Rule2022-27171
Protected Critical Infrastructure Information: Technical Amendments
Primary source
Metadata and text below are from the Federal Register, a public-domain U.S. government work. Always verify the official published version before relying on it for any legal matter.
Published
December 21, 2022
Effective
December 21, 2022
Issuing agencies
Homeland Security Department
Abstract
This final rule amends the Protected Critical Infrastructure Information regulations to provide non-substantive technical, organizational, and conforming updates that are intended to improve the accuracy of these provisions. This action is editorial in nature and does not impose any new regulatory requirements on affected parties.
Full Text
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 87 Issue 244 (Wednesday, December 21, 2022)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 244 (Wednesday, December 21, 2022)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 77971-77978]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2022-27171]
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Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 244 / Wednesday, December 21, 2022 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 77971]]
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
6 CFR Part 29
Protected Critical Infrastructure Information: Technical
Amendments
AGENCY: Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Final rule; technical amendment.
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SUMMARY: This final rule amends the Protected Critical Infrastructure
Information regulations to provide non-substantive technical,
organizational, and conforming updates that are intended to improve the
accuracy of these provisions. This action is editorial in nature and
does not impose any new regulatory requirements on affected parties.
DATES: This final rule is effective December 21, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Phillip Boggs, Protected Critical
Infrastructure Information Program Manager, (202) 878-2859,
<a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#6c3c04050000051c422e030b0b1f2c0f051f0d4208041f420b031a"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="db8bb3b2b7b7b2abf599b4bcbca89bb8b2a8baf5bfb3a8f5bcb4ad">[email protected]</span></a>.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Pursuant to the Critical Infrastructure Information Act of 2002 \1\
(CII Act), the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) established
uniform procedures for the receipt, care, and storage of critical
infrastructure information voluntarily provided to the Federal
government by the public. (69 FR 8074, Feb. 20, 2004; 71 FR 52262, Sep.
1, 2006). Today, these procedures are known as the Protected Critical
Infrastructure Information (PCII) regulations outlined in Title 6, part
29 of the Code of Federal Regulations (6 CFR part 29). In 2007, DHS
transitioned the responsibility to carry out the functions and
responsibilities of the PCII Program from the DHS Preparedness
Directorate to the National Protection and Programs Directorate
(NPPD).\2\ In 2018, Congress passed the Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency Act of 2018 which redesignated NPPD as
the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and
established it as a new agency within DHS.\3\ This technical amendment
is intended to account for the organizational changes related to
responsibility for the PCII Program within DHS and improve the
regulation's accuracy through non-substantive, technical, and editorial
updates. See the Description of Technical Amendments section below for
a more detailed discussion of the updates included in this action.
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\1\ 6 U.S.C. 671-674.
\2\ Notices of Implementation of the Post-Katrina Emergency
Reform Act of 2006 and of Additional Changes Pursuant to Section 872
of the Homeland Security Act of 2002, to Michael B. Enzi, U.S.
Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (Jan. 28,
2007) and to Bennie G. Thompson, U.S. House of Representatives
Committee on Homeland Security (Sep. 11, 2007) (on file with the
Department of Homeland Security).
\3\ 6 U.S.C. 652(a).
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II. Description of Technical Amendments
Technical amendments are made through this final rule to apply
throughout the entirety of 6 CFR part 29. A majority of the changes
made throughout 6 CFR part 29 are intended to reflect that CISA is the
agency responsible for operating the PCII Program within DHS and
providing the public with accurate information regarding how CISA
currently operates the program. Specifically, the part is amended to
accurately identify the names of offices and titles of personnel
responsible for operating the PCII Program within CISA and to update
legal citations and cross-references. This rule also creates several
new definitions and amends existing definitions to clarify terms,
titles, and acronyms used throughout the part that are specific to
CISA's operation of the PCII Program. For example, some new definitions
include ``CISA'', ``Director'', ``Executive Assistant Director'', and
``PCII Program Manager'' and do not create substantive changes to the
regulations. Other definitions such as ``Critical Infrastructure'',
``Information Sharing and Analysis Organization'', and ``Voluntary or
Voluntarily'' are amended through this rule to align the definitions
with the exact statutory text of the CII Act or to update outdated
legal citations.
This final rule also makes changes throughout the entirety of 6 CFR
part 29 to correct typographical and grammatical errors and to clarify
the regulation through stylistic wording and organizational changes.
