01/29/2009 09:00 AM Senate STATE AFFAIRS
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| SB36 | |
| Adjourn |
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| *+ | SB 36 | TELECONFERENCED | |
ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE
SENATE STATE AFFAIRS STANDING COMMITTEE
January 29, 2009
9:00 a.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT
Senator Linda Menard, Chair
Senator Kevin Meyer, Vice Chair
Senator Hollis French
Senator Albert Kookesh
Senator Joe Paskvan
MEMBERS ABSENT
All members present
COMMITTEE CALENDAR
SENATE BILL NO. 36
"An Act relating to the security of certain data processing
records of the executive branch and making the Department of
Administration responsible for the security of those records."
MOVED CSSB 36(STA) OUT OF COMMITTEE
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION
BILL: SB 36
SHORT TITLE: EXECUTIVE BRANCH RECORDS SECURITY
SPONSOR(s): SENATOR(s) THERRIAULT
01/21/09 (S) PREFILE RELEASED 1/9/09
01/21/09 (S) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
01/21/09 (S) STA, FIN
01/29/09 (S) STA AT 9:00 AM BELTZ 211
WITNESS REGISTER
SENATOR GENE THERRIAULT
Alaska State Legislature
Juneau AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Presented SB 36 as sponsor.
ED SNIFFEN, Assistant Attorney General
Department of Law
Anchorage AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Spoke in support of SB 36.
KEVIN BROOKS, Deputy Commissioner
Department of Administration
Juneau AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Spoke in support of SB 36.
PAT DAVIDSON, Auditor
Division of Legislative Audit
Juneau AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Spoke in support of SB 36.
ACTION NARRATIVE
9:00:45 AM
CHAIR LINDA MENARD called the Senate State Affairs Committee
meeting to order at 9:00 a.m. Senators French, Paskvan, and
Menard were present at the call to order. Senator Meyer joined
the committee soon thereafter. Senator Kookesh arrived later.
SB 36-EXECUTIVE BRANCH RECORDS SECURITY
CHAIR MENARD announced the consideration of SB 36.
9:01:20 AM
SENATOR FRENCH moved to adopt the committee substitute (CS) to
SB 36 [labeled 26-LS0232\E], as a working document. Hearing no
objection, Version E was before the committee.
SENATOR GENE THERRIAULT, Alaska State Legislature, Sponsor of SB
36, said he has been involved in identity theft legislation
before. There was comprehensive legislation passed last year,
and SB 36 is the next step in assuring Alaska citizens that data
collected by private businesses and the state government is
protected. He said he requested an audit a couple of years ago
regarding identity theft and private businesses, but he became
concerned because the state was Alaska's largest data collector.
He wanted Alaska to give citizens the same protections required
by the private sector. He requested an audit and found that the
state did need work on that issue. This legislation includes
recommendations from the auditor and from the Department of
Administration (DOA). The intent is to strengthen the statutes
and clarify that the duty and responsibility for security
standards lies within the DOA. The DOA will have the authority
to set the security policy and monitor the implementation and
adherence to it by the different executive branches. The DOA
will have the power to review and report the effectiveness of
the policy. There are state and federal laws that require
citizens to give personal information to the government, and how
that information is protected is a great concern.
9:04:49 AM
SENATOR THERRIAULT said the definition of "personally
identifiable information" (PII) is "when you have a name, an
address, a phone number, and it's combined with a social
security number, Alaska driver's license number, or another I.D.
number, credit card number, debit card number, account password,
or P.I.N. ... or different combinations of those bits of
information is what can be used by a scammer or an identity
thief to take over somebody's identity and cause the economic
damage." State systems gathering that data relate to workers
compensation, unemployment insurance, child support, permanent
fund dividends, driver's licenses, student loans, fish and game
information, teacher certification files, retirement, payroll,
health insurance, occupational licensing, voter registration,
and others. There are about 642 information systems within state
government that capture that kind of data, and over 200 capture
the information that meet the definition of PII.
9:06:26 AM
SENATOR THERRIAULT said Section 1 of SB 36 is largely
conforming. It tells the state archivist what information he or
she has and how to treat it. The archivist would have to follow
that new statute. Section 2 refers to the duties of the chief
executive officer for the state. It adds language to an existing
set of statutes to be subject to the new section that the bill
creates. Section 3 is the new language, and it clarifies that
the commissioner of administration is the chief information
officer for the state. Section 4 refers to how the security
records are handled and protected.
