Save the Trees!
Mar. 27th, 2007 09:30 pmDuring my three year stint as secretary of the DC Lambda Squares, I received a large quantity of paper. Specifically, these were financial statements, cancelled checks, membership forms, meeting minutes, etc., from about 1985 to the present. While some of the more current items went to my successor, I had more storage space so I kept the bulk of the oldest archives.
I have access to a delightful photocopier which is capable of scanning pages from the sheet feeder and e-mailing me the resulting PDF file. This morning, when every other task I attempted was blocked, I pulled out the first few files and began scanning the archives.
The process was both harder and simpler than I was expecting. I discovered the sheet feeder had issues with more than about 35 sheets at a time. I learned the copier itself also had a limit of 10 MB per PDF file, although it would only tell you this several minutes after maxing out by printing an error page once the stack was scanned. I also occasionally found stapled documents which had to be separated manually, slowing the process a little. Still, if all went well, I could scan almost a page per second.
My hope is that the current board will agree that most of the paper may be shredded and recycled, and the digital archives will be passed to the new secretary. In an e-mail this afternoon, I proposed the board solicit a volunteer as a semi-official archivist. I'm not interested in the role myself, but it's useful to have a particular point-of-contact to whom official documentation may be passed for digitizing and/or storage once its currency has passed.
I've done a preliminary cut of the archives, selecting the files which would be most easily scanned. Things like old cancelled checks would be much more labour-intensive so they'll wait until the end, if indeed we scan them at all.
I have access to a delightful photocopier which is capable of scanning pages from the sheet feeder and e-mailing me the resulting PDF file. This morning, when every other task I attempted was blocked, I pulled out the first few files and began scanning the archives.
The process was both harder and simpler than I was expecting. I discovered the sheet feeder had issues with more than about 35 sheets at a time. I learned the copier itself also had a limit of 10 MB per PDF file, although it would only tell you this several minutes after maxing out by printing an error page once the stack was scanned. I also occasionally found stapled documents which had to be separated manually, slowing the process a little. Still, if all went well, I could scan almost a page per second.
My hope is that the current board will agree that most of the paper may be shredded and recycled, and the digital archives will be passed to the new secretary. In an e-mail this afternoon, I proposed the board solicit a volunteer as a semi-official archivist. I'm not interested in the role myself, but it's useful to have a particular point-of-contact to whom official documentation may be passed for digitizing and/or storage once its currency has passed.
I've done a preliminary cut of the archives, selecting the files which would be most easily scanned. Things like old cancelled checks would be much more labour-intensive so they'll wait until the end, if indeed we scan them at all.