Some of these changes in the wording of the regulation are to align the
regulatory text with the statutory text of the CII Act by incorporating
the exact statutory language instead of cross-references to the CII Act
or to add words from the statutory language of the CII Act which were
initially erroneously omitted from 6 CFR part 29. Other wording and
organizational changes are editorial in nature and intended to improve
the clarity of the regulatory text. An example of such changes in
wording includes the deletion of ``tribal'' used throughout the PCII
regulations in the interest of brevity and ease of reading. Deleting
``tribal'' does not change the scope or substance of the rule because
the definition of ``Local government'' in Section 29.2 expressly
includes ``Indian tribe or authorized tribal organization, or in
Alaska, a Native village or Alaska Regional Native Corporation.''
Overall, none of the technical amendments made through this final rule
should be construed as modifying or creating any new substantive
requirements.
A. Significant Changes to Regulatory Text
Some of the most significant changes to the regulation include
changes to:
Section 29.3 Effect of Provisions
The section title has been replaced with ``FOIA Exemptions and
Restrictions on Regulatory Use of PCII'' to more accurately describe
the content provided in this section which relates to FOIA exemptions
for PCII and other restrictions on the use of PCII.
Section 29.5 Requirements for Protection
In section 29.5(a)(3)(iii)(A) & (B), the ``and'' inserted between
subparagraphs (A) & (B) has been replaced with ``or'' to correct a
technical drafting error. As currently written, the ``and'' between
both subparagraphs suggests that submitters must provide identical
electronic and non-electronic express statements to CISA in order to
receive PCII protection for electronically
[[Page 77972]]
submitted information. However, the statute only requires, and PCII
Program only needs, one express statement to accompany written
information or records seeking PCII protection regardless of the method
used to submit the information to CISA (e.g., documentary, oral, or
electronic submission formats). This change aligns the regulatory text
with the legal requirements for PCII protection of information under
the CII Act and eliminates the technical drafting error suggesting that
submitters must follow a duplicative and more burdensome process for
electronic submissions to receive PCII protection.
Section 29.6 Acknowledgment of Receipt, Validation, and Marking
Throughout this section, the term ``calendar'' has been added
throughout the section to areas describing deadlines where it was
erroneously omitted. This change is made to improve consistency and
clarity throughout the section and to reflect the PCII Program's
longstanding practice of using calendar days for all deadlines related
to this section.
In section 29.6(e)(2)(ii), the paragraph was reorganized and
revised to improve clarity on the chronological steps that CISA follows
to return to the submitter information that is not eligible for PCII
protection. The changes to this paragraph are editorial in nature to
reflect a chronological sequence. They do not change any of the steps
that CISA will follow to return information to submitters.
B. Amendatory Instructions
Amendatory instructions are the standard terms that the Office of
the Federal Register uses to give specific instructions on how to
change the CFR. Due to the extensive number of technical and conforming
amendments made through this final rule, CISA is utilizing the Office
of the Federal Register's new amendatory instruction ``revise and
republish'' to codify the revisions set out in this regulatory
action.\4\ Use of the combined instruction allows CISA to republish 6
CFR part 29 in its entirety instead of using piecemeal amendments to
revise the full unit of the CFR. Because piecemeal amendments are not
used in this rule to signal where changes have been made, CISA intends
to publish an unofficial, informal document showing what changes CISA
made through this final rule to assist industry and other stakeholders
in reviewing the changes that this final rule makes to the regulatory
text. CISA will make the unofficial, informal document showing edits
available on its website at <a href="https://www.cisa.gov/pcii-program">https://www.cisa.gov/pcii-program</a>.
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\4\ The Office of the Federal Register's Document Drafting
Handbook (Chapter 2, 2-39) explains that agencies ``use [r]epublish
to set out unchanged text for the convenience of the reader, often
to provide context for your regulatory changes.'' <a href="https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/write/handbook">https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/write/handbook</a>.
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III. Exemption From Public Notice and Delayed Effective Date
Requirements
DHS has determined that this rulemaking is exempt from notice-and-
comment rulemaking requirements under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A) and 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B). Many of the amendments made through this action pertain
solely to the organizational change in responsibility for the PCII
Program within DHS and constitute ``rules of agency organization,
procedure, or practice'' not subject to the Administrative Procedure
Act's (APA) notice and comment requirements under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
All of the amendments made through this action are technical or
editorial non-substantive corrections, which are intended to provide
the public with more accurate and current regulatory information about
the PCII Program. These changes are necessary to correct errors and
grammatical language, update definitions and titles, provide current
legal citations, and make other non-substantive amendments that improve
the clarity of the CFR. None of the amendments included in this action
will have a substantive impact on the public and nor will they alter
the regulatory requirements in the affected part. Accordingly, CISA
finds for good cause that this final rule is exempt from public notice-
and-comment rulemaking procedures under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B) because such
procedures are unnecessary.
