This Core Policy and Procedures Manual chapter outlines a specific risk management process for government. The policy, roles and responsibilities are presented separately to support understanding and performance.
Business Continuity is a professional methodology that safeguards Critical Services by creating and maintaining Business Continuity Plans (BCPs). Business Continuity Plans contain the recovery procedures and strategies necessary to resume Critical Services and are activated when standard operational procedures and responses are overwhelmed by a disruptive event. While Emergency Management focuses on event containment and response, Business Continuity focuses on the resumption of Critical Services until a return to normal business operations is possible.
Business Continuity planning allows the Province to protect the availability of Critical Services in spite of challenging or extreme circumstances. Therefore, each ministry is required to implement a Business Continuity Management Program (BCMP) consistent with provincial recovery legislation, objectives and priorities. The Emergency Program Act and the corresponding Emergency Program Management Regulations provide the authority for Business Continuity Plans and procedures in government.
Definitions:
Business Impact Analysis - A detailed and documented process designed to identify and prioritize business functions and workflow, including establishing Recovery Time Objectives by assessing impacts over time that might result if an organization was to experience a disruptive event.
Business Priority Service – business function or process that is not mission critical, but, should it not be performed, could lead to the loss of a major government service.
Critical Services – general term that collectively refers to Business Priority and Mission Critical services.
Disaster Recovery – in Business Continuity Plans (BCPs), this term refers to Information Technology (IT) recovery. Disaster Recovery Plans (DRPs) document the process to recover and restore the technology (computer processing, applications and data) needed to support critical business functions.
Mission Critical Services – those functions and processes that, should they not be performed, could lead to loss of life or injury, personal hardship to citizens, major damage to the environment, or significant loss of revenue or assets.
Recovery Point Objectives – The point in time, relative to pre-disaster, at which available data from backup can be restored.
Recovery Time Objectives – The amount of time that a business function can withstand an interruption before a negative or unacceptable consequence occurs.
Risk Assessment - The overall process of risk identification, risk analysis and risk evaluation.
Roles and Responsibilities
The Inter-Agency Emergency Preparedness Council (IEPC) is a senior committee with executive level membership from ministries, Crown Corporations and selected provincial agencies. Its responsibilities are outlined in Emergency Program Management Regulation, Schedule 2 and include:
Emergency Management BC (EMBC) is responsible for the centralized coordination and oversight of Ministry Business Continuity Programs and:
EMBC Provincial Advisors are responsible for:
Deputy Ministers are responsible for:
Ministry Business Continuity Advisors are responsible for:
Business Continuity Coordinators are responsible for:
Ministries and/or agencies providing centralized, cross-government infrastructure and support services are key to provincial recovery and are responsible for:
In addition, the Public Service Agency is responsible for:
EMBC’s Business Continuity program methodology aligns with the Disaster Recovery Institute’s Professional Practices for Business Continuity Practitioners. These professional practices provide both the standards and methods by which Ministry Business Continuity Management Programs are developed, delivered, maintained and assessed.
Ministries shall establish Business Continuity Management Programs to ensure that Business Continuity, Disaster Recovery and Ministry Operation Centre plans are developed, current and exercised with mechanisms for regular monitoring and review.
Risk Assessments are a means of protecting Critical Services by reducing the likelihood and impact of a disruption or vulnerability.
Each ministry shall conduct a Risk Assessment (RA) to identify and analyze threats to ministry business and services. Ministries should consult and leverage existing Enterprise-wide Risk Management (ERM) assessments for current risk identification, analysis and treatment information. Where possible, Ministries shall use the risk information to implement mitigation and recovery strategies to lower the impact or likelihood of a business interruption.
The Risk Assessment shall be reviewed and updated annually and when changes to core business, relative legislation, operations or location occur. Ministries are responsible for identifying and implementing Risk Assessment review triggers to ensure that risk information is refreshed when changes occur.
The Business Impact Analysis (BIA) identifies and evaluates business processes and provides the foundation for the development of recovery strategies and Business Continuity Plans.
Ministries must complete a BIA for each business unit or program area utilising EMBC templates. External contractors engaged to assist in the development of ministry BIA documentation are also subject to the use of EMBC templates, although Ministries may apply to EMBC for external contractor BIA template exemption. Exemptions should be sought prior to finalizing the contract.
