Contingency Planning. The Official Agency in conjunction with the Authority shall ensure that there are contingency plans in place at appropriate levels for dealing with food related crises and incidents. The contingency plan shall be in line with Article 115 of Regulation (EU) 2017/625 and include arrangements for activation of the plan, establishment of a crisis team, communication and information, out of hours contacts and on call services. As part of these plans, the Official Agency will provide the Authority with contact points for both office hours and out of office hours contact for emergency and crisis situations. The Official Agency shall facilitate training of personnel in the operation and exercise of the contingency plans. Periodic review of the plans shall take place in consultation with the Authority. The Official Agency shall implement the agreed Inter-Agency Protocol for the Management of a Food Crisis and guidance on Management of Outbreaks of Foodborne Illness as per Section 1.19.
Contingency Planning policies and procedures for responding to an emergency or other occurrence (for example, fire, vandalism, system failure, and natural disaster) that damages Personal Data or systems that contain Personal Data, including a data backup plan and a disaster recovery plan.
Contingency Planning. Policies and procedures for responding to an emergency or other occurrence (for example, fire, vandalism, system failure, pandemic flu, and natural disaster) that could damage Customer Data or production systems that contain Customer Data. Such procedures include:
a) Data Backups: A policy for performing periodic backups of production file systems and databases or Professional Services Data on Provider’s SFTP Server, as applicable, according to a defined schedule;
b) Disaster Recovery: A formal disaster recovery plan for the production data center, including:
i) Requirements for the disaster plan to be tested on a regular basis, currently twice a year; and
ii) A documented executive summary of the Disaster Recovery testing, at least annually, which is available upon request to customers.
c) Business Continuity Plan: A formal process to address the framework by which an unplanned event might be managed in order to minimize the loss of vital resources.
Contingency Planning. The Official Agency, in conjunction with the Authority, shall ensure that there are contingency plans in place at local level for dealing with incidents. The contingency plan shall be in line with the requirements of Article 13 of Regulation (EC) No. 882/2004 and include arrangements for activation of the plan, establishment of a crisis team, communication and information, plus out of hours contacts. The Authority will review these plans at liaison meetings. As part of these plans, the Official Agency shall provide the Authority with a single central contact point for both office hours and out of office hours for emergency and crisis situations. The Official Agency shall establish a dedicated contact point for receipt of food alerts and exchange of information relating to food incidents during normal office hours. The contact point shall be operational during all normal working hours and enable quick response at all times (including cover during leave periods). Details of the contact points (telephone and e-mail) shall be notified to the Authority and updated as necessary. The Official Agency shall implement the agreed Inter-Agency Protocol for the Management of a Food Crisis and guidance on Management of Outbreaks of Foodborne Illness as per Section 1.11. The Official Agency shall facilitate training of personnel in the operation and exercise of the contingency plans. Periodic review of the plans shall take place in conjunction with the Authority.
Contingency Planning. The vendor must employ contingent planning policy and procedures that ensure service delivery based on agreed SLA levels while maintaining all Commonwealth data within the continental Unites States. • Identification and Authorization The vendor must employ appropriate identity and access management policies and procedures to ensure that access is appropriately authorized and managed at a level to ensure that access is provisioned and de-provisioned in a timely and efficient manner. • Incident Response The vendor must employ policy and procedures to ensure that an appropriate response to all identified security incidents are addressed in a timely manner and are reported to the appropriate parties in an agreed upon SLA timeframe. The vendor must also ensure that all staff are sufficient trained to ensure that they can identify situations that are classified as security incidents. • Maintenance The vendor must employ policy and procedures that ensure that all maintenance activities are conducted only by authorized maintenance staff leveraging only authorized maintenance tools. • Media Protection The vendor must employ policy and procedure to ensure that sufficient protections exist to protect Commonwealth data on all storage media throughout the media lifecycle and maintain documentation from media creation through destruction.
Contingency Planning. The Provider must have appropriate contingency plans in the event of any incidents which would impact on delivery of the service. For example, adverse weather, power failure, illness of staff, outbreak of infection, industrial action, failure of essential facilities or specialist equipment. If an incident occurs, the Provider will assess what essential services must be delivered in line with contingency plans. The Provider must advise NSD of the situation and discuss the contingency requirements.
Contingency Planning. This section applies if COUNTY will be fulfilling Priority 1 or Priority 2 functions under this contract. A Priority 1 function is a function that, for purposes of planning business continuity during an emergency or disaster, must continue 24 hours per day and 7 days per week, or be recovered within hours. A Priority 2 function is a function that, for purposes of planning business continuity during an emergency or disaster, must be resumed within 25 hours to 5 days. Within 90 days of the execution of this CONTRACT, COUNTY and any subcontractor will have a contingency plan. The contingency plan shall:
a. Ensure fulfillment of Priority 1 or Priority 2 obligations under this CONTRACT;
b. Outline procedures for the activation of the contingency plan upon the occurrence of a governor or commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Health declared health emergency;
c. Identify an individual as its Emergency Preparedness Response Coordinator (EPRC), the EPRC shall serve as the contact for STATE with regard to emergency preparedness and response issues, the EPRC shall provide updates to STATE as the health emergency unfolds;
d. Outline roles, command structure, decision making processes, and emergency action procedures that will be implemented upon the occurrence of a health emergency;
e. Provide alternative operating plans for Priority 1 or Priority 2 functions;
f. Include a procedure for returning to normal operations; and
g. Be available for inspection upon request. APPROVED:
1. STATE ENCUMBRANCE VERIFICATION Individual certifies that funds have been encumbered as required by Minnesota Statutes, chapter 16A and section 16C.05. By: Date: Contract No: State Authorized Representative
Contingency Planning. If any of the “Capacity Loss below 1000MW” or “Force Majeure” events set forth in Section 10.1 of the Restated Agreement occur, the Authority will assess the overall severity of the event on the Customer and shall take the following actions:
(a) promptly notify the Customer of such event and convene a meeting of affected Customers to discuss the Authority’s response to such event; and
(b) if requested by the Customer, make a good faith effort to mitigate any adverse impact of such event on the Customer.
Contingency Planning. Contractor shall develop and maintain a contingency plan for providing resiliency and redundancy to the solution.
Contingency Planning. NATO nations and NATO civil and military bodies shall prepare contingency plans for the protection or destruction, during emergency situations, of NATO classified information to prevent unauthorised access and disclosure and loss of availability. These plans shall give highest priority to the most sensitive, and mission- or time-critical information.