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BUSINESS CONTINUITY PLANNING IN EDUCATION (IT Role in Emergency Planning) Dr. Jim Kennedy MRP, MBCI, CBRM, CHS-IV Business Continuity Practice Lead – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BUSINESS CONTINUITY PLANNING IN EDUCATION (IT Role in


1
BUSINESS CONTINUITYPLANNING IN EDUCATION(IT
Role in Emergency Planning)
  • Dr. Jim Kennedy
  • MRP, MBCI, CBRM, CHS-IV
  • Business Continuity Practice Lead
  • Alcatel-Lucent

2
Presentation Agenda
  • What does BC have to do with Schools?
  • Risk Management Threats Vulnerabilities
  • Why Business Continuity Planning is Crucial
  • What is Needed to Fully Plan For Emergency
    Preparedness
  • Process For Developing BCP
  • What makes a Successful BCP/DR Plan
  • Lessons Learned From Experience
  • Case Study

3
Interesting Question
  • What does business continuity have to do with
    Schools?
  • In education as in personal life, it is tempting
    to assume that catastrophes are things that
    happen elsewhere and to other people.
  • Recent events have shown us that planning is
    essential in the protection of the safety of
    children, teachers, staff, and the public.
  • Technology infrastructure and IT is increasingly
    central to education. However, the increase of
    educations dependence on technology has left
    many institutions unaware of their reliance upon
    it.
  • As solutions such as the student information
    system (SIS) or learning management system (LMS)
    become increasingly central to the day-to-day
    operation of schools and school districts,
    ensuring that these solutions keep working
    regardless of whatever disaster may have befallen
    the institution becomes a core objective of the
    Administration and the IT department.

4
Further
  • As a result, it is easy to underestimate the
    effect that a catastrophic event might have on a
    school district and its community.
  • These potential problems range from the seemingly
    trivial such as a leaking pipe to the
    completely catastrophic.
  • Damaging events might be natural or man-made.
  • A massive range of eventualities might either
    cause damage to the school or require technology
    to aid during an adverse event.
  • In all these situations, school districts need to
    have a clear plan of action that will enable them
    to make sure that their technical infrastructures
    are capable of doing what is necessary in time of
    crisis

5
Threats Natural Man-made Disasters
Hurricane/Tornado
Earthquake
Bio Hazards
Bombing
Fires
6
Threats Terrorist Attacks
Business Continuity Disruptive Events
7
Invisible Threat Cyber-Terrorism
  • Cyber-terrorism
  • Is a serious threat to critical infrastructure
  • Impacts computer systems that support
  • business operations
  • Can cause data corruption prevent access
  • to business critical data
  • Cyberspace attacks coupled with a physical
    attack can devastate business continuity
  • Were the attacks on Estonia this Spring
    state-sponsored cyber-terrorism?

8
Major Ramifications For Continuity
  • Utility Outages
  • Communications Outages
  • Transportation Outages
  • Evacuations / Unavailability of Key Personnel

9
Impact of an Incident
  • Being able to cope should adverse event occur is
    increasingly recognized as vital for individual
    schools and school districts.
  • Alcatel-Lucent believes that a number of factors
    are driving increasing interest in business
    continuity by education institutions, including

10
Education and Adverse Events
  • The range of possible disasters Extreme weather
    events across the world help to focus the minds
    of education decision-makers on how they would
    cope if some part of their infrastructure were
    hit by a disaster beyond their control.
  • Increasing dependence on Technology As
    discussed in the introduction, all schools and
    their districts now depend on the technology
    infrastructure for a significant part of their
    day-to-day operations. Education decision-makers
    are waking up to the fact that if central IT
    functions fail, then their institutions would
    find it difficult to continue their operations,
    even in a minimal fashion.
  • Broader community role Schools are not merely
    businesses providing an ordinary service, they
    are often seen as providing a central service to
    the community as a whole. In the event of a major
    crisis, schools and school buildings often find
    themselves at the center of efforts to deal with
    the situation. Schools often act as co-ordination
    points for both the victims of a disaster or the
    emergency workers trying to help them.
    Institutions who see themselves as fulfilling
    this broader role need to keep themselves going
    in a crisis not just for their own sake but in
    order to take its place at the center of the
    community it serves.
  • NOTE In a recent survey 51 of education IT
    decision makers indicated that they did not feel
    ready for a disaster.

