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Education: What is BCP?: Essays & Articles
Important Damage / Site Assessment
It is difficult for organizations to execute
their business/service continuity plans when they have no idea how
severe the damage is, or how long it will be before they can have
access to the environment which houses their core business
operations, their vital records, critical work in progress and
production capabilities.
After an incident resulting in physical property
damage occurs, a proper and thorough site/damage assessment must be
performed, not only to determine the extent of the damage, potential
recovery time frames and costs, but to ensure the safe and healthful
entry requirements for personnel entering into the damaged
environment. In many cases, a thorough site or damage assessment is
not immediately possible after the fire has been put out, the water
contained, or the environment stabilized. Access to and assessment
of the facility and its contents may be delayed due to the possible
loss of structural integrity, necessary forensic investigation, or
existing or potential toxic contamination.
In losses such as the Los Angeles First
Interstate Bank fire, the Philadelphia Meridian Plaza fire, the New
York City World Trade Center and the Oklahoma City bombing, the
Chicago downtown flooding, the Midwest, California and Pacific
Northwest floods, Hurricane Hugo andrew, Marilyn and Fran and the
Northridge earthquake, those companies, who positioned and actually
incorporated delayed access scenarios in to their recovery plans,
were among the first to recover.
Pre-loss communication with the municipal
authorities in your city, such as the Fire Department, or local
emergency management office is an excellent recovery strategy.
Notifying them in advance, as to what areas of your building are
crucial to your business recovery processes, can help them work with
you in the early stages of responding to the loss. Pre-qualify
credentialed emergency resources who will possibly be allowed to
enter the facility(s), (depending upon the severity of the loss),
under special municipal escort to obtain at least a partial damage
assessment of the critical floors and departments. These resources
could be drawn from your pre-determined general contractor,
restoration specialist or recovery management resource with whom you
have a pre-established agreement or contract, thereby allowing them
to respond immediately to your needs.
PRE-LOSS RESPONSE CONTRACTS
As you compile your listing of critical recovery
resources, you may want to discuss with them any potential
agreements or contracts regarding their response to your emergency
needs. It is important that these agreements are set up in advance
so that all the necessary legal, financial and in some cases,
insurance approvals are in place if and when a loss does occur. It
is also important to have documented evidence from them that they
have their own business recovery and continuity of operations plan
in place so that their own disaster will not prevent them from
responding to your needs. It is important to understand that the insurance company will require as much
documentation as possible regarding the circumstances, evidence and
property damage relating to the loss. Your pre-determined resources
should have a good working relationship with your insurance carrier
to ensure that the loss mitigation procedures employed are
acceptable and regarded as cost-effective. In many cases, the
insurance adjuster cannot get to the loss scene immediately and has
to rely on the integrity and performance of the emergency
restoration organization. It is also helpful to have discussions
with your insurance carrier and broker as to what their philosophy
and policies are with regard to emergency mitigation
measures.
EMERGENCY MITIGATION MEASURES
Once the affected site is approved for entry
and the site/damage assessment begins, emergency mitigation measures
should also be put in place - within the first 24 - 48 hours if
possible - to help reduce or control the damage. Emergency
restoration procedures, such as removal of standing water, facility
dehumidification, corrosion control and smoke removal are crucial
loss recovery factors in reducing damage to critical components of
the facility. These include the mechanical and electrical controls,
as well as contents including telecommunication, electronic data
processing and manufacturing equipment, vital records, raw stock and
finished products.
Electronics, as well as finished products,
should always be carefully examined and, if necessary, tested by
experienced technicians to make sure they still meet the
manufacturers original operating and performance specifications, as
well as general cosmetic appearance. For example, if
electronic equipment has suffered thermal damage, as evidenced by
melted plastic components, or been exposed to heat far beyond the
manufacturers recommendations, it normally cannot be restored and
re-certified. However, if equipment has been exposed to just smoke
from the fire for a relatively short time, there may be very little
damage, except for the corrosive components of the
particulate.
If this equipment remains in a moist, humid
environment, severe corrosion can occur within 48 - 72 hours.