9:07:58 AM
SENATOR KOOKESH arrived.
SENATOR MEYER asked how the policy will be enforced through all
the different agencies.
SENATOR THERRIAULT said he would like to see a set of standards,
and the commissioner of DOA will set the policies. "We're not
leaving it up to each agency and each division to come up with
what records they think need to be protected, how they think
they need to be protected. We're looking for standardization
across all the agencies." The DOA will work with the agencies,
and there will be periodic reports back to the legislature to
assess if agencies are meeting the standards.
9:09:55 AM
SENATOR MEYER asked if the reports will be annual.
SENATOR THERRIAULT said Section 5 requires the first report to
be due on January 1 of the fifth calendar year after the act
takes effect. Page 4, line 19, states that the legislature will
then get a report every two years. It would give agencies quite
a bit of time to come up to the standard that is set.
9:10:46 AM
SENATOR PASKVAN asked how long it will take to write the
regulations.
9:11:30 AM
ED SNIFFEN, Assistant Attorney General, Department of Law,
Anchorage, said regulations generally take six months to a year.
KEVIN BROOKS, Deputy Commissioner, Department of Administration,
Juneau, said a "reg package is not a short process." But the DOA
would not need it to proceed with many of the things in the bill
and to continue with ongoing efforts with security.
9:12:53 AM
SENATOR FRENCH asked Mr. Brooks about the department's
perspective on SB 36.
MR. BROOKS said DOA supports the legislation. It is a logical
progression from House Bill 65 of 2008. Security of data that
the state collects has been at the forefront for a number of
years. The legislature has appropriated money to DOA to
strengthen the security systems. He said he worked with the
sponsor to clarify the language. "The state's I.T. [information
technology] infrastructure didn't just occur, it's been
incremental over the last 20 or so years or more." There are so
many databases with each department responsible for the data, it
is prudent to distinguish the commissioner of DOA to be the
C.I.O. [chief information officer] for the state. The department
has statutory authority over data processing and
telecommunication. This will enable DOA to set standards and
protocols for the state agencies. DOA has a state security
office now, and it interacts with other states on security
matters. The approach is good. There is a governance structure
that includes the I.T. managers for each state agency. There are
working groups that come together to discuss the best standards.
"The entire state has gone to a Microsoft exchange platform for
state email, where we previously had five separate systems."
There are groups functioning now, and SB 36 is a logical
progression in that effort.
9:15:19 AM
SENATOR FRENCH asked if anything in the bill will cause the
separate data silos to be integrated any better. He is
interested in increasing the ability for those databases to talk
to one another.
MR. BROOKS said the bill doesn't require that, but that effort
is ongoing. "If you're going to do a database you need to use a
sequel-server database or an oracle database, so the efforts are
in place now to really get that integration." An earlier version
of the bill could have been read to have the state build a super
data farm and put all of its servers in one place. If the state
were starting today, that may be the approach, "but recognizing
that we have servers and data repositories all over the state in
all departments, I think this is a prudent approach."
9:16:34 AM
SENATOR FRENCH asked if there have been breaches to the database
by hackers.
MR. BROOKS said there have been, and everyday there are
attempts. There was a breach in February 2005, and that event
brought focus to the issue. There has been a data explosion for
the state, but there have not been severe breaches where
personal data has gone out, but the attacks occur daily and are
becoming more sophisticated. "We need to be diligent."
SENATOR PASKVAN asked if there is protocol to notify a person if
there was a breach in his or her information.
MR. BROOKS said yes, and House Bill 65 of 2008 set those
protocols in place.
9:18:10 AM
PAT DAVIDSON, Auditor, Division of Legislative Audit, Juneau,
said she was asked by the Budget and Audit Committee to conduct
an audit on state security issues as it relates to PII (personal
identifiable information). It is the first of a two-part audit
looking at the governance structure associated with state
security. For the second phase, two individual systems were
selected for additional testing. The recommendations in SB 36
are parallel to concerns of the audit division. The audit found
that the governance structure was not very strong. "The state
security office was getting a little push-back from some of the
departments with regard to establishing standards." Security
goes across departmental silos. "You get in one place; you find
the weakest access point; you get in and then you can wander
around in there." If there is a weakness in one department, the
database may be vulnerable in another department.
