Company health and safety policies and procedures should be stored wherever they can be made readily available to everyone who would have need of them. That may be in a notebook in a front office for a small company. It may be in one primary notebook or file cabinet for a larger company, with copies kept up-to-date in other locations. It may be on an internal web site or document management system. Accessing them is simply whatever works best for the way they are stored.
The employer
A library
My father recently passed away and I found some old polices among his papers. I would like to know if they are of any value. Please contact me at dbwinfall@earthlink.net. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Deborah Bobbitt
Your agent should have a copy of your policy, as does the underwriting department of the insurance company, and you should have a copy of the policy. I recommend making and keeping multiple copies of all policies. Possibly keep one copy of each at your home and other copies off premises. You have a proof of insurance card for the car. There is no good reason to keep a copy there. You may want to store at home with your other policies and other copies of policies at a safety deposit box in case a storm or fire affects the home.
You can get copies of pay stubs by going to your human resource department. You can also usually access the online.
yes
Don't think you can but your local library will have copies of what you need.
Yes, obtaining old bank statements may incur fees depending on the bank's policies. Many banks offer free access to electronic statements through their online banking platforms, but if you request physical copies or statements that are several years old, there may be a service charge. It's best to check with your specific bank for their policies and any associated costs.
You can typically access old copies of The Wicklow People local newspaper dating back to 1939 at local libraries, historical societies, or through online newspaper archives or databases. Some libraries may have physical copies of the newspaper, while others may offer digital access through their website or online resources. Contact your local library or historical society for more information on how to access these archives.
The main advantage is not really that it saves disk space (though it does that too) but, rather, that a change of permissions on the file is applied to all the link access points. The link will show permissions of lrwxrwxrwx but that is for the link itself and not the access to the file to which the link points. Thus if you want to change the permissions for a command, such as su, you only have to do it on the original. With copies you have to find all of the copies and change permission on each of the copies.
Companies are using e-mail as their official communication channel, thereby eliminating the need for hard copies of interoffice memorandums.