Wednesday, June 17, 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

    Manulife To Begin Offering Life Insurance To HIV-Positive Canadians

    Manulife To Begin Offering Life Insurance To HIV-Positive Canadians
    TORONTO — Manulife has started to offer life insurance for people who are HIV-positive, a first for a Canadian company, the insurer said Friday.

    Manulife To Begin Offering Life Insurance To HIV-Positive Canadians

    Strong Retail Sales, Underlying Inflation Suggest New Signs Of Life For Economy

    Strong Retail Sales, Underlying Inflation Suggest New Signs Of Life For Economy
    OTTAWA — Fresh economic data released Friday showed sturdier-than-expected retail sales and underlying inflation, providing further evidence the economy has started to show some life.

    Strong Retail Sales, Underlying Inflation Suggest New Signs Of Life For Economy

    500 Ontario Doctors Bill Over $1Million; One Ophthalmologist Billed 'Staggering' $6.6 Million

    500 Ontario Doctors Bill Over $1Million; One Ophthalmologist Billed 'Staggering' $6.6 Million
    Health Minister Eric Hoskins says the top billers represent less than two per cent of Ontario doctors but account for nearly 10 per cent of billings, or $677 million.

    500 Ontario Doctors Bill Over $1Million; One Ophthalmologist Billed 'Staggering' $6.6 Million

    Health Canada Moving Quickly To Regulate Dangerous Opioid Drug W-18

    Health Canada Moving Quickly To Regulate Dangerous Opioid Drug W-18
    Health Canada says it is moving quickly to include the dangerous synthetic opioid W-18 under the federal Controlled Drug and Substances Act but maintains the drug is already illegal under another law.

    Health Canada Moving Quickly To Regulate Dangerous Opioid Drug W-18

    Grandfather Of Toddler Who Died From Meningitis Says Boy Lethargic, Not Ill

    Anthony Stephan is the father of David Stephan, who along with wife Collet, are charged with failing to provide the necessaries of life for their 18-month-old son Ezekiel.

    Grandfather Of Toddler Who Died From Meningitis Says Boy Lethargic, Not Ill

    CBSA Arrests Man, 29, Posing As High School Basketball Player In Windsor, Ont.

    CBSA Arrests Man, 29, Posing As High School Basketball Player In Windsor, Ont.
    The Canadian Border Services Agency says Jonathan Nicola was arrested this week for contravening the Immigration Refugee Protection Act.

    CBSA Arrests Man, 29, Posing As High School Basketball Player In Windsor, Ont.