Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Smoke In Ottawa Data Centre Shuts Down Blackberry Email, Phoenix Pay System

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2016 01:47 PM
    OTTAWA — Smoke inside a federal data centre this morning has shut down email, some government websites and even the maligned Phoenix payroll system.
     
    The government's central IT department, Shared Services Canada, says there was no fire in the Ottawa area data centre — even though there was smoke detected inside.
     
    The centre was evacuated and went into an emergency shutdown that crippled workers across multiple departments, including Transport Canada, where inspectors and special agents were unable to send or receive emails on their BlackBerry devices.
     
    Shared Services says some 50,000 public service workers couldn't send email throughout the day because the BlackBerry email servers were down. 
     
    The Phoenix payroll system, already under scrutiny for problems that have affected pay for some 80,000 public workers, is back up and running, although Shared Services didn't say how long it was offline.
     
    The department says it is working to restore all systems as soon as possible and is working with other federal departments it serves to prioritize which systems and applications are brought online.
     
    Shared Services said it doesn't know what caused the incident at the data centre.
     
    Workers are combing through the data centre to identify the source of the problem to ensure a similar outage doesn't happen again, the IT agency said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Evidence Of Overvalued Home Prices Grows In A Number Of Markets: CMHC

    Evidence Of Overvalued Home Prices Grows In A Number Of Markets: CMHC
      The latest report from CMHC says there is evidence of overvaluation in nine of the 15 real estate markets included in the research.

    Evidence Of Overvalued Home Prices Grows In A Number Of Markets: CMHC

    New Kingston, Ont., Library Rules Discriminate Against Homeless, Group Says

    New Kingston, Ont., Library Rules Discriminate Against Homeless, Group Says
    A new code of conduct that warns foul-smelling patrons or those "lingering aimlessly" won't be tolerated at the Kingston, Ont., public library is coming under fire from critics who say it targets homeless people.

    New Kingston, Ont., Library Rules Discriminate Against Homeless, Group Says

    Petroleum Services Group Talks Oilwell Cleanup, Pipelines With Federal Ministers

    Petroleum Services Group Talks Oilwell Cleanup, Pipelines With Federal Ministers
    CALGARY — The head of an oil and gas industry group says he remains hopeful that efforts to clean up dormant wells in Alberta may eventually get some federal support, spurring some much-needed employment in the province.

    Petroleum Services Group Talks Oilwell Cleanup, Pipelines With Federal Ministers

    Rona Ambrose Calls On Prime Minister To Provide Clarity On Pipeline Policies

    Rona Ambrose Calls On Prime Minister To Provide Clarity On Pipeline Policies
    REGINA — The interim leader of the federal Conservatives is calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to take a clear stand and explain his policy on pipeline approval.

    Rona Ambrose Calls On Prime Minister To Provide Clarity On Pipeline Policies

    Alberta Judge Rules Against Plan To Ban Pharmacy Loyalty Reward Program

    Alberta Judge Rules Against Plan To Ban Pharmacy Loyalty Reward Program
    A Court of Queen's Bench judge has ruled the regulator of Alberta pharmacists does not have the legal power to impose a ban on consumer loyalty programs.

    Alberta Judge Rules Against Plan To Ban Pharmacy Loyalty Reward Program

    Transport Canada Provides $10.9 Million For Rail Crossing Upgrades

    Transport Canada Provides $10.9 Million For Rail Crossing Upgrades
    OTTAWA — Transport Canada says it will put $10.9 million into improving more than 400 rail crossings.

    Transport Canada Provides $10.9 Million For Rail Crossing Upgrades