Long-range plans are important in that they help to
steer the institution toward a specific set of goals.
Priorities are set, timeframes and resources established.
An end goal advances the preservation efforts of an
institution.
The Northeast Document Conservation Center has a leaflet
dealing with preservation planning, a long-range preservation
plan, and a needs- assessment survey. See http://www.nedcc.org/plam3/tleaf11.htm.
The Society of American Archivists has a website, http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/saapreserv/text/plan.htm,
that offers selected readings in preservation management
and planning, some of which are available on the World
Wide Web.
Another site, maintained by the Massachusetts Library
and Information Network, http://www.mlin.lib.ma.us/mblc/ldev/lsta/lrpappx.shtml#b,
provides a minimal outline for long-range planning as
well as planning component definitions.
The Boston Public Library has an 11-page 2002 action
plan with dates for specific projects, some of which
have been completed. By October 2002, a long-range plan
will be implemented. See http://www.bpl.org/general/trustees/2002plan.pdf.
The U.S. National Library of Medicine's long-range plan
for 2000-2005 includes a number of plans dealing with
the organization of and access to electronic resources.
After a brief goal statement ("Organizing health-
related information and providing access to it"),
the main objective ("Acquiring, organizing, and
preserving biomedical information") is broken down
into findings and program plans. While most of the plans
are technology related, the last one listed deals with
expanding and improving the collection's physical housing.
The program includes the identification of historically
significant records in the collections of other institutions
and the development of a national strategy to enhance
access and preservation.
See http://www.nlm.nih.gov/pubs/plan/lrp00/goal-1-1.html.
The National Library of Australia's long-range preservation
plan is presented at http://www.nla.gov.au/policy/electronic/resourcesplan.html.
The mission is described as "preserving those Australian
electronic information resources that meet the criteria
for collection and preservation as part of Australia's
documentary heritage and assisting other collecting
organizations in preserving those electronic resources
for which they take responsibility." This plan,
like many of the others mentioned here, emphasizes technology
as a valuable tool in preserving materials.