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CRIME-VIOLENT & NON-VIOLENT-FINANCLIAL-CYBER

Incident Response Guide: Water and Wastewater Sector

From the document: "Cyber threat actors are aware of--and deliberately target--single points of failure. A compromise or failure of a Water and Wastewater (WWS) Sector organization could cause cascading impacts throughout the Sector and other critical infrastructure sectors [hyperlink]. There are many aspects of the large and complex WWS Sector that pose challenges to raising cyber resilience sector wide: [1] Governance and regulation involve a mix of federal and state, local, tribal, and territorial authorities. [2] Cybersecurity maturity levels across the sector are disparate. [3] Often, WWS Sector utilities must prioritize limited resources toward the functionality of their water systems over cybersecurity. [4] Universal solutions to cyber challenges in a diverse, target-rich, and resource-poor environment are unfeasible. To provide meaningful cybersecurity support to the WWS Sector that can help with these challenges, CISA [Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency]--in conjunction with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), as well as the federal government and WWS Sector partners listed in this guide's acknowledgement section--has created this joint Incident Response Guide (IRG) for the WWS Sector. The unique value of this joint IRG is that it provides WWS Sector owners and operators information about the federal roles, resources, and responsibilities for each stage of the cyber incident response (IR) lifecycle. Sector owners and operators can use this information to augment their respective IR plans and procedures. By empowering individual WWS Sector utilities, the authors of this guide--CISA, FBI, EPA, and the acknowledged federal government and WWS Sector partners--aim to drive improvements to cyber resilience and incident response across the WWS Sector."

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