For the same reasons that this rule is exempt from notice-and-
comment rulemaking requirements, and because affected parties will not
need time to adjust to the amendments to the regulation made through
this action, CISA finds that good cause exists to make this final rule
effective upon publication in the Federal Register under 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3).
This final rule constitutes final agency action under the APA and
is issued under the authority of 5 U.S.C. 552(a), 5 U.S.C. 553, and 6
U.S.C. 673.
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 12866
Because CISA has determined that this rule is exempt from notice
and comment rulemaking requirements, the provisions of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) do not apply to this action.
This technical amendment also does not meet the criteria for a
``significant regulatory action'' as specified in Executive Order
12866.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
There is no new or amended collection of information required by
this document; therefore, the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507) are inapplicable.
List of Subjects in 6 CFR Part 29
Confidential business information, Reporting and record keeping
requirements.
0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of Homeland
Security amends 6 CFR part 29 as follows:
PART 29--PROTECTED CRITICAL INFASTRUCTURE INFORMATION
Sec.
29.1 Purpose and scope.
29.2 Definitions.
29.3 FOIA exemptions and restrictions on use of PCII.
29.4 PCII program administration.
29.5 Requirements for protection.
29.6 Acknowledgement of receipt, validation, and marking.
29.7 Safeguarding of PCII.
29.8 Disclosure of PCII.
29.9 Investigation and reporting of violation of PCII procedures.
0
1. Revise the authority citation to read as follows:
Authority: 6 U.S.C. 671-674; Section 2222-2225 of the Homeland
Security Act of 2002, Pub. L. 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135, as amended by
Subtitle B of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Act of
2018, Pub. L. 115-278, 132 Stat. 4184. 5 U.S.C. 301.
0
2. Revise and republish Sec. Sec. 29.1 through 29.9 to read as
follows:
Sec. 29.1 Purpose and scope.
(a) Purpose of this part. This part implements the Critical
Infrastructure Information Act of 2002 (CII Act) by establishing
uniform procedures for the receipt, care, and storage of Critical
Infrastructure Information voluntarily submitted to the Department of
Homeland Security through CISA. Consistent with the statutory mission
of DHS to prevent terrorist attacks within the United States and reduce
the vulnerability of the United States to terrorism, CISA will
encourage the voluntary submission of CII by safeguarding and
protecting that information from unauthorized disclosure and by
ensuring that such information is, as necessary, securely shared with
State and Local governments pursuant to the CII Act. As
[[Page 77973]]
required by the CII Act, this part establishes procedures regarding:
(1) The acknowledgment of receipt by CISA of voluntarily submitted
CII;
(2) The receipt, validation, handling, storage, proper marking, and
use of information as PCII;
(3) The safeguarding and maintenance of the confidentiality of such
information and appropriate sharing of such information with State and
Local governments or government agencies pursuant to 6 U.S.C.
673(a)(1)(E); and
(4) The issuance of advisories, notices, and warnings related to
the protection of critical infrastructure or protected systems in such
a manner to protect, as appropriate, from unauthorized disclosure the
source of critical infrastructure information that forms the basis of
the warning, and any information that is proprietary or business
sensitive, might be used to identify the submitting person or entity,
or is otherwise not appropriately in the public domain.
(b) Scope. This part applies to all persons and entities that are
authorized to handle, use, store, or otherwise accept receipt of PCII.
Sec. 29.2 Definitions.
For purposes of this part:
Critical Infrastructure has the same meaning stated in 6 U.S.C.
101(4) (which cross references the term used in 42 U.S.C. 5195c(e)) and
means systems and assets, whether physical or virtual, so vital to the
United States that the incapacity or destruction of such systems and
assets would have a debilitating impact on security, national economic
security, national public health or safety, or any combination of those
matters.
Critical Infrastructure Information or CII has the same meaning
stated in 6 U.S.C. 671(1) and means information not customarily in the
public domain and related to the security of critical infrastructure or
protected systems, including documents, records or other information
concerning:
(1) Actual, potential, or threatened interference with, attack on,
compromise of, or incapacitation of critical infrastructure or
protected systems by either physical or computer-based attack or other
similar conduct (including the misuse of or unauthorized access to all
types of communications and data transmission systems) that violates
Federal, State, or Local law, harms interstate commerce of the United
States, or threatens public health or safety;
(2) The ability of any critical infrastructure or protected system
to resist such interference, compromise, or incapacitation, including
any planned or past assessment, projection, or estimate of the
vulnerability of critical infrastructure or a protected system,
including security testing, risk evaluation thereto, risk-management
planning, or risk audit; or
(3) Any planned or past operational problem or solution regarding
critical infrastructure or protected systems, including repair,
recovery, reconstruction, insurance, or continuity, to the extent it is
related to such interference, compromise, or incapacitation.
