The Town of Islip has renovated its records center after deeming the former shelving system unsafe.
The $325,000 renovation encompassed, among other things, replacing the roomโs lighting and fire detection system, and the rolling shelves that store more than 4,400 boxes of documents. The improvements haveย eased the record retrieval process, shortening turnaround time on requests from a few days to just a few minutes, according to staff in the town historianโs office.
โThe biggest thing is the workflow,” said Islip Town Historian George Munkenbeck. “It used to sometimes take as much as a couple of days to get to something. Now, weโve actually [pulled records] in under a minute, since weโve been able to do this.”
Islip Town Clerk Olga Murray said the renovations became a priority after the state and town declared the rolling storage shelves a safety hazard.
โWe were afraid of the [old] shelves derailing,โ she said. โThey recognized that it was an emergency situation. This is probably one of the quickest projects thatโs ever been completed in the town.โ
The project was funded with a $75,000 grant from the New York State Records Management Improvement Fund and $325,000 capital funding from the Islip Town Board, according to Murray.
The project, which used the grant funding first, has not used all the funding available for renovations from the town, Murray said.
Munkenbeck said that, besides the shelves, upgrades also included painting over windows in the room to protect aging documents from sunlight; rearrangingย and cleaningย out the office to create more work space for staff and researchers; and removing old wiring and pipes from the ceiling.
Mollie Sebor, a history research intern for the Town of Islip,ย inside the recently renovated records center. Credit: Debbie Egan-Chin
He said thatย while it was sad to see the old shelving go, the mechanisms and rails had clearly “far exceeded their life span.”
Personnel and assessor records are some of the more…
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