Tuesday, December 12, 2017

House Passes HR 3359 CISA Authorization

Yesterday the House passed HR 3359, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Act of 2017 by a voice vote. The bill is Rep. McCaul’s (R,TX) long awaited reorganization of the DHS National Protection and Programs Division (NPPD).

Commentary


This bill is really nothing more than an exercise in bureaucratic shuffling. The existing NPPD is now called CISA; an Under Secretary will be known as the Director and a number of sections in 6 USC are being renumbered. The most important part of the bill is found in section 4 of the bill; nothing in the bill confers new authorities or reduces existing authorities existing the day before this bill is enacted.

There is one subtle change made by this bill in the new definitions section 2201. There are two cybersecurity related definitions in this new section; both taken from existing statutes. The bill uses the IT-limited definition of ‘cybersecurity risk’ from the current 6 USC 148 (moving to §2209) and the ICS-inclusive definition of ‘cybersecurity threat’ from 6 USC 1501. The definitional disconnect between these two very similar (and closely intertwined) terms could cause some interesting confusion about the authority of this ‘new’ agency to address control system security issues.

Moving Forward



The bill moves forward to the Senate where it will pass with similar bipartisan support if it reaches the floor for consideration. The big question is whether or not the bill will have the leadership support necessary to bring it to the floor for consideration. At this point, I am not sure that it does.

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