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In the wee hours of August 29, 2022, sophisticated foreign agent BlackCat executed an attack on the city of Wheat Ridge’s network. The city’s IT professionals proactively shut down the network and infrastructure, rendering city hall and many services unavailable. While the impact to the public was minimal, the internal struggle to deliver services during the several months-long recovery and restoration period was stressful, challenging, and frustrating for staff.

Looking back, I realize I learned a great deal about leading through crisis from this particular experience. My three biggest takeaways from this experience follow.

Keep Calm and Get Your Hands Dirty

In my role, I oversee the IT team as well as most of the city’s shared services. I also happened to be the acting city manager for the first two weeks of the incident. But regardless of the specifics of your role as assistant, in times of uncertainty like this, you have to be visible, informed, and involved as the second in command. Others in the organization are looking to see how you behave, whether or not you have a leading role to play in the incident itself. Chances are, no matter the organizational structure, if you are in a small to mid-size organization, you’re playing a major role in situations like these.

For me, digging in meant learning everything I could about cybercrime in those first few days. The acronyms (hello, DDoS); the terms and phrases (it’s “threat actor,” if you please); the cybercrime “industry”; the various roles that lawyers, forensics, and government entities play; and how communications with a threat actor are typically handled. My suit of armor in the chaos included a really fast education so that I could speak intelligently with elected officials, colleagues, and staff; make good decisions quickly; and give solid advice to the city manager. I was the asker of “dumb” questions and I found that those professionals who were there to help us appreciated my inquisitive nature and worked really hard to help me bridge the knowledge gap.

I knew that being highly visible in those initial few weeks was important as employees were struggling to serve the community without their usual tools. In fact, this was harder for us than those first months of the pandemic because in this emergency, we lost our communication tools. I learned so much about exactly what employees were struggling with just by walking around city hall every day. In hindsight, I wish I had done a better job of traveling to other facilities to hear more directly from other department staff.

Be Decisive (and Toughen up, Buttercup)

As the assistant or deputy, we make impactful decisions every day. In emergency situations—based on your response plan, organizational chart, or lack thereof—we need to be ready and willing to make those decisions faster than on a normal day. That’s the job. The organization needs you to think quickly, weigh the alternatives, and then for goodness sake make a decision and stick to it. Some of the decisions I made with our awesome IT manager weren’t popular, even today, but I’ll stand behind them. For example, we decided in the first few days to rebuild better, stronger, and more secure than before. That meant activating quickly on best practices, such as eliminating flash drives that are known to bring viruses into network environments. When you’ve done the research and leveraged your resources to know it’s the right thing, stick to it, even when others might disagree. Again, it’s the job.

Prioritize Communication and Transparency

As previously mentioned, at first, we had to get by without our usual communication tools of email and phones. We did have access to Microsoft Teams, but we had some slow adopters of the tool, which we had implemented in 2021 during the pandemic. A special cyber response team convened twice a day for the first few weeks, and as a team, we developed “scrappy communication methods” to get consistent messaging to staff about what was happening and what to expect that day and week. In particular, we wanted to communicate anything that had a personal impact (yes, you will get paid on Friday!) and share the priorities for restoration (no, you won’t have access to your user drive for a week or two because we are prioritizing police communication systems and email). We made sure that staff heard about any details of our attack before the public. On my walkabouts, I asked all employees I ran into if and how they were receiving updates and we tweaked our approach based on what we heard. We weren’t perfect in our approach, but I do believe that by taking an empathetic approach and making our staff a priority, we minimized rumors and eased frustration.

This emergency was lifechanging and by far the most challenging professional experience for me thus far. As assistants and deputies, we must decide who we are and how we want to show up for our organizations in times such as these. We have a critical and unique role to play, and our bosses, colleagues, staff, and community are counting on us to lead and overcome.

Headshot of author Allison Scheck

 

ALLISON SCHECK is deputy city manager of Wheat Ridge, Colorado (linkedin.com/in/allison ­hamiltonscheck).

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