@mijostyn,
No arguments that there may always be some static charge under some conditions.
Someone over at the Steve Hoffman site has been doing some cleaning agent comparisons (with some input) and has a static field device, and after full wet cleaning the record surface measures <0.200 kV but his background humidity is in the 30's. Once the background humidity gets above 45F dewpoint (same as 40% at 72F) the moisture layer that naturally forms on the record should be enough to dissipate most static charge; noting that what condenses out of the air is slightly ionic. So, in you current situation with humidity <20%, the static that is forming is likely just the consequence of the record spinning in the very dry ambient air.
Not sure how the label that is bonded to the polyvinyl-chloride-acetate (PVCa) transfers electrons the record. Either way for my application, with the paper in contact with the metal spindle, any charge should be dissipated. I also have a reflex clamp that is plastic in contact with the label w/metal top/threads that could help to dissipate the charge from the label. One thing you have to consider is that when controlling static, the term anti-static includes materials that are conductive and dissipative. Very often in ESD control, ESD ground straps will have a 1 meg-ohm resistor built-in to control how fast the static charge is dissipated; and the time duration is just a few seconds. For work surfaces they do not want fast discharge - it can damage a microchip when placed on the mat, so they slow down the discharge to be dissipative.
So, although by convention the record material is considered an insulator, and static develops on the surface, that does not mean it cannot dissipate charge through the material - but very slowly. The ESD mat top surface is vinyl - but it is dissipative across its surface and through its surface to the center conductive layer. But, the heavier ergo thicker record, dissipation through the record will much slower. Also, the high static charge that forms is not uniform, the articles measured it as islands.