CII Act means the Critical Infrastructure Information Act of 2002
in 6 U.S.C. 671-674; Sections 2222-2225 of the Homeland Security Act of
2002, Public Law 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135, as amended by Subtitle B of
the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Act of 2018, Public Law
115-278, 132 Stat. 4168.
CISA means the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
Department or DHS means the Department of Homeland Security.
Director means the Director of the CISA, any successors to that
position within the Department, or any designee.
Executive Assistant Director means the Executive Assistant Director
for the Infrastructure Security Division of the CISA, any successors to
that position within the Department, or any designee.
Information Sharing and Analysis Organization or ISAO has the same
meaning stated in 6 U.S.C. 671(5) and means any formal or informal
entity or collaboration created or employed by public or private sector
organizations for purposes of:
(1) Gathering and analyzing CII, including information related to
cybersecurity risks and incidents, in order to better understand
security problems and interdependencies related to critical
infrastructure and protected systems, so as to ensure the availability,
integrity, and reliability thereof;
(2) Communicating or disclosing CII, including cybersecurity risks
and incidents, to help prevent, detect, mitigate, or recover from the
effects of an interference, compromise, or an incapacitation problem
related to critical infrastructure or protected systems; and
(3) Voluntarily disseminating CII, including cybersecurity risks
and incidents, to its members, Federal, State, and Local governments,
or any other entities that may be of assistance in carrying out the
purposes specified in paragraphs (h)(1) and (2) of this section.
In the public domain means information lawfully, properly, and
regularly disclosed generally or broadly to the public. Information
regarding system, facility, or operational security is not ``in the
public domain.'' Information submitted with CII that is proprietary or
business sensitive, or which might be used to identify a submitting
person or entity will not be considered ``in the public domain.''
Information may be ``business sensitive'' for this purpose whether or
not it is commercial in nature, and even if its release could not
demonstrably cause substantial harm to the competitive position of the
submitting person or entity.
Local government has the same meaning stated in 6 U.S.C. 101(13)
and means:
(1) A county, municipality, city, town, township, local public
authority, school district, special district, intrastate district,
council of governments (regardless of whether the council of
governments is incorporated as a nonprofit corporation under State
law), regional or interstate government entity, or agency or
instrumentality of a Local government;
(2) An Indian tribe or authorized tribal organization, or in
Alaska, a Native village or Alaska Regional Native Corporation; and
(3) A rural community, unincorporated town or village, or other
public entity.
Protected Critical Infrastructure Information or PCII means
validated CII, including information covered by Sec. 29.6(b) and (h),
including the identity of the submitting person or entity and any
person or entity on whose behalf the submitting person or entity
submits the CII, that is voluntarily submitted, directly or indirectly,
to CISA, for its use regarding the security of critical infrastructure
and protected systems, analysis, warning, interdependency study,
recovery, reconstitution, or other appropriate purpose. PCII also
includes any information, statements, compilations or other materials
reasonably necessary to explain the CII, put the CII in context, or
describe the importance or use of the CII when accompanied by an
express statement as described in Sec. 29.5.
PCII Program Manager means the federal employee within the
Infrastructure Security Division of CISA appointed as responsible for
the administration of the PCII Program pursuant to this part, any
successors to that position within the Department, or any designee.
PCII Program Manager's Designee means a federal employee outside of
the PCII Program Office, whether employed by CISA or another federal
agency, to whom certain functions of the PCII
[[Page 77974]]
Program Office are delegated by the PCII Program Manager, as determined
on a case-by-case basis.
Protected Critical Infrastructure Information Program Office or
PCII Program Office means the personnel organized within the
Infrastructure Security Division of CISA who carry out the operational
and administrative functions of the PCII Program pursuant to the
direction of the PCII Program Manager.
PCII Program Officer means a Federal, State, or Local government
employee appointed by their respective agency or entity and, upon
approval of the PCII Program Manager, carries out the responsibilities
described in 6 CFR 29.4(d) to ensure the proper use, storage, and
handling of PCII within their respective agency or entity.
Protected Critical Infrastructure Information Program or PCII
Program means the program implementing the CII Act within the
Infrastructure Security Division of the CISA, including the
maintenance, management, and review of the information provided in
furtherance of the protections provided by the CII Act.
Protected Critical Infrastructure Information Management System or
PCIIMS means the electronic database and platform used to record the
receipt, acknowledgement, validation, storage, dissemination, and
destruction of PCII. PCIIMS also enables CISA to manage and train
individuals authorized to view, handle, and access PCII.