The BIA shall be reviewed and updated annually, as well as when changes to business operations and processes, organizational structure, critical dependencies or resources occur. Ministries are responsible for identifying and implementing operational triggers to ensure the BIA is current.
Recovery Strategies are the means by which Critical Services resume and are required for each resource and critical dependency. Resources are the physical tools of recovery such as computers, staff, records, and work space. Critical dependencies refer to services or information sourced outside the business unit, such as other departments, branches, divisions or Ministries as well as non-government agencies, private sector partnerships, key vendor and service providers.
The delivery of Government Critical Services requires resources and critical dependency inputs, therefore Ministries must manage them with appropriate diligence by developing and negotiating supportive agreement documentation, utilizing one or more of the following:
Ministries shall identify, evaluate and select recovery strategies consistent with the following requirements:
Ministry Operations Centre and Business Continuity Plans integrate with Occupational Health and Safety as well as the Emergency Management BC provincial emergency response in the event of a widespread or severe disaster. Business Continuity plans support and align with the British Columbia Emergency Response Management System response goals through the identification of and planning for mission critical functions.
Using provincially approved templates, ministries must have a current Ministry Operations Centre (MOC) Plan which documents the Ministry’s Crisis Management organization structure, roles, responsibilities and communication lines for significant disruptive events to support, direct, and coordinate ministry response and recovery activities.
Ministries must set out, in Business Continuity and IT Disaster Recovery Plans and procedures, the manner and means by which the organization will resume Critical Services following a business disruption or event, regardless of the cause.
Plans shall include current lists of resource requirements including personnel, facilities, supplies and office equipment/furniture, information technology assets (hardware and software), data, communications, critical dependencies and documented recovery strategies and procedures.
Ministry Business Continuity Plans shall be developed utilising the provincially approved template. External vendors and contractors engaged to assist in the development of ministry Business Continuity Plan documentation are also subject to the use of provincial Business Continuity Plan template.
Business Continuity Plans shall be reviewed and updated at least annually and as warranted by changes to organizational structure, business operations, critical dependencies, resource requirements, location or critical contact information. Ministries are responsible for identifying and implementing operational review triggers to ensure that Plan information is refreshed when changes occur.
Ministries supporting and managing IT infrastructure, data and/or applications will develop IT Disaster Recovery Plans. IT Disaster Recovery Plans are subject to the same maintenance requirements as the Business Continuity Plans they support.
In addition to delivering training in the form of plan orientations, reviews, exercises or other means to assigned members of Ministry Operations Centre, Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery teams, ministries shall deliver general awareness and training activities to all staff members.
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery exercises are conducted to validate plan strategies, procedures and the ability to meet Recovery Time Objectives.
Ministries shall conduct exercises for Business Continuity Plans and Ministry Operations Centres at least annually and as warranted by changes to the plans such as team members, location, business functions or organizational structure.
Ministries with Critical Services dependent on the restoration of IT data and applications shall participate in Disaster Recovery exercises to perform data and systems verification.
Ministries supporting or managing IT infrastructure, data and/or applications shall implement a scheduled exercise cycle, not to exceed three years, for conducting IT Disaster Recovery exercises to validate systems and data integrity, availability and Recovery Time Objectives.
Ministries shall report the status of ministry-wide Business Continuity to EMBC semi-annually and on an ad-hoc basis, as requested. Ministries are responsible for self- monitoring compliance with Core Policy, standards, tools and templates.
Ministry Business Continuity documentation (including RAs, BIAs, BCPs, DRPs and MOCs, exercise, maintenance and training materials) may be selected to participate in an EMBC review.
Areas identified by Ministries or EMBC as deficient or non-compliant will require the development of a remediation plan identifying the actions, target dates and individuals responsible. The progress of the plan will be monitored until the required actions are completed.
More formal audits of government and Ministry Business Continuity Management Programs may be carried out from time to time by Internal Audit and Advisory Services or the Office of the Auditor General.
Ministries shall ensure that their Ministry Operations Centre, Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Plans contain the messages and procedures to facilitate communication with recovery team members, staff, customers, stakeholders and agencies during a crisis.
Further information can be obtained by contacting Emergency Management BC at 250 952-4913 or consulting the EMBC website. Please note government IDIR and SharePoint site accounts are required for access, contact Shared Services BC for IDIR information and EMBC to register for a site account.
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