Peggy
We made pretty strong inroads when we had round the clock shifts for the first month or so back in Tumbleweed.
But power being off for 30 years wasn't great for the computers, or the paper records. 72.3% of the computers were all or partially salvageable and to my last knowledge, the bulk of those have been read with a hard drive slave because password directives in the 90s were really easy to hack. We had about 6 with a very high level of encryption. About 15% percent with significant weather damage. And There was an server rack that was full of mice so some of those hard drives I don't think are going to ever be salvageable. But we broke that down and the drives I guess themselves are in the closet down by 346.
When I transferred to employment, we had digitized all paper records into a searchable database, but were unable to lift redactions though did try text bashing to fill in some of the logical blanks though obviously that's not great for names or specific words. But files are annotated with theories on illegible sections. There were three bags of shredded papers. They were assembled as best possible. And where documents weren't legible, notes have been attached speculating at content.
Some forms stored in paper boxes had a bit of a mold problem. They're quarantined and boxed in the walk-in cold room off medical analytics if we get someone trained in document restoration.