A group of congressmen are urging federal agencies to submit
emergency contingency plans for dealing with possible Y2K-related
failures.
Sens. Bob Bennett (R-Utah), chairman of the Senate Special Committee on the Year
2000 Technology Problem, and Chris Dodd (D-Connecticut), vice chair
of the committee, said they are concerned about a number of agencies
that are expected to miss the March 31 deadline for all "mission critical" systems within the federal government to be compliant and want all
agencies to be prepared for possible Y2K failures.
In a letter sent to 22 agency heads that was also signed by
Senate Appropriations Committee chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) and ranking
Sen. Robert Byrd (D-Virginia), Bennett and Dodd wrote that "knowing the
federal departments and agencies are not only addressing Y2K, but also
have appropriate Y2K contingency plans will go a long way in assuring
the American public that the federal government will be ready."
The request comes the same week the Clinton administration released its eighth quarterly report on the federal government's progress tackling the Y2K issue. Three federal agencies are likely to miss the rapidly approaching White
House deadline, according to the report.
Although close to 85 to 90 percent of federal agencies are ready for the
Year 2000, "some mission critical systems and services may not be
completed in time," the senators wrote. "New or renovated systems may
still fail or provide faulty data due to Y2K-related problems."
In addition, senators warned that unexpected failures in infrastructure
components such as telecommunications and electric power can impede the
functions of critical operations.
Bennett and Dodd are asking agencies to provide a list of department or
agency core missions ranked according to priority and a description of
contingency plans for any Y2K failure scenarios that would affect "core
missions."
If a department has specific responsibilities for national security or
emergency preparedness, the senators are also asking agencies to provide
an explanation of the steps taken to ensure those functions are not
compromised.
In addition, if a department has specific responsibilities outlined in
the Federal Response Plan--for natural disasters and other emergencies--the senators want a description of their plans to ensure emergency
duties are going to be fulfilled.
They also ask that all agencies provide contingency plans for Thursday,
December 30, 1999, through the first week of 2000.
"In the face of great uncertainties over the nation's emergency needs
arising from Y2K problems, these concerns make government continuity and
contingency planning critical," the senators wrote.
The so-called millennium bug refers to the fact that many computers are
programmed to register only the last two digits of the year, meaning
that "2000" may be read as "1900." If left uncorrected, such programs
could generate errors and scramble the computers that companies use to
keep track of customers, run their payrolls, handle their accounts, run
elevators, and monitor air traffic, some experts warn.
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