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Bracing for the blight –Toronto body calls for city-wide disaster recovery exercise

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Some three years after North America's largest power failure left more than 50 million people in the U.S. and Canada in the dark, a Toronto organization is asking that a coordinated city-wide disaster recovery exercise be launched.

The Disaster Recovery Information Exchange, Toronto chapter (DRIE Toronto) is urging major industry and public sector officials to work together and set up what it calls Toronto Incident Management Exercise (TIME), an emergency readiness drill covering the Greater Toronto Area.

DRIE is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to promoting business continuity management, disaster recovery planning and other related disciplines as integral components of an effective business strategy. Various private and public sector organizations may have preparedness and business resumption plans (BRPs) but it is not certain if these will work in concert during an actual disaster, according to Michael Smith, president of ReadySmith, a business continuity consulting company and co-chair of TIME.

"The critical need is to see how these plans will mesh with one another, and to fill in any identifiable gaps, especially in the business community," said Smith.

He said because of the enormous amount of preparation needed, the exercise could be ideally held sometime in 2008.

In the afternoon of August 14, 2003, a debilitating power failure hit part of Ontario and much of northeastern U.S. The power outage, which lasted for several days, stranded many commuters and disabled some businesses.

A joint American-Canadian task force traced the main cause of the outage to a generating plant in Eastlake, Ohio that went off line amid a high electrical demand and strained high-voltage power lines that went out of service after coming in contact with "overgrown trees". The cascading impact of the incident shut down more than 100 power plants.

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Outage-related financial losses were estimated at $6.8 billion.

Toronto is a key North American business centre and so needs to have a coordinated disaster recovery plan said George Kerns, a member of DRIE Toronto and president and CEO of Fusepoint Managed Services Inc. based in Toronto.

"The business community as a whole needs to pull together and work hand in hand with front line agencies."

Smith said business involvement is essential as, in many cases, the private sector is responsible for or involved in running services such as telephone and Web-based communication as well as broadcasting and transportation services.

Businesses rarely have resumption plans that are adequately coordinated with those of their partner or government counterparts, according to Walter Cooke, chief security officer of QuoVadis Ltd., a secure managed service provider in Hamilton, Bermuda.

"A properly planned disaster exercise will walk people through the process of how to act during an emergency," said Cooke, who has more than 35 years of experience securing organizations in various parts of the world.

He said simple things, such as knowing who to contact during an emergency, could mean the difference between survival and disaster. "The lives of a great many New York city firefighters could have been saved were there clearly delineated lines of communication on 9/11."

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