tornado2When I wrote about preparing your family and your home for the various kinds of emergencies and catastrophes that can befall us, I surely had no idea the subject would suddenly become so topical. Again. We’ve seen, time and again, the danger and heartache that a natural disaster brings to individuals, families, and homeowners. But what about business owners and leaders? What can you do to prepare your business for disaster?

Some business entrepreneurs have been there before us and can offer some advice. Forbes contributor Elaine Pofeldt, for example, lists some wish-I’d-thought-of-this preparations that would have helped get her own and her husband’s home-based businesses through Hurricane Sandy:

generator
car charger for laptops
back-up Internet service
printed list of hotels in nearby states
bicycle at the ready.

If your business has outgrown a room in the back of the house and is an established, brick-and-mortar retail store, wholesale operation, or service office, your planning issues are more complex and more crucial to the business’s survival. Some 25 percent of small businesses are unable to come back after a natural disaster, largely because they are unprepared. A December 2012 survey showed that 74 percent of businesses have no disaster plan, 84 percent have no natural disaster insurance, and a third have no idea how quickly they could get back in operation after a natural disaster.

Experts urge the importance of several coordinating strategies. These include

having a disaster recovery plan in place;
migrating IT functions, data, applications, and processes to the Cloud;
developing a back-up communication system that does not rely on cell phones;
and anticipating ways to help restore normalcy to employees whose lives are upended.

Clearly, a crucial strategy is to move data and computer functions off-site, to a secure site in the Cloud. This should include not only archived records and programs, but all work in progress. Not only will this protect your company’s and your clients’ data, it can make it possible for employees to work remotely, in case they can’t get to the office or the office itself is out of commission.

The Pacific County (Washington) Economic Development Council has posted an excellent and broad-ranging series of guides and checklists for business preparedness, in connection with a conference on the subject. If you own a business or are in charge of preparedness at your workplace, this is an invaluable series of resources. While you’re at this site, click on the “Business Planning Document” link at the top of the page. This will load a Word document containing a full business preparedness plan whose purpose is “to allow the company to resume mission critical operations within twenty-four to forty-eight hours, followed by the resumption of all other company operations within three to five days.”

Financial Services Group PNC adds the suggestion that business managers identify their organization’s most vulnerable points — computers located on a first floor vulnerable to flooding, for example — and take action to remedy those situations before the fact.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has published several pages of useful information at its website, including a set of planning and implementation guides for businesses. Also on these pages you can find suggestions for building emergency kits, either for families or for businesses, and descriptions of various kinds of hazards and how to prepare for them. Another FEMA document, “Every Business Should Have a Plan,” provides a succinct set of recommendations for preparations to help to keep your employees safe during an emergency and help your company stay in business afterward.

King David HotelThere are actually two aspects to disaster preparedness: readying oneself and one’s group for natural disasters and preparing for manmade disasters and catastrophic human error. Quite a lot of information addresses the possibility of natural events such as earthquakes, tornadoes, fire, and floods, but there’s less public information about preparing for a terrorist attack. Probably the best organized and most useful discussion appears at FEMA’s site on terrorist hazards. There you’ll find links to pages with details on protecting yourself from biological and chemical threats, cyberattacks, explosions, nuclear blasts, and radioactive dispersion devices.

Another of the best planning documents designed to help businesses cope with manmade disasters is a primer published by Business Executives for National Security. This guide covers the several possible kinds of terrorist attacks, risk assessment and preparation, employee training, terrorism insurance, ways a business can respond to a terrorist attack, and recovery. It includes a short, to-the-point checklist.

In the recovery department, the Small Business Administration offers a variety of business physical recovery loans for companies in a declared disaster zone.

Palm Beach County (Florida) provides a business guide for disaster preparedness that also addresses bomb threats, enraged employees or customers, sabotage, cyberterrorism, and hacking. And King County (Washington) publishes a short and to-the-point set of actions to take in various scenarios, ranging from hazard recognition to survival if you’re trapped under debris.

The Red Cross has a PDF on responding to terrorist attacks; it contains some helpful advice, including instructions for sheltering in place.

In 2003, the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) prepared an eye-opening report on potential terrorist actions and the nation’s preparedness for them. A key part of this discussion has to do with the threat to financial markets posed by a successful, major attack. We saw what happened when some joker hacked in to the Associated Press’s Twitter feed and posted a report that the White House had been struck — an instantaneous, deep stock market dip. Had the report been real, the consequences would have been very serious, indeed. The GAO report deals largely with the financial markets, the banking industry, and the telecommunications infrastructure. Even though it’s a decade old, the report and its recommendations are still worth a business executive’s attention.

