(A)The following
definitions are applicable to this rule:
(1)"County
family services agency" has the same meaning as defined in section 307.981
of the Revised Code.
(2)"Grant"
means an award for one or more family services duties or workforce development
duties of federal financial assistance that a federal agency provides in the
form of money, or property in lieu of money, to the Ohio department of job and
family services (ODJFS) and that ODJFS awards to a county family services
agency or local area. Grant may include state funds ODJFS awards to a county
family services agency or local area to match the federal financial assistance.
Grant does not mean technical assistance that provides services instead of
money and does not mean other assistance provided in the form of revenue
sharing, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, or insurance.
(3)"Inactive
records" refers to closed case files and those records that are no longer
used on a regular basis.
(4)"Local
area," has the same meaning as defined in section 6301.01 of the Revised
Code.
(5)"Pass-through
entity" means a non-federal entity that provides a federal award and/or
state funds to a subrecipient to carry out a federal and/or state program,
function, or activity.
(6)"Record"
has the same meaning as defined in section 149.011 of the Revised Code.
(7)"Record
series" means records that are filed together or maintained as a unit
because they relate to a particular subject or function, result from the same
activity, have a particular form, or have some other relationship arising from
their creation, receipt, or use.
(8)"Retention
schedule" means a document that assigns a required retention period to a
record series based on its fiscal, legal, historical or administrative value.
(9)"Subrecipient"
means a non-federal entity that expends federal awards and/or state funds
received from a pass-through entity but does not include an individual that is
a beneficiary of such program, function, or activity.
(10)"Workforce
development agency" has the same meaning as defined in section 5116.01 of
the Revised Code.
(B) Each county
family services agency and local area shall comply with all applicable federal,
state, and local records retention requirements for all records related to any
program, function, or activity that is funded in whole or in part by state
and/or federal funds. Local records retention requirements may be available
through the county records commission in each county, which are established
pursuant to section 149.38 of the Revised Code. The functions of the county
records commission are to provide rules for the retention and disposal of
county records, to review applications for one-time disposal of obsolete
records, and to review schedules of records retention and disposal submitted by
county offices.
(C)Each county
family services agency and local area shall have a records retention schedule
that governs each record series maintained by the agency and that includes the
requirements set forth in this paragraph. Each such records retention schedule
shall at a minimum do the following:
(1)Identify the
name of the record series;
(2)Describe the
use and purpose of the records;
(3)Assign a
retention period based on the fiscal, legal, historical or administrative
purpose value of the record series;
(4)Establish the
method of disposition of the records when the retention period expires; and
(5)Comply with any
minimum records retention requirements specified by applicable state law and
regulations, applicable ODJFS records retention requirements, and applicable
federal law and regulations, including, but not limited to, the following:
(a)2 C.F.R. Part
200;
(b) 7 C.F.R.
272.1(f) applicable to the expenditure of food stamp program funds;
(c)29 C.F.R. 95.53
applicable to non-profit organizations expending department of labor funds
(DOL) funds;
(d) 29 C.F.R.
97.42 applicable to government units expending DOL funds;
(e)45 C.F.R.
75.361 applicable to non-federal entities expending department of health and
human services (HHS) funds; or
(f) Any other
federal award requirements related to any program, function, or activity the
county family services agency or local area administers that is funded in whole
or in part by federal funds.
(D)In addition to
having the records retention schedules required by paragraph (C) of this rule,
each county family services agency and local area shall have a records
retention schedule governing all records of its subrecipients that document a
program, function, or activity for which the county family services agency's or
local area's subrecipient receives state and/or federal funds. Each county
family services agency and local area shall include in any contract or other
type of agreement, including grant awards to subrecipients and subcontracts
with service providers, all applicable minimum federal, state, and local
records retention requirements for all records documenting a program, function,
or activity for which the county family services agency's or local area's
subrecipient, contractor or subcontractor receives state and/or federal funds.
Any succeeding subrecipient or subcontractor of state and/or federal funds
passed through from the county family services agency's or local area's
subrecipient, contractor or subcontractor is subject to the same requirements
stated in this paragraph.
(E)Each county
family services agency and local area shall retain financial, programmatic,
statistical, and recipient records and supporting documents relating or
pertaining to a federal award passed through from ODJFS for a minimum of three
years after submittal of the final expenditure report for the grant, or
applicable ODJFS records retention requirements, whichever is longer, unless
otherwise provided by any minimum records retention requirements specified by
applicable state or federal law. A county family services agency or local area
may establish a minimum records retention period that exceeds the minimum
retention period provided by this paragraph.
