Friday, June 19, 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

    Abbotsford Police Warn Public Of Craigslist Phone Theft Scam

    Abbotsford Police Department is warning the public after reports of three separate incidents involving an iPhone for sale on Craigslist.

    Abbotsford Police Warn Public Of Craigslist Phone Theft Scam

    Turbulent Battle As Golden, B.C., Fights To Save Local River Rafting Industry

    Turbulent Battle As Golden, B.C., Fights To Save Local River Rafting Industry
    Tourism officials in the southeastern B.C., town of Golden say letters of support are flooding in as they fight for access to the Kicking Horse River.

    Turbulent Battle As Golden, B.C., Fights To Save Local River Rafting Industry

    Vancouver And Toronto Markets Charge Ahead Despite Mortgage Rule Changes

    Vancouver And Toronto Markets Charge Ahead Despite Mortgage Rule Changes
    Moves by Ottawa to tighten mortgage lending rules did little to cool the country's two hottest real estate markets as home sales in Toronto and Vancouver continued to charge ahead last month.

    Vancouver And Toronto Markets Charge Ahead Despite Mortgage Rule Changes

    Canadian Bank Fined $1.1 Million For Failing To Report Suspicious Dealing

    Canadian Bank Fined $1.1 Million For Failing To Report Suspicious Dealing
    It is the first time the Ottawa-based Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, known as Fintrac, has penalized a bank.

    Canadian Bank Fined $1.1 Million For Failing To Report Suspicious Dealing

    BMO CEO Defends Canadian Banking Sector's Anti-money Laundering Practices

    BMO CEO Defends Canadian Banking Sector's Anti-money Laundering Practices
    Bill Downe says Canadian banks have "dramatically" beefed up their anti-money laundering controls over the last seven to 10 years at the request of various governments around the world.

    BMO CEO Defends Canadian Banking Sector's Anti-money Laundering Practices

    Ontario Kids With Autism Aged 5 And Older Cut Off Of Government-Paid Therapy

    Ontario Kids With Autism Aged 5 And Older Cut Off Of Government-Paid Therapy
    The Liberal government has announced a new Ontario Autism Program with $333 million in funding, but changes include limiting Intensive Behavioural Intervention to children between two and four.

    Ontario Kids With Autism Aged 5 And Older Cut Off Of Government-Paid Therapy