Focus shifts to recovery and rebuilding

Hamilton, ON – As part of the City of Hamilton’s continued response to the cybersecurity attack, efforts have shifted from incident response to the recovery and rebuilding of our IT systems.

The City’s work to this point has focused on containment and isolation of our infrastructure to prevent the cyber criminals from inflicting further damage. This portion of work has been completed. The focus of the work has shifted to the recovery stage to prioritize the restoration and rebuild of critical systems and to conduct testing to make sure the systems can function safely. Recovery and rebuilding will help support internal operations with the goal of making even more City services available as quickly and securely as possible.

The City continues to collaborate with cyber experts and authorities at various levels. Part of their work includes ongoing forensic analysis of the criminals’ activity within our systems.

“I want to express my thanks to Hamiltonians for their patience and understanding over the last few weeks,” said Mayor Andrea Horwath. “As City staff continue to prioritize the response to this cybersecurity incident, I want to assure residents that we are taking this matter very seriously and are doing everything we can to minimize the impact and protect the community.”

Critical services such as curbside waste collection, transit, water and wastewater treatment and emergency services continue to be delivered. During the response to this cybersecurity incident, the City has continued to deliver the majority of programs and services to the community through either manual processes or by finding alternate ways to deliver the service.

Current service level updates

  • The Customer Contact Centre and 905-546-2489 is available to respond to questions and concerns from residents, as well as supporting Fire Prevention Services and Provincial Offences Administration by addressing general enquiries.
  • Development applications and building permits continue to be processed and building inspections continue.
  • Council and Committee meetings will resume starting March 27, 2024 to ensure important and time-sensitive issues can advance.
  • Most transactions usually processed online can be processed manually in person at City Hall and Municipal Service Centers, such as marriage license applications and burn permit applications.
  • Payments to vendors are in progress and support payments continue to be processed.
  • Guest Wi-Fi connectivity at most libraries is now available.
  • Municipal Service Centres and Transfer Stations (Community Recycling Centres and Yard Waste Drop offs) can now accept all forms of payment.

“City staff are really rising to the occasion, and I am so grateful to our team of experts who continue to work around the clock to respond to this incident and find creative ways to deliver the services our community relies on each day,” said Marnie Cluckie, City Manager. “We are committed to providing service to Hamiltonians and recovering safely and securely.”

For the latest information, a full list of service disruptions and answers to frequently asked questions, visit hamilton.ca/cyberincident.

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