[CONTIGENCY-PLANNING] Comparison with UK contingency planning
'Not one of the state regulatory commissions appear to have developed an aggressive Y2K stance to push regulated sectors to act
04/29/1998: "Two hundred IT professionals from 39 state governments met at the mid-year conference of the National Association of State Information Resource Executives (NASIRE) in Lexington, Kentucky on April 20 -21 to discuss electronic commerce, welfare reform, outsourcing, and the Year 2000." So writes, Victor Porlier in his Westergaard Year 2000 column, "State CIOs Meet on Y2K," 4/29/1998. A further excerpt from his column reports:
Lastly, not one of the myriad state regulatory commissions appear to have developed an aggressive Y2K stance to push regulated sectors to act - banks, utilities, telecommunications, health, transportation, etc.
State level officials are so busy working with limited human resources that over half are not keeping their Y2K citizen awareness Web sites up to date or dealing comprehensively or effectively with their many local governments and school districts.
In my own research, I had observed the same thing, most obviously with water. I recently spoke at the SPG Year 2000 Conference and Expo in Orlando and sat in on workshops on how things are going with various state governments. Capers Jones in his 6/21/1998 keynote speech confirmed my fears that water utilities are at the bottom of the list in addressing Y2K issues -- mainly because they are city-government operated and are not under the domain of any state-driven Y2K program. (Actually, they are 2nd from the bottom, I can't remember the bottom industry except that I did not consider it critical to life.)
Best Government-Sponsored Fallback Plan is the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee on the Year 2000
04/29/1998: In contrast to the situation in the United States with state governments, as discussed above, the Institution of Electrical Engineers in the UK submitted evidence to the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee on "The Year 2000 - Computer Compliance". The resulting report of that committee, available at parliament.the-stationery-office.co.uk cmselect/cmsctech/342ii/st0202.htm, is entitled "Science and Technology - Second Report." This proposal I highly recommend for all 50 states in the USA and other countries. Here are some of the report excerpts:
Malfunctions or failures in systems which perform safety-critical or essential operations, such as air traffic control systems; road or rail signalling; medical equipment; safety control equipment in factories or equipment controlling the labelling, storage and distribution of perishable foods, would present more fundamental risks to the public. For example, Thames Water, whose operational monitoring and control systems for major water and waste processes are dependent on embedded systems, told us "any failure of our services for a significant period of time would have a potentially serious impact on the public health of millions of people".
...It is more difficult to assess progress in other public bodies, such as local government or the NHS, partly because far less information on compliance programmes has been made publicly available and partly because of the disparate nature of the large number of organisations concerned. Although the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster has no responsibility beyond central Government, he has asked each Secretary of State to ensure that their department performs an exercise similar to the one he has undertaken in central Government in respect of the organisations they sponsor. We recommend that they should do so. We further recommend that the results of these reviews should be made available, as a supplement to the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster's quarterly reports, so that they can both be scrutinised by experts and serve to reassure the public that adequate precautions are being taken.
...There are two aspects to contingency planning in the public sector. First, each organisation must make alternative arrangements for essential systems which might fail even though every effort has been made to make them millennium ready. The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster has drawn the attention of each department to the need to make such plans and has "asked Ministerial colleagues to ensure that the contingency plans in place to cope with major systems failures are adequate to deal with any unforeseen Year 2000 processing problems". Nevertheless, we are concerned that the development of such plans should be monitored. We recommend that progress reports on contingency planning for central departments and agencies should form an explicit part of the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster's quarterly reviews and further that such reporting should be mirrored by all Ministers in respect of the public bodies which their departments sponsor.
...The second area where Government has a responsibility for contingency planning is in respect of the breakdown of essential public services, whether provided in the public or private sector, such as emergency services, power and transport, however remote such possibilities may be. Responsibility in this area falls to MISC 4-a Cabinet Committee, chaired by the President of the Board of Trade, which met for the first time in January 1998. MISC 4 members have a difficult job to perform as the millennium approaches in drawing up contingency plans for the worst possible, and most unlikely, scenarios. They will also have to balance the need to reassure the public that such plans are in place with the risk of causing widespread fear and panic.
...We were most concerned to ascertain the extent of progress towards millennium readiness in those sectors which provide services on which society depends such as food distribution, transport, health care, power and water supply, telecommunications and financial and emergency services.
...Not one of these organisations has yet completed their Year 2000 projects and all pointed out that projects were designed to reduce risks to manageable proportions rather than to achieve full compliance. Furthermore, most pointed out that while they were confident that their own systems would by adequately prepared in time, they were unable to predict whether other organisations on whom they were critically dependent would be.[108] This situation reinforces the need for adequate and integrated contingency plans to be drawn up and tested. Thus, while it is important that each organisation develop its own contingency plans, there is a role for Government to ensure that alternative arrangements are in place should there be any interruption in the ability of providers of essential public services to deliver.
...Contingency plans are more likely to be effective if those making the plans know what sort of contingencies should be planned for. Action 2000 told us that it "stands ready to contribute ... by gathering information on the state of preparedness, particularly in key sectors" and we welcome its commitment to undertake "systematic and regular surveys". We recommend that Action 2000 commission a quarterly survey on progress in the business sector, broken down into categories including core services such as transport, telecommunications and other critical public services. We further recommend that the results of the survey be publicly and freely available.
...Although it is impossible to guarantee performance without degradation or interruption, we are reasonably content that widespread failures in key parts of the national infrastructure will be averted if current Year 2000 programmes for compliance are continued through to completion on time. However, we emphasise the need for integrated contingency planning.
...Another means of reaching businesses directly would be to include information leaflets in telephone or other utility bills which are delivered to the vast majority of SMEs [small or medium-sized enterprises]. ...
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