The Records of Governor George W. Bush
The records of Governor George W. Bush are available for research.
Researchers will expedite the fulfillment of their reference requests
by first consulting finding aids. Requests for records must follow
the procedures
set forth in the Texas Public Information Act.
The Records
of Governor George W. Bush are available for research despite
the fact that they have not been fully prepared for research. As
the Archives' staff prepares each group of records, this finding
aid is updated on the Web at TARO
(Texas Archival Resources Online).
The finding aids listed here will also assist researchers in locating
records of interest.
An explanation of the finding aids to the George
W. Bush gubernatorial records
All of these finding aids but one were created and maintained by
the governors staff probably during Bushs term to control
the records. The exception is the finding aid titled "Bush
box and folder." It was begun by individuals working at the
George Bush Presidential Library to gain some administrative control
over the records while in the Librarys care; it was completed
by the staff of the Texas State Archives.
The finding aids are mostly in the form of databases. The finding
aids may describe single documents or entire boxes of records; within
a finding aid, either is possible.
The finding aids are listed in the order of their probable usefulness
to researchers.
Bush Correspondence
The biggest finding aid has 489,257 entries. The data describe
individual documents received from 1995 to 2000 including the correspondents
name and address, date received and replied to (if replied to),
who referred to (if referred), and major issue and sub issue. The
purpose of several fields is unknown. Only correspondence directed
to the governors office or to Governor Bush directly was entered
into this system; correspondence addressed to other offices within
the governors office or to individual staff members was not
entered.
E-mail addresses that had originally been redacted from the finding
aid were restored following Texas Attorney General Open Records
Decision OR2002-2314.
The requesters advantage with this finding aid is the item-by-item
description. The requesters disadvantage when using these
records is that the context of the creation and use of the records
is absent because the records are filed by their unique number.
In addition, some items are missing from the central file. The missing
items may be filed elsewhere, but, until the records have been fully
prepared for research, locating them will be difficult. The finding
aid covers approximately 1,100 cubic feet of records.
The database contains a minor (we believe) number of records whose
data fields have shifted. These errors will be corrected as soon
as possible.
Bush box and folder
This finding aid was created by individuals working at the George
W. Bush Presidential Library to establish administrative control
over the Bush gubernatorial records while they were in the Librarys
care; it was completed by the staff of the Texas State Archives.
It consists of 16,428 records that are folder title lists of the
records as received. The file includes the name of the particular
office within the Governors Office that created and maintained
the records. The finding aid covers approximately 1,000 cubic feet
of records.
Bush mail log
This finding aid has 489,257 entries. The data in this finding
aid are similar to those in the Bush Correspondence finding aid
except that it lacks the major issue and sub issue fields. For about
half the records, an abbreviated subject term (using only eight
spaces and a three-space extension) has been entered. The lack of
subject access limits the utility of this finding aid. A comparison
of the Bush mail log finding aid to the Bush Correspondence finding
aid was not conducted although it seems very likely that Bush mail
log database is a subset of Bush Correspondence. E-mail addresses
that had originally been redacted from the finding aid were restored
following Texas Attorney General Open Records Decision OR2002-2314.
Bush
Seventeen offices within the Governors Office have individual
finding aids within this file. They range in size from one record
to almost 6,000. The contents vary as well. The finding aids may
describe individual documents or entire boxes of records. Data fields
give the category and sub-category of the correspondence, a date,
an author, a description, response and response date, folder and
box numbers, the retention schedule, date destroyed and by whom
authorized, and comments. Although the fields are constant across
the seventeen databases, data entry is not. Not all fields were
used by all offices; nor were they used consistently within one
office. The box number and folder fields were rarely employed. The
degree to which the gubernatorial records now in the custody of
the State Library and Archives Commission match the finding aids
is unknown at this time. Retrieving documents described in these
finding aids will be slow, but the documents, if found, will be
in context with other records.
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Division
|
Number of records
|
|
Administration Accounting
|
38 records
|
|
Administration CSD
|
6 records
|
|
Administration Operations
|
27 records
|
|
Communications
|
173 records
|
|
Correspondence
|
421 records
|
|
Criminal Justice
|
87 records
|
|
Disabilities Commission
|
1 record
|
|
Executive Office
|
504 records
|
|
General Counsel redacted *
|
5,993 records
|
|
Grants Team
|
3 records
|
|
Human Resources
|
33 records
|
|
Legislative
|
21 records
|
|
Music Film and Multimedia
|
5 records
|
|
Office of the First Lady
|
32 records
|
|
Policy Office
|
83 records
|
|
Scheduling
|
84 records
|
|
TCWEC [Texas Council on Workforce and Economic Competitiveness]
|
589 records
|
* Records within the General Counsel finding aid have been redacted
for information made confidential by Texas Government Code 552.101
(common law privacy) as we were instructed by the Texas Attorney
General in Open Records Decision OR2002-2314. E-mail addresses that
had originally been redacted from the finding aid were restored
following the same open records decision.
Finding aids for six other offices were set up, but were not used.
Those six offices are:
Administrative Office
Executive Office Executive Assistant
Executive Office Senior Advisor
Internal Auditor
Mansion
Womens Commission
Filing Cabinets
The finding aids consist of general descriptions of records (by
series) in each of these offices within the Governors Office,
the quantity of the records, and their disposition (e.g., stay,
send to Presidential Library, destroy). Inventories exist for these
offices:
Administration
Administration Accounting
Administration Human Resources
Administration Internal Auditor
Administration Operations
Appointments
Correspondence Filing Cabinet
Correspondence Inventory (box numbers and dates of contents
[a few months in 1995])
Executive
General Counsel
Governors Committee on People with Disabilities
Grants
Human Resources
Legislative Office
Policy
Press
Vickers Filing System
Empty document:
Audit
Executive - Archives Inventory
In this finding aid the first row of a set has a folder title and
the following rows describe the contents. Folders are listed alphabetically
by subject. The finding aid contains 2,793 rows. The inventory was
created by Sheryl Labar, who worked as administrative assistant
to Senior Advisor Margaret LaMontagne. Most of the documents concern
education issues.
Gifts
The finding aid consists of 5,400 records. It describes the gift
to the governor; whether it was a personal gift, a gift to the state,
or accepted to be donated elsewhere; from whom received; and value.
E-mail addresses that had originally been redacted from the finding
aid were restored following Texas Attorney General Open Records
Decision OR2002-2314.
Requesting these Bush finding aids
Follow the Texas
Public Information Act procedures
to request a copy of the Bush finding aids on CD.
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