Protected system has the same meaning stated in 6 U.S.C. 671(6) and
means any service, physical or computer-based system, process, or
procedure that directly or indirectly affects the viability of a
facility of critical infrastructure; and includes any physical or
computer-based system, including a computer, computer system, computer
or communications network, or any component hardware or element
thereof, software program, processing instructions, or information or
data in transmission or storage therein, irrespective of the medium of
transmission or storage.
Purposes of the CII Act has the meaning set forth in the CII Act
and includes the security of critical infrastructure and protected
systems, analysis, warning, interdependency study, recovery,
reconstitution, or other informational purposes.
Regulatory proceeding, as used in 6 U.S.C. 671(7) and this part,
means administrative proceedings in which DHS is the adjudicating
entity, and does not include any form or type of regulatory proceeding
or other matter outside of DHS.
State has the same meaning stated in 6 U.S.C. 101(17) and means any
State of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and any possession of the
United States.
Submission as referenced in these procedures means any transmittal,
either directly or indirectly, of CII to the CISA PCII Program Office
or the PCII Program Manager's Designee, as set forth herein.
Submitted in good faith means any submission of information that
could reasonably be defined as CII or PCII under this section. Upon
validation of a submission as PCII, CISA has conclusively established
the good faith of the submission. Any information qualifying as PCII by
virtue of a categorical inclusion identified by the PCII Program
Manager pursuant to this part is submitted in good faith.
Voluntary or voluntarily, when used in reference to any submission
of CII, means the submittal thereof in the absence of an exercise of
legal authority by DHS to compel access to or submission of such
information. Voluntary submission of CII may be accomplished by (i.e.,
come from) a single State or Local governmental entity; private entity
or person; or by an ISAO acting on behalf of its members or otherwise.
There are two exclusions from this definition:
(1) In the case of any action brought under the securities laws--as
is defined in 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(47)--the term ``voluntary'' or
``voluntarily'' does not include:
(i) Information or statements contained in any documents or
materials filed pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 78l(i) with the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission or with federal banking regulators; or
(ii) A writing that accompanied the solicitation of an offer or a
sale of securities; and
(2) Information or statements previously submitted to DHS in the
course of a regulatory proceeding or a licensing or permitting
determination are not ``voluntarily submitted.'' In addition, the
submission of information to DHS for purposes of seeking a federal
preference or benefit, including CII submitted to support an
application for a DHS grant to secure critical infrastructure will be
considered a voluntary submission of information. Applications for
Support Anti-terrorism by Fostering Effective Technologies Act of 2002
filed pursuant to 6 U.S.C. 441 et seq., or SAFETY Act Designation or
Certification under 6 CFR part 25, will also be considered a voluntary
submission.
Used directly by such agency, any other Federal, State, or Local
authority, or any third party, in any civil action arising under
Federal or State law in 6 U.S.C. 673(a)(1)(C) means any use in any
proceeding other than a criminal prosecution before any court of the
United States or of a State or otherwise, of any PCII, or any drafts or
copies of PCII retained by the submitter, including the opinions,
evaluations, analyses and conclusions prepared and submitted as CII, as
evidence at trial or in any pretrial or other discovery,
notwithstanding whether the United States, its agencies, officers, or
employees is or are a party to such proceeding.
Sec. 29.3 FOIA exemptions and restrictions on use of PCII.
(a) Freedom of Information Act disclosure exemptions. Information
that is separately exempt from public disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) or applicable State, or Local law does
not lose its separate exemption from public disclosure due to the
applicability of these procedures or any failure to follow them.
(b) Restriction on use of PCII by regulatory agencies and other
Federal, State, and Local agencies. A Federal, State, or Local
government agency that receives PCII may utilize the PCII only for
purposes appropriate under the CII Act, including securing critical
infrastructure or protected systems. Such PCII may not be utilized for
any other collateral regulatory purposes without the written consent of
the PCII Program Manager and of the submitting person or entity. The
PCII Program Manager or the PCII Program Manager's Designee will not
share PCII with Federal, State, or Local government agencies without
instituting appropriate measures to ensure that PCII is used only for
appropriate purposes.
Sec. 29.4 PCII Program administration.
(a) Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. The Secretary
of the Department of Homeland Security hereby designates the Director
as the senior DHS official responsible for the direction and
administration of the PCII Program. The Director administers this
program through the Executive Assistant Director.
(b) Appointment of a PCII Program Manager. The Director will:
(1) Appoint a PCII Program Manager serving under the Executive
Assistant Director who is responsible for the administration of the
PCII Program;
[[Page 77975]]
(2) Commit resources necessary for the effective implementation of
the PCII Program;
(3) Ensure that sufficient personnel, including detailees or
assignees from other federal national security, homeland security, or
law enforcement entities, as the Director deems appropriate, are
assigned to the PCII Program to facilitate secure information sharing
with appropriate authorities; and
(4) Promulgate implementing directives and prepare training
materials, as appropriate, for the proper treatment of PCII.
