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PDF: A lifeblood technology of government

Government requirements for electronic documents include considerations most businesses don’t need to address. From long-term archivability to accessibility, authenticity, redaction and more, government organizations think about documents a little differently.
About the author: The PDF Association staff delivers a vendor-neutral platform for PDF’s stakeholders, facilitating the development of open specifications and ISO standards for PDF technology. Staff members include: Alexandra Oettler (Editor), Betsy Fanning … Read more
PDF Association staff

PDF Association staff
October 28, 2014

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.govUnlike most businesses, government records-keepers are responsible for preserving documents for far longer periods than is typical in business, where retention periods rarely exceed 7 years.

Unlike those of most businesses, many formal government documents must be public, accountable, and accessible to users with disabilities, while other publically-accessible documents must be redacted to remove sensitive information.

Unlike those of most businesses, formal documents in government must commonly adhere to exacting standards for reproduction and authenticity purposes. At the same time, government agencies must be ready to accept (and store, and retrieve) vast numbers of pages submitted by millions of taxpayers, lawyers, accountants, companies, regulators, etc.

Government organizations think about documents a little differently than corporations. They have to.

Government needs a record

For bureaucracies and democracies alike, a record of laws, regulations, court decisions, appointments, statements and the many other types of official documents require a fixed representation. Formal documents must have a predictable and authoritative look and feel, and provide consistent performance in all viewing and printing situations. Discounting raster images as insufficient, the only way to responsibly share fixed, formal documents is PDF.

It’s not always easy to determine how PDF technology is best leveraged in non-commercial settings. The PDF Association’s December 2014 PDF Day educational event in Washington DC is designed to help IT decision-makers address their future document technology projects with substantial and clear knowledge of what PDF can do for them.

Making the record

From the judiciary to the legislative branch, from the regulator’s office to defense procurement, government departments have special responsibilities to document their internal communications and records of actions taken. One understated but key quality of PDF is the fact that high-quality documents in this format can be made from almost any source document or system.  Excel, CAD or web-browser, PDF takes it all. It’s flexible, and for this and many other reasons, is ideally suited as an electronic document format of record.

PDF/A can make archival versions from scanned or born-digital documents, incoming email, high volume output, or anything that may be printed from a computer.

PDF/A is recommended for use with archival documents by NARA’s new Transfer Guidance, and the Library of Congress.

Learn how to implement and address typical challenges in workflows based on PDF/A technology at PDF Day, December 10, 2014 in Washington DC.

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