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Howard County Community Readiness Week: Most Businesses Unprepared for Disaster, Experts Say
Tuesday, November 1, 2005
(The Business Monthly) --
By Len Lazarick
Most
businesses are unprepared to
deal with a natural or man-made disaster, an
expert on emergency
management told a group of business leaders as
part of last month's
Community Readiness Week.
Kevin O'Brien, a project manager with
Innovative Emergency Management,
Inc., said surveys by Michigan State University
and others have shown
that most companies do not have an emergency
plan to cope with a flood,
fire or even a long-term power outage, no less
the aftermath of a
terrorist attack. These surveys also found that
40% of companies that
lose their records in a disaster wind up going
out of business.
"Having no plan in place will make you
reactionary and that will make you a victim,"
said O'Brien.
His comments came at the kickoff of a
county-organized series of events
that asked the question: "What's your plan,
Howard County?"
The answer appeared to be that Howard County's
official first
responders and a core of volunteers to help
them is reasonably well
prepared, but the members of the business
community may not be. "Howard
County is far ahead" over many places in the
rest of the country, said
Pam Klahr, president of the Howard County
Chamber of Commerce. But
surveying the sparse crowd of about 100 in the
George Howard Building's
Banneker Room, Klahr said, "I wish we had three
times the number of
people."
"What do individuals do to prepare themselves?"
asked Howard County
Executive Jim Robey. Robey, the fire chief and
police chief all said
that even well-prepared first responders can
only do so much in the
first hours and days of a disaster. One of the
first questions
residents and businesses need to ask is: "Who's
taking care of my
family at home?" If that question is unsettled,
business managers and
employees are going to be conflicted about
their work duties.
Robey recalled his own experience as a young
Howard County police
officer during the massive flooding from
Tropical Storm Agnes in 1972,
putting in a 16-hour shift, wondering what was
happening to his parents
in the low-lying town of Daniels on the
Patapsco. He said they were
ultimately rescued by a National Guard
helicopter from the roof of
their house before it collapsed. (The old mill
town was largely wiped
out in the storm.) "They were not prepared —.
Each of you — has a
responsibility to be prepared," Robey
said.
That's especially true in light of a slide of
an organizational chart
of the federal Homeland Security Department put
on the screen by
Richard Krieg, chairman of the Community
Emergency Response Network
(CERN), the county's official volunteer
coordinating group. The
confusing and complicated chart is "not very
reassuring - that does not
give many people solace."
However, much of the thick binder given to
participants in the Oct. 17
meeting were printouts of emergency planning
tools from Homeland
Security's preparedness web site, Ready.gov. It
includes long
checklists, explanations and step-by-step
procedures for both
businesses and households in putting together
an emergency plan.
Other resources for businesses and residents
can be found on the CERN
web site, including links to other preparedness
cites run by the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and cyber security
organizations. The CERN web site
is also available in Korean and Spanish, the
two most prevalent
non-English languages spoken in Howard
County.
O'Brien emphasized the need for business
continuity planning. This
planning includes written plans and procedures,
identifying essential
functions, delegating authority, succession
planning within the
organization and locating alternate facilities
for operation.
"How much would it cost you to be out of
business for one hour?"
O'Brien asked. If your firm is knocked out of
commission for days,
"other businesses may capitalize on the
situation and pick up the work."
One strategy to cope with a shutdown of a
business is to identify an
alternate location for doing business that
employees can use, including
computers and connections to databases. In
response to a question from
a small business owner who suggested that this
strategy is difficult
for a small operation, O'Brien suggested
identifying another small
business in the same line of work that might be
willing to set up
cooperative arrangements in the event of a
disaster.
Robey and O'Brien both emphasized that written
plans that sit on
shelves or in file drawers don't do much good
if they have not been
practiced through some sort of drill that tries
to duplicate conditions
of a disaster. "Plans are worthless," said
O'Brien, quoting Dwight
Eisenhower, the late general and president.
"Planning is essential."