(c) Appointment of PCII Program Officers. The PCII Program Manager
will establish procedures to ensure that each DHS component and each
Federal, State, or Local agency or entity that works with PCII appoints
one or more employees to serve as a PCII Program Officer in order to
carry out the responsibilities stated in paragraph (d) of this section.
Persons appointed to serve as PCII Program Officers must be fully
familiar with these procedures.
(d) Responsibilities of PCII Program Officers. PCII Program
Officers:
(1) Oversee the handling, use, and storage of PCII;
(2) Ensure the secure sharing of PCII with appropriate authorities
and individuals, as set forth in Sec. 29.1(a), and paragraph (b)(3) of
this section;
(3) Establish and maintain an ongoing self-inspection program
including periodic review and assessment of compliance with handling,
use, and storage of PCII;
(4) Establish additional procedures, measures, and penalties, as
necessary, to prevent unauthorized access to PCII; and
(5) Ensure prompt and appropriate coordination with the PCII
Program Manager regarding any request, challenge, or complaint arising
out of the implementation of these regulations.
(e) Protected Critical Infrastructure Information Management System
or PCIIMS. The PCII Program Manager will develop, for use by the PCII
Program Office and the PCII Manager's Designees, an electronic database
to be known as PCIIMS to record the receipt, acknowledgement,
validation, storage, dissemination, and destruction of PCII. This
compilation of PCII must be safeguarded and protected in accordance
with the provisions of the CII Act. The PCII Program Manager may
require the completion of appropriate background investigations of an
individual before granting that individual access to any PCII.
Sec. 29.5 Requirements for protection.
(a) CII receives the protections of the CII Act when:
(1) Such information is voluntarily submitted, directly or
indirectly, to the PCII Program Office or a PCII Program Manager's
Designee;
(2) The information is submitted for protected use regarding the
security of critical infrastructure or protected systems, analysis,
warning, interdependency study, recovery, reconstitution, or other
appropriate purposes including, without limitation, for the
identification, analysis, prevention, preemption, disruption, defense
against and/or mitigation of terrorist threats to the homeland;
(3) The information is labeled with an express statement as
follows:
(i) Documentary submissions. In the case of documentary
submissions, a written marking on the information or records
substantially similar to the following: ``This information is
voluntarily submitted to the federal government in expectation of
protection from disclosure as provided by the provisions of the
Critical Infrastructure Information Act of 2002, as amended by the
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Act of 2018'';
(ii) Oral submissions. In the case of oral submissions:
(A) Through an oral statement, made at the time of the oral
submission or within a reasonable period of time thereafter, indicating
an expectation of protection from disclosure as provided by the
provisions of the CII Act; and
(B) Through a written statement substantially similar to the one
specified above in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this section accompanied by a
document that memorializes the nature of the oral submission initially
provided to the PCII Program Office or the PCII Program Manager's
Designee within a reasonable period of time after making the oral
submission; or
(iii) Electronic submissions. In the case of electronic
submissions:
(A) Through an electronically submitted statement made within a
reasonable period of time after making the electronic submission,
indicating an expectation of protection from disclosure as provided by
the provisions of the CII Act; or
(B) Through a non-electronically submitted written statement
substantially similar to the one specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of
this section accompanied by a document that memorializes the nature of
the electronic submission initially provided to the PCII Program Office
or the PCII Program Manager's Designee within a reasonable period after
making the electronic submission; and
(4) The documentary, electronic, or oral submission is accompanied
by a statement, signed by the submitting person or an authorized person
on behalf of an entity identifying the submitting person or entity,
containing such contact information as is considered necessary by the
PCII Program Office, and certifying that the information being
submitted is not customarily in the public domain.
(b) Information that is not submitted to the PCII Program Office or
the PCII Program Manager's Designees will not qualify for protection
under the CII Act. Only the PCII Program Office or a PCII Program
Manager's Designee are authorized to acknowledge receipt of information
submitted for consideration of protection under the CII Act.
(c) All Federal, State, and Local government entities must protect
and maintain information as required by this part and by the provisions
of the CII Act when that information is provided to the entity by the
PCII Program Manager or a PCII Program Manager's Designee and is marked
as required in Sec. 29.6(c).
(d) All submissions seeking PCII status are presumed to have been
submitted in good faith until validation or a determination not to
validate is made pursuant to this part.
Sec. 29.6 Acknowledgment of receipt, validation, and marking.