Ideally, you would be able to clean all of the equipment at the same
time and remove the contaminants, but factors such as the volume of
equipment, decisions on restoration Vs replacement, insurance
coverage issues and re-certification requirements can delay the
complete cleaning process.
The proper testing, performed by your
pre-qualified specialists, must be done as quickly as possible to
determine the quantitative, as well as the qualitative corrosivity.
Emergency mitigation procedures, such as the removal of surface
contamination and application of corrosion inhibitors, which can buy
you the time you need to make the necessary replace or restore
decisions, should be considered.
STRUCTURAL DAMAGE ASSESSMENT
It is imperative that a thorough investigation of the
structure be performed as quickly as possible by a state licensed
structural engineer, or a professional engineer specializing in
structural integrity areas. (comply with your state requirements).
For example, during the situation created by water infiltration of
the freight tunnels and sub-basements of some fifty or more
buildings in the Chicago Loop during the April 1992 flood, Mr. Ian
R. Chin, SE, AIA of the Chicago, Illinois firm Wiss, Janney, Elstner
Associates, Inc., was contacted by BOMA (Building Owners &
Managers Assoc.) Chicago, to provide assessment recommendations to
its affected members.
In his recommendations, Mr. Chin states that
Many of the buildings affected by water infiltration have been
exposed by this situation to loading conditions that they have never
seen before and possibly were not designed to withstand.....After
the water is pumped out, all structural walls, beams and columns
should be investigated to determine if water-related forces have
adversely affected the structural capacity and serviceability of
building elements. When existing conditions have been evaluated, the
structural engineer should design repairs to provide immediate
intervention for stabilization as needed and to provide long-term
measures to address distress conditions. Structural intervention
must be coordinated with measures to address architectural,
mechanical, electrical and environmental concerns in areas affected
by water.
Mr. Chin tells me that after a fire, ...structural
conditions to look for include: distortions in structural columns,
beams and slabs; fracturing of connections, spalling of concrete
members and cracking of concrete members. If these conditions exist
extensively, then material tests should be performed to determine if
the strength of the structural materials has been affected by the
fire. Surveys of columns and beams should be performed to determine
the extent of their distortions and to evaluate the affect of the
distortion on the load carrying capacity of the structural
members.
It is obvious that you will want to include a
qualified structural or professional engineer on your emergency
response damage assessment team so that you can have accurate
information as quickly as possible to begin the repair, restoration
or replacement. If your organization does not own the affected
facility your business is housed in, you will want to make sure the
building owner or their representative has addressed this
requirement in their disaster recovery or business/service
continuity plan.
HAZARDOUS MATERIAL CONTAMINATION
Depending on the type and level of non-routine contamination found or suspected at the
facility(s), such as PCBs, asbestos, lead, cadmium, mercury, etc.,
or any combination of the combustibles and reactives consumed in the
fire, explosion or loss scenario, OSHA requires not only special
protective clothing and equipment, but special training and
certifications in order for an individual to be able to even enter
the building. To safeguard against potential hazards, it is
important that your internal or external certified industrial
hygienist test for any health, safety and environmental concerns
that may exist. Once an in-depth site assessment is performed,
samples taken and analyzed, the proper cleaning and decontamination
protocols can be identified and performed by your pre-qualified
hazardous material decontamination specialists.
Pre-determined specialists should include, at a
minimum, a certified industrial hygienist, occupational physician,
toxicologist, microbiologist, geologist, remediation and
bio-remediation specialists and OSHA certified hazardous materials
technicians.
It may also be necessary, depending upon what
was in the facility, to identify those items that would require lab
packing, which is the containerization and removal of like hazard
classes of materials, such as all flammable liquids and all
corrosives -- and then have that process performed. Profiling and
disposal in compliance with local, state and federal regulations
will then be necessary, as will the determination that the
facility(s) has been returned to the proper criteria of clean by the
local or state officials. Evidence or suspicion of hazardous
contamination at your site will normally necessitate a more detailed
assessment and the decontamination protocols and timeframe to make
your facility tenable again can be lengthy and costly. Therefore,
you must anticipate this possibility when identifying your recovery
scenarios in your recovery and continuity plans.
FIRE DAMAGE ASSESSMENT
In addition to determining structural integrity and
hazardous material(s) contamination, it is also important to
determine if any routine contamination resulting from the cause of
the loss exists, such as the by-products of a fire.
