AC26 | Session 09
Failing Forward: How a Federal Audit Sparked the Framework of a Strong RIM Program
Target: Federal
Focus: Archives, Records Management
Levels: Beginner
GARA: "Program Establishment & Administration" OR "Legal & Compliance Issues" 
Overview

A sub-par federal audit is never the desired outcome for any organization. Yet for many institutions, audits are the moment when long-standing gaps in records and information management (RIM) finally come into full view. This session presents a real-world participatory action research case where a federal audit uncovered systemic weaknesses in records practices—and how those findings became the catalyst for building a comprehensive, defensible, and sustainable RIM framework that has been pressure tested on two subsequent federal audits.

The session begins with the audit context: an organization operating under the assumption that its practices were “good enough.” While basic policies existed and staff were making good-faith efforts, the audit revealed inconsistent retention practices, unclear ownership of records, limited documentation standards, and a lack of enterprise-wide governance. Rather than responding with short-term corrective actions designed only to close audit findings, leadership chose to “fail forward,” shifting from reactive compliance to proactive information governance.

To strengthen enforcement and implementation of evolving Department of Defense regulations, the organization established an Accountability Officer role (the first of its kind in a Federally Funded Research & Development Center to single-handedly manage classified collections). Audit findings were treated not as isolated issues to fix, but as indicators of deeper structural problems requiring a coordinated, strategic response.

Participants will be guided through the turning point where leadership commitment and organizational buy-in transformed the audit response from a checklist exercise into a foundational initiative. The session explores root causes such as unclear accountability, limited staff training, siloed systems, and the misconception that RIM was not a foundational component of compliance readiness.

The core of the session covers the step-by-step development of a strong RIM framework. Attendees will learn how governance structures were established to define ownership, roles, and responsibilities across departments (in adherence to regulations), and how policies and standards were created and aligned (including record schema, retention schedules, and audit-ready documentation practices). Emphasis is placed on making policies practical and integrated into daily workflows (not just written guidance).

Equally important is training and culture change: moving beyond one-time sessions to ongoing education, reinforcement, and shared responsibility. This session also introduces attendees to a DoD special collection environment and the unique challenges faced when RIM compliance is under-credited, showing why resilience and adaptability matter in building an audit-ready program.

Presenter
Emma Rose Powers
Accountability Officer, MIT Lincoln Laboratory
With a blended academic background in national security/homeland security and library science/archives & special collections, Emma offers an unseen lens to a role that preserves critical data. As an Accountability Officer, she provides liability and order in a blend of security and information management that embodies mastery of control.

Emma specializes in multimedia special collection archives. She is currently an Accountability Officer (Special Security Representative III) at MIT Lincoln Laboratory, responsible for enforcing security regulations and government policies to facilitate national security missions. Tasked with managing material life cycles and their records, she acquires, arranges, describes, stores, preserves, manages, and inventories over 1,600 items in her repository.

Her education includes a Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice (Johnson & Wales University), a Master of Arts in Strategic Intelligence and Analysis with a concentration in Homeland Security (Northeastern University), and she is a candidate for a Master in Information & Library Science and Archives and Special Collections certificate (University of Southern Mississippi).

Emma serves on several NAGARA committees, holds a GARA certificate, is vice president for the Library and Information Science Student Association (LISSA), and is a member of professional organizations including the Society of American Archivists (SAA), New England Archivists (NEA), and the Special Libraries Association (SLA).