AC26 | Session 15
Beyond the Gold Rush: A Records Manager’s Field Guide for AI Governance
Target: Local, State, Federal, Tribal, Public Institutions of Higher Learning 
Focus: Records Management, Information Governance, AI
Levels: Intermediate, Advanced 
GARA: "Record Considerations for Emerging Technologies" 
Overview

As the public sector races to adopt artificial intelligence, the “regulatory paradox” has reached a fever pitch. Agencies are no longer just exploring the frontier (they are feeding their records into AI engines).

For records managers and archivists serving as the “Territorial Marshals,” the challenge has shifted. You are no longer just protecting static boxes or servers (you are managing the fuel for AI-powered workflows). This session focuses on how to ensure your agency’s transition to AI is built on a foundation of compliant, secure, and well-managed information.

What We’ll Cover
  • Defensible Data Minimization: Ensure only necessary records are accessible to AI (reducing “garbage in, garbage out” risk).
  • Modernizing Retention for AI: Update “need-to-keep” policies so tools don’t ingest (or hallucinate from) expired or obsolete records.
  • Advocating for Information Privacy: Speak the language of privacy to IT and vendors so AI architectures respect sensitive citizen data.
  • Validating the Output: Define the records manager’s role in human-in-the-loop systems to keep AI-generated content accurate, authentic, and trustworthy.

The AI landscape will keep shifting, but your role as the arbiter of trust is more critical than ever. Join us as we workshop practical governance strategies that move agencies from unregulated innovation to secure, records-compliant transformation.

Presenter
Nathan Wright
Senior Manager of Marketing, Iron Mountain Government Solutions
Nathan Wright is the senior manager of marketing for Iron Mountain Government Solutions. Residing in New York City, he has a passion for information-driven innovation, and has been experimenting with and driving AI adoption for nearly a decade.