In the event of fire heat and soot are
generated and areas of the building you assume may be unaffected
directly from the fire, can still suffer damage. The initial damage
assessment should always address both indirect as well as direct
fire-damage areas. Contamination, such as fire combustion
by-products, may lie hidden behind the obvious physical damage to
the structure. These by-products are locked into the soot which
condenses on all cool surfaces. Poly Vinyl Chloride (PVC) plastic,
for example, when heated, generates hydrogen chloride gas. This gas,
combined with water, forms hydrochloric acid, a very corrosive
chemical.
Other building materials can form sulfates and
nitrates. A common cushion material, polyurethane foam, yields
hydrogen cyanide when burned. Even fire-extinguishing chemicals can
generate such by-products as hydrochloric acid, hydrofluoric acid
and hydrogen bromide. Since each fire leaves its own unique
chemical fingerprint in the soot, the chemical components are
determined by what burned, in what quantities and under what
conditions.
WATER - RESIDUAL CHEMICAL DAMAGE
Water associated with floods or fire suppression can carry contaminants also. Inorganic salts from
building materials and atmospheric particulate matter can be
deposited on exposed circuit boards. Also chilled-water systems
often contain glycol, which can adversely affect certain types of
paper and magnetic media. The water's ionic content, acidity,
suspended solids and organic content should always be
analyzed.
During the Chicago flood, for example, the
floodwaters in the basements of most buildings were basically clean
from contamination. In some instances however, there were some
hydrocarbons in the form of oils floating on the surface, which had
come from the mechanical room, waste oil storage or fuel oil tanks.
Since this was a flood and not a hazardous materials incident, the
Certified Industrial Hygienist used a Toxic/ Combustible/ Oxygen
Deficiency Meter upon entering the areas of concern. This tells if
there is a presence of toxic or combustible gases and if there is
sufficient oxygen present to eliminate the necessity of supplied
air.
Silt was tested for contaminants such as
bacteria, heavy metals, pesticides, PCBs and hydrocarbons, etc.,
and submitted to a qualified laboratory for analysis. In some cases,
metals, including lead, chrome, cadmium, barium and traces of
mercury were found. Based upon the tests and analysis results, the
proper cleaning protocols were employed.
Another site assessment consideration at the
affected buildings and which can often occur in similar situations,
was the potential presence and loss of, maintenance chemicals,
oils, paints, solvents, housekeeping chemicals and pesticides, etc.,
which could have been released into the flood waters.
When these and other unknown chemicals were
found in various locations in these sub-basements, specific
procedures had to be followed. They involved taking a complete
physical inventory of each container. Simultaneously, product
segregation, according to Department of Transportation (DOT) Hazard
Class specifications, was performed by certified, trained, hazardous
material technicians.
MOLD AND MILDEW
In addition, where you have had standing water, or moist,
humid conditions in a facility for more than 24 - 48 hours, you must
be concerned about the development and growth of mold and mildew
spores. This affects not only the structure, hvac
systems and critical contents such as documents and magnetic media,
but can produce sick building syndrome as well. Highly elevated
humidity and temperature levels, for example, over 50% relative
humidity and over 75 degrees F, in moist humid conditions can
produce an environment conducive to mold and mildew growth.
Mold growth will typically be visual around
baseboards, on ceiling tiles, light fixtures, supply registers,
upholstery and porous surfaces such as paper documents. Restoration
specialist, Jim McGovern of V&M Restoration discussed two types
of mold growth with me, specifically active growth and dormant
growth. "A wipe sample will provide you with evidence of CFU's
(colony forming units). Samples, taken from different areas and
contents in the facility, should be sent to a qualified laboratory,
specializing in health and environmental issues. Their analysis will
tell you the type and volume of mold spores growing. Active growth
can be killed by using special EPA recognized biocides.
Dormant spores are more difficult to deal with
because when the humidity and temperature levels in the facility
return to normal ranges, e.g. 50% relative humidity and 75 degrees F
ambient temperature, active growth will become dormant. In moist,
humid conditions, when the temperature and humidity levels rise
again, the dormant spores can again become active. There are varied
approaches of source removal for dormant spores."
