In Brief
Blackout: A Case for Energy Regulation?
Half of survey respondents think the government must take a stronger hand in regulating the electric industry.
By Kathleen Carr
October 01, 2003 — CSO — On Thursday, Aug. 14, the lights went out in Cleveland, Detroit, New York City and Ontario, Canada. Thousands of people navigated dark city streets and subway tunnels. In Cleveland, where the electricity pumps the lakes, these same folks went without a drop of water during one of the hottest days of the summer. Not fun. We polled readers to find out how the blackout affected their businesses, and 382 of you responded. Half of you think the government must take a stronger hand in regulating the electric industry. To view the entire survey, find it online at www.csoonline .com/printlinks. Here's where you think the fault and the solution lie.
What is the best way to achieve critical infrastructure protection?
55% The government should expand oversight of the electric industry
31% Voluntary compliance
14% Unsure
What was the root cause of August's power failure?
33% Out-of-date systems
15% Technical malfunction
14% Unsure
11% Other
11% Human error
6% Transmission problems
6% Confluence of events
4% Sabotage
Read more about business continuity in CSOonline's Business Continuity section.
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