Monday, December 22, 2008

Closing Barn Door After Horses Got Out

One very common apparent dilemma in the world of internal control is whether or not to fix the barn door after loosing one or more of your horses. Some say this is a waste of time and effort. However, more thought is needed. For example, there are some questions to ask before just leaving the current situation alone:


  • Are there still more horses in the barn (valuable assets that must not be lost)?

  • Is it possible that some of the lost horses could be recovered?

  • Will there be new horses added to your stable that need to be protected?

Just recently I had the opportunity to be faced with this question in a very personal way. I had been crossing Rockville Pike at Halpine Road on the way home from the Twinbrook Metro station on December 11, 2008 -- an action I do nearly every day that I go to work. The conditions were bad (dark, raining, a little later in the evening than usual). I was struck by a car driven by someone who either did not see me at all or thought he or she could make a left turn in front of me. The result was that I learned the definition of a pedestrian colision with me, Stu on Patrol, being the pedestrian.


As a student of risk management, I have known that crossing Rockville Pike is always a risky proposition. Now, I knew what happens when that risk is translated into an adverse result. Fortunately, I am still alive and able to tell of this unfortunate event. Moreover, there were no adverse effects shown on the CT scan or X-rays I had taken later than night at the Suburban Hospital Shock Trauma Unit. However, my losses and injuries were still significant:



  • I was violently stuck by the car sending me to the ground and injuring the back of my head

  • The head injury required 11 surgical staples

  • Several places on two or more ribs are bruised or broken (X-rays don't always see breakes)

  • Many truck and extremity muscles became strained, requiring weeks to fully recover

  • My glasses and hat were knocked off my head on impact not to be found again.

Now that a loss has been sustained, it seems foolhardy to me to assume it would could never happen again. The traffic patterns and personality of the local drivers has not changed. So, what adjustment to my behavior could be made to reduce the likelihoon of a recurrence? I am not likely to change my commuting habbits, such as walking to the Metro, any time soon. Nor is there any way I think I could change the habbits of those who drive cars near where I have to walk.

I decided I had to make it easier to see me and therefore less likely to not see me as I was crossing the street. I will therefore be on the lookout for more reflective or more brightly colored clothing . I also considered wearing a light when it was dark. In the end I purchased a runner's headlight that I have been wearing on my arm in blink mode on my way from home to the station or vice versa if it is dark outside. I will also add more vissible clothing to my wardrobe from time to time as I notice it in stores.

I was extremely lucky to have been hit, was able to limp away from the scene, and most likely have a full recovery in the next week or two. Thus, there were some lost horses, but many more still in the barn worth saving. It is also possible that the collission may have been avoided if I had taken the risk of crossing the street under bad condition more seriously and made myself more conspicuous. But, all decisons have to be made in the present, rather than the past or the future. So, yes, in this case as in most other cases, it does pay to fix the barn door after the horses get out.

If you have an account of how you fixed the barn door after loosing some horses, or it you decided not to fix it, please comment back to Stu on Patrol.


Monday, December 15, 2008

Why Sign Off? - - Why Sign On?

The requirement that official documents be signed is about as old as writing itself and continues to show up in nearly every new form that needs to be completed. Why are we asked to sign off on documents that we have completed. There appears to be three separate reasons:

  1. Tells the reader that the writer did in fact intend the meaning of every word (and number written in the document.
  2. Prevents the writer from claiming at a later time that someone else must have written the document. (Either the writer recognizes the signature or a handwriting expert can provide evidence of its authenticity.)
  3. Reminds the writer that anyone can determine his or her identity and therefore care should be taken to avoid any incorrect or inappropriate material.

If the above is why we sign off, then why do we sign on. In effect the sign on required to enter an information technology network or an specific application is a modern day version of a pen and ink signature. The three basic reasons still apply. A computer system sign-on also has an additional purpose:

  • Only those individuals with a recognized user name and password can gain access to network, application or special function protected by the password.

And the computer sign-on also has some very important features (provided passwords are kept secret):

  • The exact identity of the person signing on can be easily determined.
  • The precise day and time of a sign-on can also be determined and recorded.
  • Extra sign-ons can be required to specifically record the entry of a user into a specific function or sector of an application.

Did you ever wonder why you were asked sign-off so many places on a legal document or sign-on so many times during a single computer session? To discuss any puzzling examples, simply conact Stu on Patrol.