11
Common Failure Areas
12
Applicable Standards and Regulations
  • FEDERAL
  • STATE
  • COUNTY
  • LOCAL
  • NFPA 1600

13
Different Types of Plans
  • Business Continuity (BC)
  • Disaster Recovery (DR)
  • Continuity of Operations (COOP)
  • Emergency Operations (EOP)
  • Crisis Management (CM)
  • Incident Response (IR)

Resume
Respond
4 Rs of Contingency Planning
Recover
Restore
14
Business Continuity a Beginning without an End
  • Business Continuity Management means
    ensuring the continuity or uninterrupted
    provision of operations and services.  Business
    Continuity Management is an on-going process with
    several different but complementary elements.
    Planning for business continuity is a
    comprehensive process that includes disaster
    recovery, business recovery, business resumption,
    and contingency planning as shown below.

15
BUSINESS CONTINUITY MANAGEMENT
Security Policy
BUSINESS CONTINUITY MANAGEMENT
Risk Management
BUSINESS CONTINUITY PLAN

Emergency Operations Plan
Crisis Management Plan
Data Recovery Plan
IT Recovery Plan
Business Unit Recovery Plans
  • Security
  • Insurance
  • Vital Records
  • Business
  • Impact
  • Analysis
  • Takeover
  • Product
  • Contamination
  • Kidnap
  • Strike

Testing
Dr. Jim Kennedy July 2006
16
Business Continuity Planning So Where Do We
Begin?
  • Formalize BC processes Organization to set
    Policy, Governance Reporting
  • Senior Official and executive management
    commitment support as most critical elements
  • Identify recovery needs
  • What is the difference Business Continuity (BCP)
    vs. Disaster Recovery (DR)
  • BCP is forethought to prevent loss of operational
    capability
  • DR is process of recovery/resumption of
    technology functions

17
Did You Know?
  • If you cant describe what you are doing as a
    process, you dont know what you are doing.
  • -W. Edwards Deming

18
Business Continuity Planning
19
Methodology
20
Typical BCP Process
1
2
4
BCP Project Initiation
Conduct Business Impact Analysis (BIA)
Develop BCP Policy Scope
5
Identify Risks and their Mitigation
Develop Recovery Strategies
3
Develop Test Plan
  • Organization
  • Resources

6
Management Awareness Training
BCP Maintenance Change Management
BCP Review, Testing Verification
7A
7
7B
21
Which Plan to Develop?
  • DISASTER RECOVERY PLAN  The management approved
    document that defines the resources, actions,
    tasks and data required to manage the technology
    recovery effort.  Usually refers to the
    technology recovery effort.  This is a component
    of the Business Continuity Management Program.
  • BUSINESS CONTINUITY PLAN  (BCP)  Process of
    developing and documenting arrangements and
    procedures that enable an organization to respond
    to an event that lasts for an unacceptable period
    of time and return to performing its critical
    functions after an interruption. Similar terms 
    business resumption plan, continuity plan, and
    contingency plan.

22
More Plans?
  • CONTINUITY OF OPERATIONS PLAN (COOP)  A COOP
    provides guidance on the system restoration for
    emergencies, disasters, mobilization, and for
    maintaining a state of readiness to provide the
    necessary level of information processing support
    commensurate with the mission requirements/priorit
    ies identified by the respective functional
    proponent.  Federal, State and local government
    and supporting agencies traditionally use this
    term to describe activities otherwise known as
    Disaster Recovery, Business Continuity, Business
    Resumption, or Contingency Planning.
  • Emergency Operations Plan (EOP) A clear and
    concise document describing the actions to be
    taken, or instructions to all individual and
    local government services concerned, stating what
    will be done in the event of an emergency. The
    plan will state the method or scheme for taking
    coordinated action to meet the needs of the
    situation. It will state the action to be taken
    by whom, what, when and where based on
    predetermined assumptions, objectives and
    capabilities.

