03/19/2010 06:21:00 PM EST
New Legal Duty of Care for Disaster Preparedness for Businesses
Disasters
during the past decade have forever altered legal counsel's role in small and
large businesses alike. In addition to traditional areas of responsibility --
such as corporate governance, financial risk, and personnel, counsel must now
plan carefully to ensure company programs are created, executed, and monitored,
including ensuring that corporate programs meet minimum disaster preparedness
requirements.
Mr. Zeichner writes: In late 2009, the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) launched a formal review of disaster preparedness
standards and is expected to support a new voluntary program aimed at
certifying compliance with community standards. As a result of this process,
national standards for disaster preparedness are being reviewed by the Federal
government potentially leading to new legal responsibilities for the business
community.
If adopted in their current form, the proposed standards may impose a legal
duty of care on owners and operators of business institutions covering several
major areas of disaster preparedness. The imposition of a legal duty on
business reflects a dramatic departure from existing best practice and could
lead to lawsuits in negligence, equally affecting both small and large
businesses.
At least one of the proposed standards explicitly describes a "duty" owed by
business owners to a range of stakeholders, such as customers and shareholders.
Other community standards under review by DHS do not reference a "duty"
explicitly, but detailed descriptions of preparedness activity suggest an
evolving legal responsibility of business owners to adopt and implement
emergency preparedness activity.
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