Images:

Tornado in central Oklahoma, 1999. U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Public domain.
King David Hotel (Jerusalem) after attack by Irgun, 1946. Public domain.

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AnnagarlicJestjack’s comment on last Saturday’s post, about the vet who opined that the wide-ranging pisser of a cat had “anger issues” (heeee!), reminded me of Anna the German Shepherd, a dog for whom “trainability” was an alien term.

Actually, Anna was highly trainable. But she was a working dog with a capital W and a capital D, and she had so much drive that she really needed a full-time doggy job to run off her bottomless reserves of energy. This was an animal that needed to herd sheep. Or cattle. Or camels. She was so strong that for many months I faced quite the challenge keeping her under control.

A woman who trained search dogs and drug dogs for the police had been the most successful of a largely unsuccessful lot of dog-and-human trainers. By the time Anna was about 18 months old, she was marginally leash-trained, despite daily efforts on my part. This police dog trainer favored a vicious pinch collar, something that just made me cringe…but I couldn’t afford to have the dog drag me into the traffic, or to have to let her go as she charged in front of an oncoming vehicle. Since she craved to bring cars and trucks down by their oil-pans, suicide by car was a likely end for Anna. The pinch collar at least put a damper on that activity. To a degree. A low degree.

One day I mentioned this to Jerry Jenkins, a now-retired veterinarian who over the years had become a friend. He said he knew a “dog behavioralist” that maybe I should try. Silently thinking “holeee mackerel, what next?” I took the guy’s phone number. In a moment of desperation, after having been dragged around the neighborhood again, I called him.

Now, you should bear in mind that another friend of mine, at the time, was a lady who claimed to believe in astrology and who was in the act of hanging out her shingle as a pet astrologist and mind-reader. No. Yes. She was serious. I think. Who can tell?

At any rate, you can imagine the eye-rolling over the “dog behavioralist.”

So I call the guy up, and it turns out that under the silly psycho-babble veneer, what he really does is teach owners (not dogs) how to behave. Abhorred by the stainless-steel pinch collar, the first thing he did was demonstrate how to get Anna to heel using nothing more than a leather leash and her ordinary everyday rolled leather collar. It wasn’t very difficult. The trick was, you had to do it several times a day. Didn’t matter whether you did it in the house, did it in the backyard, did it on a sidewalk, or did it in the park. You just had to do it for a short period, over and over, every day.

Here’s how to do it:

Get a rolled leather collar (it’s better for long-haired dogs and it will work better for your purposes). Get a sturdy leather leash (not nylon). Place the collar on the dog and hook the leash to the collar. Have the dog sit next to you. Step forward with the dog at your left side. Each time the dog surges ahead of your knees, say “HUP!” and give the leash a sharp jerk. Always precede the jerk with the “HUP!” sound. Never jerk the leash and then say “HUP.” Walk steadily and confidently forward. Never let the dog get past your knees without going “HUP” and giving it a jerk.

This won’t hurt the dog, but it will get its attention. Reward the dog with friendly noises for heeling correctly over brief periods. You may heel and sit, heel and sit, heel and sit if that’s necessary to underscore the idea that the human walks the dog, not the other way around. Do not fail to do this for a few minutes at least three times a day — five or ten minutes per session will suffice.

After awhile, the dog will start to expect a jerk whenever you say “HUP!” You can then use the word “HUP” to mean, approximately, “heel.”

It works.

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The “End of the Month & We’re Broke” Pot-luck Pasta Salad

May 19, 2013

So last Wednesday at choir rehearsal I was reminded that, today being the end of our season, we have our annual choir send-off party and pot-luck. This was a bit of an embarrassment, since I’ve pretty much spent the grocery budget and, if Cassie and I are to survive until the end of the month [...]

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Wounded Dog Dodges Bankruptcy

May 17, 2013

The other day Cassie flew into the air, chasing Ball up the driveway, and came down wrong on a hind leg. She yelped once, licked her foot, and then went on about her frenetic business. She seemed OK. Maybe a little sore but not enough to slow her down. She’s still racing around like a [...]

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Medicare Supplement: QUALIFIED!

May 16, 2013

Thank goodness! The agent I stumbled across while trying to navigate the Medigap labyrinth after Mutual of Omaha decided to up its Medicare supplement premium by $433 a year called to say Government Personnel Mutual’s underwriters have approved me for a Plan G policy. That will be a difference of almost $700 off the two [...]

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Cleaning FRENZY!

May 15, 2013

So yesterday I went completely off the deep end. Damn near kilt myself with overwork. Monday is vacuuming day. Check. Tuesday is steam-mop day. Well, it’s been quite some time since I steam-mopped the 1680 square feet of tile in this house. As a stop-gap, I’ve been wet-mopping the dirtiest floors, which usually are the [...]

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