then develop a litigation plan that identifies who is responsible for what when the proverbial fan is hit.

Second, develop a document-retention policy that sets destruction schedules based on the type of document, applicable legal requirements for the document type, and the realistic business need for the document. Finally, make sure that document-destruction procedures can be suspended quickly when the lawyers call.

View all HR topics

Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Related articles on E-Discovery from the State Employment Law Letters
designates additional valuable resources available exclusively to Employment Law Letter subscribers

Managing electronic discovery in employment litigation
  South Carolina Employment Law Letter, November 2007
What does HR need to know about e-discovery?
  Vermont Employment Law Letter, May 2007
Strategic HR planning: document- and data-retention procedures
  South Carolina Employment LawLetter, April 2007
On to the next frontier: 'e-discovery'
  South Carolina Employment Law Letter, February2007
Electronic age creates more demands on Nevada employers
  Nevada Employment Law Letter,January 2007

HR Tools for E-Discovery

     

Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Subscriber Login