Cisco: Crisis Response Community Volunteers Know What It Takes To Stay Connected

In This Article:

by Joseph Harrison

April is Global Volunteer Month. All month long, we’re recognizing some of the ways Cisco employees give their time, skills, and expertise in their communities.

NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESS Newswire / May 15, 2025 / In 2005, Hurricane Katrina formed over the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and went on to become a Category 5 storm that would devastate the city of New Orleans. In response to the disaster, Cisco deployed what was then its Tactical Operations, or TacOps, team to help reestablish connectivity for first responders and victims.

Now, 20 years later, what was then TacOps has evolved to become Cisco Crisis Response, a corporate function with a mission of providing connectivity in response to crisis, backed by the strength of more than 800 employee volunteers who comprise the CCR Community.

CCR Community volunteers are ready to be deployed to natural disasters and humanitarian crises on short notice. Their mission is to deliver the connectivity needed to help first responders assess a community's needs, coordinate an effective response, and begin the process of recovery while enabling victims to contact their loved ones and access the critical information and services they need to rebuild their lives.

To ensure they're ready when the call comes, hundreds of CCR Community volunteers complete in-person and virtual trainings where they learn how to quickly establish connectivity in the most challenging of circumstances.

CCR Community volunteers recently attended training in Rome and Munich, and I talked to three volunteers who participated: Michele Festuccia, a solutions engineering leader, and Maurizio Cocco, a solutions engineer, both from Italy, and Anna Boom, a customer experience leader in Germany. Here are some highlights from our conversation.

Volunteers Answering the Call

I asked Anna why she signed up to volunteer with the CCR Community.

"Seeing the different areas where the CCR team has deployed-everything from hurricanes to floods and wildfires-and being able to support those missions seemed like such an incredible way to give back to the community," she said.

It's a sentiment shared by many CCR volunteers: a desire to contribute to something larger than oneself, alleviate suffering, and stand in solidarity with those affected by crises. CCR allows us to do that in the context of providing Cisco's unique connectivity offerings-a powerful combination.

Michele shared , "When there is a call, training positions us to be prepared to go in the field to support a critical situation."