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When disaster strikes

When disaster strikes

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 05 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A disaster recovery plan is critical for your data centre. But, if it hasn’t been tested, you’ll never know if it works. Making the case for fire drills, data centre-style. With YouTube video of Hurricane Ike and the Great Blackout of 2003

While it’s important to commit a disaster recovery plan (DRP) to paper, it’s even more critical to actually test the process and ensure its effectiveness. Nowhere is this more important than when it comes to your company’s data centre emergency evacuation plans.

According to Ross Armstrong, senior research analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group, no DRP is complete without data centre-specific evacuation guidelines. After all, the most important asset in your company’s data centre is the employees that help keep it up and running.

“An actual emergency situation is not the time to be finding out that your plans are ineffective, insufficient and have gaps,” Armstrong said. “So, while most companies have the proper procedures committed to policy, a lot of them are not testing the plan to see how it works.”

Armstrong added that testing should encompass all elements of the plan — not just the emergency notification and evacuation procedures. “It also means you should be testing your backups and seeing that you can restore them to a server in an off-site location.”

Gaining stakeholder acceptance of the plan is also crucial, he said. Evacuation plans involve a lot more than IT, and planning sessions should include co-ordination with health and safety committees, HR, and other applicable business units.

For companies that are having difficulty gaining corporate interest in DRP, being able to determine the probability of a potential disaster and what kind of effect it could have on the data centre is another important exercise, Armstrong said. After conducting a threat and risk assessment, you must communicate these findings to both your stakeholders and your staff. You must let them know that there are very real reasons behind the evacuation plans, he added. “Without that, people tend to tune this stuff out and say that fire drills remind them of school,” Armstrong said.

Threat and risk assessments should also include an element of scenario planning. “I’ve heard horror stories of companies that went so far as to purchase backup diesel generators to provide them with off-the-grid power in the event of an outage,” Armstrong said. But when a blackout affected half the city, the company went to get the diesel at the gas station and found the place was sold out. “Every company in the area was doing the same thing,” he said. “They were down anyway, despite their investment in the generators.”

Caught on Video!

The night the lights went out: Toronto during the August 2003 Eastern Seaboard blackout

To get a closer look at how effectively emergency notification and evacuation plans can be integrated into a DRP, we talked to two large North American enterprises that aren’t taking chances with employee safety. Enbridge Inc. and Waste Management Inc. face different challenges, but both have implemented plans that can deal with the risks most likely to affect them.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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