MS. DAVIDSON said this is an important statewide issue that
needs to be dealt with on a comprehensive basis. Putting the DOA
in charge is a good idea. The audit included "dumpster diving."
Auditors went to the sixth floor of the state office building
and a few other locations and saw that medical, payroll, and
other records where left out for recycling. "We found
astonishing things." More disturbing was that the agency "gave
us blank looks, like ... 'what's the problem?'" So raising
security awareness consciousness has to happen, and it needs to
be statewide. The I.T. experts understand it very well, "but if
you're talking to an administrative assistant who's just trying
to gather up the recycling, they don't have that in the
forefront of their consciousness. This has to be an integrated
training process." Setting the standards and moving them forward
is really important for state government.
9:21:52 AM
SENATOR FRENCH referred to the obligations required by SB 36 on
page 4. It looks like the bill is focused on data processing
records, and those are records that are produced by the
automatic data processing resources. He asked if it would
include the records in the recycling bins.
9:22:51 AM
MS. DAVIDSON said it will be a combination of both. Some are
printouts from data that has been collected. "Payroll records
are going to be paper output from the payroll system." Some will
be emails. She found things that people put in emails that had a
lot more information than should be. "As we were evaluating the
state security office - discussion of that - again, I.T. folks
know that that's important. And the more authority you vest in
somebody, and responsibility, I think you're going to see that
taken up as more of an issue -- maybe not directly as it's
related here, because we are talking about just data processing
records, but I think the security consciousness will start
raising."
SENATOR FRENCH asked if the bill should be broader. This is the
legislature's opportunity to tell administrative clerks not to
throw out a payroll record or an email. Line 26, Page 4,
presents the idea most of "us" are worried about: records that
include personally identifiable information. "That's really what
we're trying to get at ... you're trying to keep those
obviously, sort of, dangerous pieces of information about me or
any other citizen from being put out in a recycle bin outside a
state office."
9:24:49 AM
MS. DAVIDSON said that is a question for the sponsor. Laws might
not be needed to raise the security consciousness, "you just
need to put it into practice."
SENATOR MEYER said the original bill asked for an audit every
two years, and the CS asks for a legislative report. He asked if
Ms. Davidson will have to jump in a dumpster every two years to
ensure compliance.
MS. DAVIDSON said the current version doesn't refer to an audit;
it refers to an evaluation that will be done by DOA. The audit
division will not do it.
9:26:24 AM
SENATOR MEYER said the original bill asked for an audit.
SENATOR THERRIAULT said the bill was changed from a rigorous
audit that could take six to eight months to even begin and
another year to complete. He wants the DOA to put together a
report on how closely the policies are being followed. It does
not preclude Legislative Budget and Audit from asking for a
full-blown audit from outside of the executive branch. He didn't
want that expense every two years.
SENATOR THERRIAULT referred to page 4, lines 2 and 3, which
state, "state agency responsible for insuring the security of
the non-archive records produced from those databases." So most
of what was found in a recycle bin was produced from the
electronic silos. He believes there is language that covers
Senator French's concerns.
9:28:56 AM
SENATOR MEYER asked if the departments are expected to just
absorb this work without any cost.
SENATOR THERRIAULT said the DOA prepared a zero fiscal note. As
Mr. Brooks mentioned, the department has an ongoing effort. When
House Bill 65 passed last year, it had a $2 million fiscal note
for software and to work "in this direction." But it wasn't
standardized across all agencies, and there was actually
resistance from some agencies. The person in the transportation
department won't know why medical records could be an issue, but
penetration can come from the department and "the person can run
amok within the state system."
9:30:32 AM
MR. SNIFFEN said the bill is a good effort. Identity theft has
become a serious problem across the country, "and we see a lot
of that in the consumer protection section that I work in." Any
efforts to help secure this kind of information will go a long
way. The legislation is a good idea.
9:31:34 AM
CHAIR MENARD said legislators can help by having office
shredders and by trying to "do our part in our own personal
senate offices."
9:32:04 AM
SENATOR PASKVAN moved to report the CS to SB 36 [26-LS0232\E]
from committee with individual recommendations and accompanying
fiscal notes. Hearing no objections, CSSB 36(STA) passed out of
committee.
9:32:38 AM
There being no further business to come before the committee,
the meeting was adjourned at 9:32 a.m.
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