Cyber Security and the UK's Critical National Infrastructure
November is National Critical Infrastructure Security ...
Transcript of November is National Critical Infrastructure Security ...
November is National Critical Infrastructure Security & Resilience Month
In celebration of this very important awareness and the developing Critical Infrastructure and Key
Resources (CIKR) Program for the State of Oregon, the Oregon Department of Justice/Criminal Justice
Division is hosting a series of classes for the promotion of Infrastructure Protection (IP). These classes
will be provided by the Texas A&M Engineering Extension Service (TEEX), National Emergency
Response & Rescue Training Center. All courses will be provided with no registration fees through
funding from the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS)/Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA).
Oregon has a very comprehensive and diverse IP community in both the public and private sectors.
This community is full of industry professionals, public safety officials, and commercial service
providers with a common goal; protecting the way of life for Oregonians across the state. In support of
these efforts, all IP professionals are welcome to register for the courses hosted by the Oregon
DOJ/Criminal Justice - CIKR Program.
Registration is limited to the first 40 individuals for each class; please email your interest to
Shannon Marheine at the Oregon Department of Justice - Oregon TITAN Fusion Center (OTFC) as
soon as possible. Email: [email protected], Phone: 503-934-2022. You will be
provided the appropriate registration form(s) and any applicable class pre-requisite information.
Completion of all four classes will allow an individual to apply for the IP Master Certificate through
TEEX Law Enforcement & Security Training Program.
November 12-13, 2015
MGT310: Jurisdictional Threat & Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment - 16 hrs.
November 16, 2015
AWR213: Critical Infrastructure Security & Resilience Awareness – 8hrs.
November 17-18, 2015
MGT315: Critical Asset Risk Management – 16 hrs.
November 19, 2015
MGT414: Advanced Critical Infrastructure Protection – 8hrs.
A detailed flyer for each course is attached.
Training Level:Management and Planning
Venue:Jurisdiction
Course Length:Two days (16 hours)
Participant Audience:Emergency response level, supervisory and/ormanagement personnel who respond to or haveoversight responsibility for incidents caused byterrorism, natural disaster, major accidents and allother hazards. Course participants include respondersfrom the following disciplines/services:
• Law Enforcement• Fire Service• Emergency Medical Services• Hazardous Materials• Public Health and Health Care• Public Works• Emergency Management• Public Elected Officials• Public Safety Communications• Governmental Administrative
Personnel from the private sector, non-governmental organizations, schools, and the military are also allowed to attend if invited or approved by the host jurisdiction.
Continuing Education Units:IACET - 1.6 CEUs
Prerequisites:Participants should work in one of the listed disciplines, have completed a WMD/terrorism awareness level course, or be approved by the local jurisdiction host. Completion of the online courses IS-700.a (NIMS - An Introduction) and AWR-160 (WMD/Terrorism Awareness for Emergency Responders) is recommended but not required. The DHS/FEMA NTED course AWR-160 is offered online by TEEX at:http://teex.com/nerrtc.
Class Size:24-40 participants
For more information, contact:TEXAS A&M ENGINEERING EXTENSION SERVICE200 Technology WayCollege Station, TX 77845-3424Email: [email protected] or 800.423.8433 (toll free)www.teex.org/publicsafety
The purpose of this course is to prepare participants to conduct a Jurisdictional Threat and Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment (THIRA). Participants will identify threats and hazards of jurisdictional concern, give those threats and hazards context, establish capability targets, and determine how to apply the THIRA results.The course will assist local emergency responders and stakeholders in identifying the critical infrastructure that may be at risk in their jurisdiction. By using the THIRA process, stakeholders will develop a strategy to allocate resources and establish mitigation and preparedness activities. THIRA-informed planning is consistent with and expands on nationally accepted emergency management standards as the basis for planning across the mission areas of prevention, protection, mitigation, response, and recovery.
Jurisdictional Threat and Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment
MGT-310
C13.6609.02
Topics•The Critical Infrastructure Challenge•Federal Policy and Guidance•Risk Management•Roles and Responsibilities of Critical
Infrastructure Partners•Information Sharing Programs•Individual Actions
PrerequisitesFEMA / SID Number Students must register and bring a copy of their SID number to class. Register online: cdp.dhs.gov/femasid
Recommendations•IS-100.B: Introduction to the Incident
Command System
•IS-700.A: National Incident Management System (NIMS) An Introduction
•AWR-160: WMD/Terrorism Awareness for Emergency Responders
Course Length VenueOne Day (8 hours) Jurisdiction
Class Size CE Credits40 Participants IACET – .8 CEUs
Participants•Critical infrastructure owners, operators, and
managers•Federal, State, local, regional, tribal, and territorialgovernmentofficialsandmanagers
•Sector-SpecificAgencymanagers•Other organizations and managers with critical
infrastructure responsibilities
CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE SECURITY AND RESILIENCE AWARENESS
AWR-213
This course will introduce participants to the key terms, policy, guidance, and preparedness efforts required to safeguard the Nation’s critical infrastructure. Participants will discuss the risk management framework, describe Federal critical infrastructure security and resilience and information sharing programs, and relate critical infrastructure programs to individual actions.