(1)If any
litigation, claim, investigation, criminal action, negotiation, audit,
administrative review, or other action involving the records has been started
before the expiration of the longer of the minimum retention period defined in
paragraph (E) of this rule or before actual disposition of the records, the
county family services agency or local area shall maintain the records until completion
of the action and resolution of all issues that arise from it, or until the end
of the longest applicable minimum retention period, whichever is later.
(2)If final
payment after closeout of the federal award has not been made before the
expiration of the longer of thelongest applicable minimum retention period defined in
paragraph (E) of this rule or before actual disposition of the records, the
county family services agency or local area shall maintain the records until
final payment is made and resolution of all issues that arise from it, or until
the end of the longest applicable minimum retention period provided in
paragraph (E) of this rule, whichever is later.
(3)Each county
family services agency and local area shall maintain a current file of all
records that have been subject to a federal or state audit, administrative
review, or other action, and must refer to that file before requesting approval
from the county records commission to destroy any record.
(F)Each county
family services agency and local area shall annually provide or make available
to ODJFS the agency's records retention schedules, including any records
retention schedule adopted pursuant to paragraph (D) of this rule. Each county
family services agency and local area shall make its current records retention
schedule readily available to the public.
(G)Each county
family services agency and local area shall establish policies and procedures
for the transfer and storage of inactive records that comply with all
applicable state, federal, and local requirements. Secondary locations used for
storing inactive records must provide adequate security and allow for the
prompt and efficient retrieval of requested records.
(H)The
requirements regarding access to records are as follows:
(1)Each county
family services agency and local area shall adopt a public records policy for
responding to public records requests in accordance with section 149.43 of the
Revised Code. Public records do not include information or records specifically
exempted from treatment as public records in division (A)(1) of section 149.43
of the Revised Code, or information or records that are expressly made
confidential under other federal or state laws or regulations.
(2)All records
documenting a program, function, or activity for which the county family
services agency and local area receive state and/or federal funds must be made
available to authorized governmental agencies, including, but not limited to,
ODJFS, the auditor of state, and other Ohio funding sources and federal funding
sources upon request. This access to records includes, but is not limited to,
all financial and programmatic records, supporting documents, statistical
records, and other records of recipients, subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors. This right of access is not limited to any required minimum
retention period if the records are still being retained and have not been
disposed at the time of the request.
(3)All information
and records concerning an applicant, a recipient, or a former recipient must be
safe guarded from release as specified by applicable state and federal law and
regulations, including, but not limited to, rules 5101:1-1-03, 5101:4-1-13, and
5160-1-32 of the Administrative Code, and section 5101.27 of the Revised Code,
and are subject to all applicable intercounty transfer requirements, including,
but not limited to, rules 5101:1-1-13 and 5101:4-8-19 of the Administrative Code.
(4)All public
records as defined in division (A)(1) of section 149.43 of the Revised Code
must also be made available for inspection or copying to any person at all
reasonable times during regular business hours, as specified in division (B) of
section 149.43 of the Revised Code.
(5)Each county
family services agency and local area shall maintain its records in such a
manner that the agency can fulfill its records access obligations promptly and
efficiently.
(I)Each county
family services agency and local area shall obtain approval from the county
records commission before destruction of any records in accordance with section
149.38 of the Revised Code. Pursuant to section 149.38 of the Revised Code, the
county records commission approval must in turn be reviewed by the Ohio history
connection, and upon completion of the Ohio history connection's review of the
request to dispose the records, the auditor of state must approve or disapprove
the request.
(J)After
permission to destroy the records has been obtained, each county family
services agency and local area shall follow the requirements established by the
county records commission for disposal of county records.
(K)Notwithstanding
the provisions in this rule, each county family services agency and local area
shall continue to follow any minimum applicable ODJFS, state, and federal
records retention requirements requiring a longer minimum retention period than
the general three-year retention period stated in paragraph (E) of this rule,
such as children services case records retention requirements set forth in rule
5101:2-33-23 of the Administrative Code, and any other program-specific records
retention requirements established by other state or federal law, unless
directed to comply with the minimum records retention requirements provided in
this rule.
(L)The retention,
destruction and access provisions adopted or established by a local area
pursuant to this rule will apply to every workforce development agency within
that local area.
Effective: 4/1/2023
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 03/16/2023
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 5101.02
Rule Amplifies: 329.04, 329.05, 5101.27, 5101.28
Prior Effective Dates: 03/07/1982, 04/01/1988 (Emer.),
06/30/1988, 02/15/1996, 11/01/1996, 08/23/2008, 03/01/2015, 03/05/2018