A record that must be preserved and available for retrieval if needed.
A record identified as essential for the continuation or survival of the organization if a disaster strikes. Such records are necessary to re-create the organization's legal and financial status and to determine the rights and obligations of employees, customers, stockholders, and citizens (ARMA International).
a record of birth, marriage, divorce, or death
Computerised or paper record which is considered to be essential to the continuation of the business following an E/I/E/C.
A certificate of birth, death, divorce or annulment, a marriage document or a fetal death report, which ch. 69, Stats., requires be prepared whenever one of these events occur and be filed in the office of the register of deeds for the county or, for some cities, in the city health office, where a copy is maintained and the original sent on to DHFS; part of a nationwide system for recording these events.
A record that is essential for preserving, continuing or reconstructing the operations of the organization and protecting the rights of the organization, its employees, its customers and its stockholders.
A record containing information essential to re-establish or continue an organization in the event of a disaster. Vital records comprise the records necessary to recreate the organization's legal and financial status and to determine the rights and obligations of employees, customers, stockholders, and citizens. (SAA) Voice mail. A computerized telephone message recording system.
Vital records are records of life events kept under governmental authority, including birth certificates, marriage licenses, and death certificates. In some jurisdictions, vital records may also include records of civil unions or domestic partnerships.