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The Time Has Arrived For Disaster
Recovery Plans
By Jim Jordan
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Jim Jordan is
director of construction services for Dallas/Fort Worth-based
Weaver and Tidwell LLP.
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If a natural disaster hit your business, would it be able
to survive? In the wake of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, many
businesses for the first time are giving the question serious
consideration. And they should. According to Fireman's Fund
Insurance, 40 percent of all businesses hit by a disaster
close within five years. The primary reason, experts say,
is that far too many companies never give a thought to disaster
recovery planning. In fact, such planning has been practically
non-existent, despite the growing number of natural disasters
that have occurred in the U.S..
With the lessons of recent natural disasters fresh in mind,
contractors large and small should create formal disaster
recovery plans. The effort is simply another investment in
the business. The process should begin with a simple question:
If the company's administrative offices and at least some
equipment were destroyed, would the business be able to rebound?
Statistics show that for a business to have a chance of surviving
a disaster, it needs to be operating again within five days.
A team composed of members from all departments should be
assembled to evaluate the critical items needed for operations
to continue. Although disaster plans may vary in scope and
emphasis, their initial focus should be on the protection
of employees, the security and retrieval of administrative
data and access to working capital.
Here are some key points to consider in the development of
a recovery plan:
Protecting employees and administrative data In terms of
employees, physical safety is the primary concern. All contractors
should assess how dangerous their offices and job sites might
be should a natural disaster strike. Once necessary steps
are taken to reopen and enhance safety, contractors need to
develop systems for employees to communicate with each other
from remote locations.
Protection of data is critical. Losing power for a few days
can cause operations to cease temporarily, but the loss of
data can be grave. Any information that affects day-to-day
operations should be saved off-site.
Protecting capital is perhaps the most misunderstood aspect
of disaster planning. A natural disaster may halt a firm's
operations, but not its obligation to make loan payments and
pay employees. Providing a timely method to pay employees
when the payroll system is inoperable is essential.
Prior to a disaster, contractors should visit with their
bankers to devise a financial contingency plan that can be
enacted if operations are suddenly interrupted. Emergency
lines of credit can be discussed in advance. Lenders can help
create an emergency plan that would temporarily suspend or
reduce loan repayment schedules and provide information on
disaster assistance loans offered by FEMA and the Small Business
Administration. Information on SBA loans can be found by logging
on to sba.gov.
For contractors, disaster planning is particularly critical
because any disruption of operations can halt projects in
progress. Although project owners nearly always allow some
flexibility on deadlines, contractors should always request
and document extensions in accordance with the contract documents.
Sufficient insurance One way to protect assets and provide
a source of funding is to purchase sufficient insurance. Contractors
should purchase three types of insurance: property, liability
and business-interruption.
Business-interruption insurance can go a long way in helping
a devastated business stay afloat. It pays what a company
would have earned had it not been hit by a disaster. But it
is not sold as a policy by itself. It may be added to a property
insurance policy or included in a package. Make sure its limits
are sufficient to cover your business for more than a few
days.
Insurance is expensive, so it's important to have the amount
you need, but not much more. Have enough to get the company
back on its feet without exhausting available cash.
Employee safety, protection of data and financial continuity
are critical issues in the development of any disaster recovery
plan. However, they are only a departure point. There are
countless other issues that need to be addressed, and many
are easy to enact. For example, companies should store an
adequate supply of checks and purchase orders off-site.
No business in America is entirely safe from a natural disaster.
That's a fact too many of us overlook.
Are you prepared if the lights go out?
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