Focus will be placed on local preparedness efforts as they relate to the national approach to critical infrastructure security and resilience, enabling stakeholders to address local planning within a common framework. Informed planning is consistent with accepted emergency management standards as the basis for planning across the mission areas of prevention, protection, mitigation, response, and recovery.
C15.8026.01
National Emergency Response and Rescue Training Center
For more information, contact:TEXAS A&M ENGINEERING EXTENSION SERVICELaw Enforcement and Security Taining200 Technology WayCollege Station, Texas 77845-3424979.845,6677 or 800.423.8433 (toll-free)[email protected]/nerrtc
Topics•Overview of Risk Management Process•ThreatandHazardIdentification•Asset Valuation•Vulnerabilities•Risk Assessment•Mitigation Mission Area•On-Site Risk Assessment
PrerequisitesFEMA / SID Number Students must register and bring a copy of their SID number to class. Register online: cdp.dhs.gov/femasid
Recommendations•MGT-310 Jurisdictional Threat and Hazard IdentificationandRiskAssessment
•AWR-213 Critical Infrastructure Awareness•MGT-414 Advanced Critical Infrastructure
Protection
Course Length VenueTwo Days (16 hours) Jurisdiction
Class Size CE Credits24 Participants IACET – 1.6 CEUs
ACE - 1 Hour College Credit (Upper Division)
Participants•Law Enforcement•Fire Service•Public Safety Communications•Hazardous Material Personnel•Emergency Medical Services •Emergency Management Agency •Health Care, Public Health•Public Works•Governmental Administrative•PublicElectedOfficials•Military (if invited by the host jurisdiction)•Private Sector and Non-Governmental
Organizations (if invited by the host jurisdiction)
CRITICAL ASSET RISK MANAGEMENTMGT-315
The Critical Asset Risk Management course helps participants answer those questions by teaching critical components of risk management. Through a combination of lecture, facilitated discussion, and group activities, participants will learn how threats, vulnerabilities, and consequences determine risk, and are given an opportunity to practice the fundamentals of conducting vulnerability assessments by conducting on-site assessments of select local facilities. Additionally they will identify potential mitigation measuresassociatedwiththeirfindingsandworktogethertodevelopandpresentariskassessmentreport.
Individuals completing this course, in combination with AWR-213, MGT-315, and MGT-414, are awarded theTEEXInfrastructureProtectionCertificate.
C15.8024.01
National Emergency Response and Rescue Training Center
For more information, contact:TEXAS A&M ENGINEERING EXTENSION SERVICE200 Technology WayCollege Station, Texas 77845-3424979.845,6677 or 800.423.8433 (toll-free)[email protected]/nerrtc
Training Level: Management and Planning
Venue: Your jurisdiction
Course Length: One day (8 hours)
Participant Audience: l Critical infrastructure owners, operators, and managers l State, local, tribal, and territorial government seniorofficialsandmanagers l DHS personnel lSector-SpecificAgencymanagers l Other managers with critical infrastructure responsibilities
Prerequisites: None,however,attendanceinAWR-213 is highly recommended. If attendance is not possible, completion of the IS-860 online course is suggested.
Continuing Education Credits: IACET-.8CEUs
Class Size: Minimum: 20Maximum: 40
The purpose of this management level course is to extend the knowledge, skills, and abilities developed in theawarenesslevelcourse(AWR-213)andtoformulateconsiderationsfortheresilienceofjurisdictionalassetsleveraging cross-sector partnerships. These considerations, as part of a resilience action plan, will enhance the whole community’s ability to manage the risk associated with critical infrastructure protection efforts. Participants receive a template for presenting all of the relevant data for jurisdictional or regional resilience.
Major topics include: •Describe the national strategy of resilience relative to the local partner role •Describe the whole community approach relative to the National Preparedness Goal •Identify and prioritize jurisdictional critical infrastructure assets and interdependencies across all Critical Infrastructure sectors •Describe the purpose and components of a resilience plan •Analyzeassetandsectorimpactonjurisdictionalresilience •Developoptionsforsector-specificnextstepsforhighest-prioritysectors •Develop a list of jurisdiction-level (regional) resilience actions
ADVANCED CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE PROTECTION
MGT-414
C13.6672.02
For more information, contact:TEXAS A&M ENGINEERING EXTENSION SERVICE200TechnologyWayCollege Station, Texas 77845-3424800.423.8433 (toll-free)[email protected]/publicsafety