Located along the banks of the Mississippi River, the City of New Orleans delivers citizen services to nearly 400,000 residents—the largest city population in Louisiana—with a commitment to serve with integrity, excellence, transparency, and innovation.
For Chief Information Officer Kimberly LaGrue, this mandate extends to the city’s 5,000 employees, who rely on technology to provide everything from parking, permits, and licenses to public safety. When her team was alerted to a cyber attack in 2019, they quickly shut down 470 servers, virtual machines, and thousands of computers. City services were temporarily paralyzed, disrupting everything from routine court operations to taxpayers attempting to make payments.
These early actions stopped the malware from spreading and encrypting all the city’s data—ultimately preventing the attackers from demanding a ransom.
“At the time, we didn’t know how far the attack had gone so we had to assume the worst,” says LaGrue. “We needed to test, cleanse, and store all of our data elsewhere to prevent further attacks while also getting our systems back online safely so that city services could continue.”
This required a new IT infrastructure and twice as much storage. And it provided an opportunity to update the city’s legacy and under-performing storage platform.