(a) Authorized officials. Only the PCII Program Manager is
authorized to validate and mark information submitted for protection
outside of a categorical inclusion as PCII. The PCII Program Manager or
a Program Manager's Designee may mark information qualifying for
protection under categorical inclusions pursuant to paragraph (f) of
this section as PCII.
(b) Presumption of protection. All information submitted in
accordance with the procedures set forth in Sec. 29.5 of this part
will be presumed to be and will be treated as PCII, enjoying the
protections of the CII Act, from the time the information is received
by the PCII Program Office or a PCII Program Manager's Designee. The
information must remain protected unless and until the PCII Program
Office renders a final decision that the information is not PCII. The
PCII Program Office will, with respect to information that is not
properly submitted, inform the submitting person or entity within
thirty calendar days of receipt, by a means of communication to be
prescribed by the PCII Program Manager, that the submittal was
procedurally defective. The submitter will then have an
[[Page 77976]]
additional thirty calendar days to remedy the deficiency from the date
of receipt of such notification by the PCII Program Office. If the
submitting person or entity does not cure the deficiency within thirty
calendar days after the date of receipt of the notification provided by
the PCII Program Office in this paragraph, the PCII Program Office may
determine that the presumption of protection is terminated. Under such
circumstances, the PCII Program Office may cure the deficiency by
labeling the submission with the information required in Sec. 29.5 or
may notify the applicant that the submission does not qualify as PCII.
No CII submission will lose its presumptive status as PCII except as
provided in paragraph (g) of this section.
(c) Marking of information. All PCII must be clearly identified
through markings made by the PCII Program Office. The PCII Program
Office will mark PCII materials as follows: ``This document contains
PCII. In accordance with the provisions of 6 CFR part 29, this document
is exempt from release under the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C.
552(b)(3)) and similar laws requiring public disclosure. Unauthorized
release may result in criminal and administrative penalties. This
document is to be safeguarded and disseminated in accordance with the
CII Act and PCII Program requirements.'' When distributing PCII, the
distributing person must ensure that the distributed information
contains this marking.
(d) Acknowledgement of receipt of information. The PCII Program
Office or a PCII Program Manager's Designee will acknowledge receipt of
information submitted as CII and accompanied by an express statement,
and in so doing will:
(1) Contact the submitting person or entity, within thirty calendar
days of receipt of the submission of CII, by the means of delivery
prescribed in procedures developed by the PCII Program Manager. In the
case of oral submissions, receipt will be acknowledged in writing
within thirty calendar days after receipt by the PCII Program Office or
a PCII Program Manager's Designee of a written statement,
certification, and documents that memorialize the oral submission, as
referenced in Sec. 29.5(a)(3)(ii);
(2) Enter the appropriate data into the PCIIMS as required in Sec.
29.4(e); and
(3) Provide the submitting person or entity with a unique tracking
number that will accompany the information from the time it is received
by the PCII Program Office or a PCII Program Manager's Designee.
(e) Validation of information. (1) The PCII Program Manager is
responsible for reviewing all submissions that request protection under
the CII Act. The PCII Program Manager will review the submitted
information as soon as practicable. If a final determination is made
that the submitted information meets the requirements for protection,
the PCII Program Manager must ensure that the information has been
marked as required in paragraph (c) of this section, notify the
submitting person or entity of the determination, and disclose it only
pursuant to Sec. 29.8.
(2) If the PCII Program Office makes an initial determination that
the information submitted does not meet the requirements for protection
under the CII Act, the PCII Program Office will:
(i) Notify the submitting person or entity of the initial
determination that the information is not considered to be PCII. This
notification also will, as necessary:
(A) Request that the submitting person or entity complete the
requirements of Sec. 29.5(a) or further explain the nature of the
information and the submitting person or entity's basis for believing
the information qualifies for protection under the CII Act;
(B) Advise the submitting person or entity that the PCII Program
Office will review any further information provided before rendering a
final determination;
(C) Advise the submitting person or entity that the submission can
be withdrawn at any time before a final determination is made;
(D) Notify the submitting person or entity that until a final
determination is made the submission will be treated as PCII;
(E) Notify the submitting person or entity that any response to the
notification must be received by the PCII Program Office no later than
thirty calendar days after the date of the notification; and
(F) Request the submitting person or entity to state whether, in
the event the PCII Program Office makes a final determination that any
such information is not PCII, the submitting person or entity prefers
that the information be maintained without the protections of the CII
Act, returned to the submitting person or entity, or destroyed. If a
request for return is made, all such information will be returned to
the submitting person or entity.