A proper and thorough damage assessment,
performed by a Certified Industrial Hygienist and decontamination of
the HVAC systems is critical in ensuring that the building will be
returned to the proper criteria of clean for re-occupancy. With
today's technology, there is hardly ever a need to replace the
ductwork. Rather you can apply the proper EPA recognized biocide
through various fogging and cleaning applications. In compliance
with your local and state regulations, follow up clearance sampling
is necessary as the final step in returning the facility to a safe
and healthful condition.
VITAL RECORDS RECOVERY
Although you may have excellent disaster avoidance and
loss control programs in place, in the event of fire or water
damage, vital records can become a total loss very quickly.
Understanding and implementing the emergency mitigation procedures
for records, recovery will allow for a more successful
restoration. Different types of documents, photographs
and vellum items, as well as magnetic media, need immediate and
extra-special care. In dealing with paper in moist, humid
conditions, you have about 48 hours before damage-inducing mold and
mildew begin to grow.
Peter Waters, a retired Conservation Officer
with the United States Library of Congress, provides some very
valuable information to us, "In any weather, mold will appear within
48 hours in unventilated areas made warm and humid by recent fire in
adjacent parts of the building. Every effort should be made to
reduce high temperatures and vent the areas as soon as the water has
receded or been pumped out. Water-soaked materials must be kept as
cool as possibly by good air circulation until they can be
stabilized.
As long as books are tightly shelved, mold will
develop only on the outer edges of the bindings. Thus, no attempt
should be made in these conditions to separate books and fan them
open. Archival files, packed closely together on shelves in
cardboard boxes, or in metal fire cabinets, are the least affected.
As a general rule, damp books, located in warm and humid areas,
without ventilation, will be subject to rapid mold growth. Archival
files, which have not been disturbed, will not be attacked so
quickly by mold. As they begin to dry after removal from the water,
however, both the bindings and the edges of books, will be quickly
attacked by mold, especially when in warm, unventilated areas.
A different problem exists for books printed on
coated stock, since, if allowed to dry in this condition, the leaves
will permanently fuse together. Coated papers must not be permitted
to begin drying until each volume can be dealt with under carefully
controlled conditions."
A blast freezing or cold storage resource is
also vital to your plan. Having a freezer trailer at the damage
site, equipped with a diesel-powered refrigeration system, capable
of 0°F, is recommended.
In many cases, immediate damage assessment or
restoration is not possible. Freezing and storing documents can buy
you time to finalize arrangements for proper recovery procedures.
Although freezing itself is not a drying method - and does not kill
mold - if definitely controls its growth if done
properly. Certain procedures must be completed prior to
freezing to avoid additional damage. These procedures may include
washing away accumulated mud, sewage and dirt. In addition, when
removing wet documents from file cabinets or shelving, do not
attempt to pull them apart while wet. Remove all documents in
blocks, if possible, so you do not increase deterioration. Boxes
should be labeled as precisely as possible. A master inventory
should always be created and bar-coding systems can be helpful in
tracking the items as they move from one location and process to
another.
Equally important are the special health and
safety, cleaning and handling protocols which must be established
before restoration begins. These protocols are based on the type of
damage and debris affecting the documents and media, as well as
their surrounding environment. During flooding, for example, sewage
backup normally occurs. The typhoid bacteria can be present in
sewage and therefore your qualified resources will need to institute
the proper health and safety procedures.
As you pre-plan for vital records recovery, just
as you pre-qualify all other resources, research the track record of
your vendors who will be retrieving, possibly relocating and
restoring your information and critical media. Document how the
media will be transported to and stored in the freeze-drying
chambers or off-site cleaning and storage location. Determine in
advance not only the recovery costs, but the accessibility you will
or will not have to your records while they are off-site.
A well designed and maintained site and damage
assessment plan that includes pre-loss site safety audits, along
with disaster avoidance, mitigation and good loss control and waste
management practices should be an integral part of an organizations
business and service continuity planning effort.
This
article may not be reprinted, reproduced or distributed in part, or
in total, without the express written consent of Strohl Systems.
Copyright © Strohl Systems 2002
All Rights Reserved.
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