On the Thursday after the attacks, members of HIP's disaster-recovery team obtained a police escort to the company's data center, only a few blocks from the World Trade Center. They successfully removed critical data tapes and planned to bring them to the recovery floor in New Jersey.
That first week after the attacks, HIP's midtown headquarters were empty except for the disaster-recovery team. "I didn't go home for five working days," Villalba says. "I stayed here, and a lot of the critical staff did shifts."
"We started to complain a little bit about how some of the staff was starting to smell," jokes CIO John Steber. "We used to kid around with Pedro because he wound up wearing various pieces of clothing from other people."
Thanks to that kind of dedication, HIP had its critical systems and mainframes running by Sept. 13, a day ahead of schedule, Villalba says. "By Friday, businesspeople were taking the system through the paces, so that on Monday we would be open for business, and that's what occurred. That's when I went home, on Monday."
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