Plan for Natural Disaster: Small Businesses in St. Louis

Recent flooding in St. Louis Missouri

St. Louis, Missouri, known as the Gateway to the West, is well-loved by its residents for a variety of reasons that make it a great location for businesses and home to their employees. St. Louisans love their sports teams (Congrats to our NHL Stanley Cup CHAMPIONS!) and are proud hosts of the famous, award-winning St. Louis Zoo and other free attractions in Forest Park, such as the History and Art Museums. Situated in the northernmost Ozark foothills, the city also has a lovely, rolling landscape and is close to many state parks.

St. Louis ranks on many best-of lists across the nation, including:

  • One of the “Top 100 Best Places to Live” for 2019 (livability.com)
  • Number 2 of the “10 Best Cities for Entrepreneurs 2019” (fitsmallbusiness.com)
  • One of the “Top 10 Rising Cities For Startups” in 2018 (forbes.com)
  • Number 2 of the 2018 list of “Best Cities for Jobs” (glassdoor.com)
  • Number 1 on the “25 U.S. Cities That Millennials Can Afford – and Actually Want to Live In” for 2018 (thepennyhoarder.com)
  • The Number 2 “Food City” in the United States (Yelp, reported by riverfronttimes.com)

These rankings paint an appropriately pleasant and prosperous picture of St. Louis! However, businesses looking for a home in this city should know that St. Louis has a long history of natural disasters because of its location.

The Mississippi and Missouri Rivers often become overburdened from heavy deluges in the north, which doesn’t help the fact that St. Louis is tucked into the eastern edge of Tornado Alley. The city often feels the effects of blizzards, hurricanes, and even earthquakes. This unique set of natural factors is something business owners and technology teams must consider ­in their disaster preparedness planning, to keep business running no matter what nature has in store.

IT Backup in St. Louis

Disaster planning is a critical part of your business’s backup process. This process is outlined in HIPAA regulations, but is important for every business and organization, whether HIPAA compliant or not. When you begin to design your plan, you must think from every angle of your business, not just the IT side. How will your business prepare for a disaster? What physical aspects could be affected? How will your business implement measures once a disaster has happened? And what steps will your business need to take to recover? When creating a plan, identify all things that can happen, determine the likelihood that they will happen, and tailor the overall risk to your St. Louis-specific location.

For your IT, you’ll want to document your network and computer infrastructure configuration and safeguard your equipment prior to a disaster. You’ll also want to make sure you have a two-fold backup system, with one being a physical backup stored at a safe location and one being a cloud backup. An essential for every business is insurance, both for the physical location and for digital data loss. With a disaster plan in place, you’ll be well on your way through disaster recovery, even before a disaster happens.

In addition, you should regularly test your backups and make sure the full-recovery test is successful just in case of that dreaded emergency.

Read more about disaster planning, recovery, and managed tech services for your St. Louis business!

But what natural forces specifically impact St. Louis businesses and should always factor in their disaster planning?

Flooding

Are you located in or near a flood plain? Recent major flooding in Missouri shows flooding in the last few years has exceeded the anticipated 100-year and 500-year flood levels. This should be a concern for any business located in one, and flood insurance should be obtained. Rivers notoriously breach their banks, and the Missouri River is especially unpredictable.

Originally, the Missouri was much, much wider. However, over the years, engineers funneled it into a narrower, deeper, stronger river to be used for commerce. Being a body of water, it will always try to retake the “bottom land” engineers during the New Deal era salvaged from it.

The Mississippi River is no less dangerous. As the biggest river in the United States, it has many tributaries, and by the time it travels through the St. Louis metro area, it can be swollen with excess water from the north—rain, ice, and melted snowpack. Just this year, the Mississippi has caused $12 billion in flood damage.

Floods generally provide a little more preparation time than tornadoes do, but there’s never enough time when an emergency is at hand. Don’t use warning time to procrastinate preparation. Part of disaster recovery is disaster preparedness. What steps can your business take when flood waters loom? How can you mitigate potential future loss?

Tornadoes

If the location of your company is at risk of tornadoes or very high winds, you’ll want to tailor your protection for that. Unlike floods, tornadoes can affect areas far beyond the actual funnel, with winds tearing off roofs and flipping vehicles and structures.

Most tornadoes in the St. Louis area don’t make it into the city itself, but across the county and surrounding flatlands businesses have seen the brutal effects of tornadoes touching down.

With this in mind, storing backups digitally in the cloud is imperative. If a tornado blasts through your area and carries the entire office away with it, you’ll need a place to start. Having data properly and securely backed to the cloud will ensure that your business can start up again in any location, or that you can do something as simple as contact clients from a laptop to alert them to your circumstances.

Blizzards, Earthquakes, and Hurricane Effects

The Midwest routinely receives the effects of hurricanes from the Gulf of Mexico and the sub-zero temperatures blown in from the north. Every now and then, twelve inches of snow will fall or a gale will blow through that knocks out power to a good portion of the community. Are you ready for no electricity at the office? How will your business plan for unsafe travel conditions, or below-zero temperatures when ice knocks down the powerlines?

Missouri is also known for its massive earthquake in 1812 that is thought to be one of the worst the United States has ever seen. Minor quakes have occurred during recent years due to the New Madrid fault line that clips the southeast portion of the state.

Don’t Wait to Plan for Natural Disaster

Just like any other city, St. Louis has its own set of common natural disasters, and it’s important for your company to take the proper measures to prepare for them. Planning for disaster can’t guarantee your business’s safety, but by planning for it, you’ll be ahead of the game, no matter what.

Once your fully-developed disaster plan is implemented and tested, disaster recovery shouldn’t be too detrimental on time and resources. Even smaller disasters, such as local fires or theft and vandalism are essential to prepare for.

Are you ready to develop your disaster plan? If you’d like more information on disaster recovery for your IT systems in St. Louis, call Anderson Technologies at 314.394.3001. A team member will be happy to help!