23
BCP Plan Composition Contents
  • Supporting Information
  • Introduction
  • Scope of BCP
  • Concept of Operations
  • Notification/Activation
  • Notification Procedures
  • Damage Assessment
  • Plan Activation
  • Plan Appendices
  • Points of Contact
  • System Requirements
  • Procedures Checklists
  • Recovery Phase
  • Sequence of Recovery Activities
  • Recovery Procedures
  • Restoration Phase
  • Restore Original Site
  • Test Systems
  • Terminate Operations

24
Major Shortcomings in BCP
  • Not considering critical processes or functions
  • Forgetting about critical records
  • Protection of distributed and mostly unstructured
    data
  • Lack of emphasis on people side of recovery
  • Lack of planning for crisis management
  • Not involving outside agencies and first
    responders

25
Personnel Considerations in BCP
  • Single most common failure is the lack of
    planning for the people
  • Personal Safety Evacuation
  • Personnel Welfare
  • Relationship with Response Organization (Local
    Fire, Police, Rescue, etc.)
  • Internal External Communication

26
Did you Know?
  • Plans are only good intentions,
  • unless they immediately degenerate
  • into hard work.
  • -Peter F. Drucker

27
Critical Success Factors
  • Build smaller teams of Subject Matter Experts
  • Seek team cooperation and sharing w. each other
    and outside resources
  • Be brutally honest
  • Do it in-house if you have time and expertise,
    otherwise bring a BCP consultant
  • Simplify large/complex critical
  • functions
  • People
  • Facilities
  • Technology
  • Miscellaneous

28
  • Expect the Worst and Dont be Disappointed
    Planning for Business Continuity Disaster
    Recovery

29
CASE STUDY
30
Atlanta Public Schools Partners with its Local
Service Provider and Lucent to Implement Disaster
Planning
  • I was extremely pleased with our engagement with
    our Service Provider and Lucent. They provided us
    with competent industry experts who not only
    identified our vulnerabilities, but also
    suggested solutions for mitigation. Their
    expertise was critical in the overall project and
    they ensured that our team was positioned for
    ongoing support by the end of the engagement.
  • Gail Waldo, Director of IT Operations, Atlanta
    Public Schools

Challenge
Previous audits had shown that Atlanta
Public Schools (APS) lacked adequate security and
disaster recovery processes to protect its IT
operations. It needed to assess and develop
business continuity management/disaster recovery
plans for its critical IT platforms.
Solution
APS partnered with its local service provider and
Lucent Worldwide Services to develop a business
continuity/disaster recovery strategy. Lucent
worked with APS to assess its IT risks, their
business impact, and potential disaster recovery
strategies. Lucent also helped APS develop and
test comprehensive response and restoration plans
and to train its staff on those new procedures.
Benefits
  • Initial Risk Assessment helped APS identify and
    determine how to mitigate all natural, man-made,
    and technical risks to their IT infrastructure
  • IT Business Impact Assessment enabled APS to
    focus their efforts on the risks that would have
    the greatest impact on their IT operations
  • Incident Command Structure, Response Plans, and
    Restoration Addendums ensure that APS will be
    able to restore critical IT operations rapidly in
    the event of a disaster

31
QUESTIONS ???
  • Dr. Jim Kennedy
  • Principal Consultant BCDR/Security Practice
    Lead
  • NCE, MRP, MBCI, CBRM, CHS-IV, Security
  • jtkennedy_at_alcatel-lucent.com
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