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The Nebraska Chapter holds Charter No. 14, June 12, 1961
in ARMA. In April, 1961 18 Omaha business people with
records management responsibilities met to talk about
forming a records management association that could "provide
a valuable vehicle for the interchange of ideas."
William Paustion, soon to be the first chapter vice-president,
shared information on ARMA, then the American Records
Managers Association. Many attendees already strongly
supported establishing an ARMA chapter. Robert Runcie,
who would be elected the first chapter president, suggested
that a Founders' Committee be formed to devise bylaws
and an organizational structure. At the Founders Day Luncheon,
May 11, 1961, the whole group elected officers, adopted
the bylaws, applied for a charter, and hosted Alma Ledig
of Chicago, the ARMA vice-president who outlined the national
organization's aims. At this meeting 17 of the attendees
signed the application for an ARMA charter for the Omaha
Chapter.
These first chapter members obviously considered their
actions historic since they chose the terms "Founders
Committee" and "Founders Day Luncheon".
They believed that the Omaha group was the first local
ARMA chapter to be organized in a Midwestern city.
The chapter structure has remained constant. The first
by-laws designated an executive board. The general meetings
followed the pattern of speakers and visits to pertinent
sites. The chapter has sponsored a spring seminar for
years. One addition was the annual Awards Banquet, which
started in 1985.
The chapter changed its name in 1981 from Metro Omaha Chapter
to Nebraska Chapter to accommodate a more diverse membership.
Because of Nebraska's geography, most of the members worked
in Omaha, the largest metropolitan center in the state.
Since the 1970s, however, people representing state government
and insurance firms in Lincoln, companies in Council Bluffs,
Iowa, Iowa Beef Processors in Dakota City, the Principal
Financial Group in Grand Island, and Nebraska Public Power
District in Columbus have participated in chapter activities.
For years the non-Omaha members were "members at
large' or "company affiliates", but this changed
in 1981 along with the name.
Many programs of the chapter meetings chart the changing
technology in the business community. In 1967 an ARMA
executive vice-president, William P. Southard, a former
Omahan, told the chapter that they were "on the threshold
of the computer age but that there is a lot of pioneering
and more education to be done." The computer was
"a machine which deals in precise 'yes & no'
logic?.it has not replaced man's thought power."
But this situation was already changing. At a 1968 meeting
a Northwestern Bell Telephone Company representative described
the touch-tone phone linked to a New York computer, and
its implications for the banking industry - a checkless
society. In 1970 the chapter visited the 1st Bank of Omaha
to hear a discussion of the computer in the banking world.
Northern Natural Gas Company in 1971 showed off the new
"facsimile applications for documentation transmission
via telephone" - the fax machine. In 1975 the chapter
members visited the Omaha City Personnel Department's
operating system for placing employee records on a computer.
In 1976 the Douglas County Systems and Data Processing
Center director talked to them about online systems. The
chapter took a break from new technology at the May 1976
meeting. Instead someone from the Omaha Civil Defense
Department spoke about the "Security of Records,"
using slides of the destructive May, 1975 tornado in Omaha.
Since its beginning members of the Metro Omaha/ Nebraska Chapter
have contributed to both ARMA International and the records
management profession. Between the 1960s and the 1980s
several members wrote articles for the Records Management
Quarterly, including Lois Edwards, 1971, Patricia Ann
Nicol, 1967 and 1968, Emil Sulentic, 1968, and Barbara
Thompson, 1984. Nicol also served as advertising editor
for the Quarterly and Edwards received the Britt Literary
Award for her article. The Omaha Metro Chapter hosted
the second Region IV Leadership Conference in the mid-1980s.
Among the recent chapter members who have served on ARMA
international committees or held office are William Ptacek,
Scott Swanson, and David Bangtson.
The Nebraska Chapter continues its pattern of service
to both its members and to ARMA International.
Webmaster:
Bill Lang
Chapter Address:
Nebraska ARMA Chapter
c/o Jacque Hornung, Treasurer
Ameritas Life Insurance Corp.
5900 'O' Street
PO Box 81889
Lincoln, NE 68510
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