(ii) If the information submitted has not been withdrawn by the
submitting person or entity, the PCII Program Office will return the
information to the submitter in accordance with the submitting person
or entity's written preference and the procedures set forth in
paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section within thirty calendar days of
making a final determination that the information submitted is not
eligible for protections under the CII Act. If the submitting person or
entity cannot be notified or the submitting person or entity's response
is not received within thirty calendar days of the date of the
notification as provided in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section, the
PCII Program Office will make the initial determination final and
return the information to the submitter. If return to the submitter is
impractical, the PCII Program Office will destroy the information
within thirty calendar days. This process is consistent with the
appropriate National Archives and Records Administration-approved
records disposition schedule.
(f) Categorical Inclusions of Certain Types of CII as PCII. The
PCII Program Manager has discretion to declare certain subject matter
or types of information categorically protected as PCII and to set
procedures for receipt and processing of such information. Information
within a categorical inclusion will be considered validated upon
receipt by the PCII Program Manager or any of the PCII Program
Manager's Designees without further review, provided that the submitter
provides the express statement required by Sec. 29.5(a)(3). The PCII
Program Manager's designees will provide to the PCII Program Office
information submitted under a categorical inclusion.
(g) Changing the status of PCII to non-PCII. Once information is
validated, only the PCII Program Manager may change the status of PCII
to that of non-PCII and remove its PCII markings. Status changes may
only take place when the submitting person or entity requests in
writing that the information no longer be protected under the CII Act;
or when the PCII Program Office determines that the information was, at
the time of the submission, customarily in the public domain. Upon
making an initial determination that a change in status may be
warranted, but prior to a final determination, the PCII Program Office,
using the procedures in paragraph (e)(2) of this section, will inform
the submitting person or entity of the initial determination of a
change in status. Notice of the final change in status of PCII will be
provided to all recipients of PCII received under Sec. 29.8.
Sec. 29.7 Safeguarding of PCII.
(a) Safeguarding. All persons granted access to PCII are
responsible for safeguarding such information in their possession or
control. PCII must be protected at all times by appropriate
[[Page 77977]]
storage and handling. Each person who works with PCII is personally
responsible for taking proper precautions to ensure that unauthorized
persons do not gain access to it.
(b) Background checks on persons with access to PCII. For those who
require access to PCII, CISA will, to the extent practicable and
consistent with the purposes of the CII Act, undertake appropriate
background checks to ensure that individuals with access to PCII do not
pose a threat to national security. These checks may also be waived in
exigent circumstances.
(c) Use and storage. When PCII is in the physical possession of a
person, reasonable steps must be taken, in accordance with procedures
prescribed by the PCII Program Manager, to minimize the risk of access
to PCII by unauthorized persons. When PCII is not in the physical
possession of a person, it must be stored in a secure environment.
(d) Reproduction. Pursuant to procedures prescribed by the PCII
Program Manager, a document or other material containing PCII may be
reproduced to the extent necessary and consistent with the need to
carry out official duties, provided that the reproduced documents or
material are marked and protected in the same manner as the original
documents or material.
(e) Disposal of information. Documents and material containing PCII
may be disposed of by any method that prevents unauthorized retrieval,
such as shredding or incineration.
(f) Transmission of information. PCII will be transmitted only by
secure means of delivery as determined by the PCII Program Manager, and
in conformance with appropriate federal standards.
(g) Automated Information Systems. The PCII Program Manager will
establish security requirements designed to protect information to the
maximum extent practicable, and consistent with the CII Act, for
Automated Information Systems that contain PCII. Such security
requirements will be in conformance with the information technology
security requirements in the Federal Information Security Management
Act and the Office of Management and Budget's implementing policies.
Sec. 29.8 Disclosure of PCII.
(a) Authorization of access. The Director, the Executive Assistant
Director, or either's designee may choose to provide or authorize
access to PCII under one or more of the paragraphs in this section when
it is determined that access supports a lawful and authorized
government purpose as enumerated in the CII Act or other law,
regulation, or legal authority.
(b) Federal, State, and Local government sharing. The PCII Program
Office or a PCII Program Manager's Designee may provide PCII to an
employee of the federal government, provided, subject to paragraph (f)
of this section, that such information is shared for purposes of
securing the critical infrastructure or protected systems, analysis,
warning, interdependency study, recovery, reconstitution, or for
another appropriate purpose including, without limitation, the
identification, analysis, prevention, preemption, and/or disruption of
terrorist threats to the homeland. PCII may not be used, directly or
indirectly, for any collateral regulatory purpose. PCII may be provided
to a State or Local government entity for the purpose of protecting
critical infrastructure or protected systems, or in furtherance of the
investigation or prosecution of a criminal act. The provision of PCII
to a State or Local government entity will normally be made only
pursuant to an arrangement with the PCII Program Manager providing for
compliance with the requirements of paragraph (d) of this section and
acknowledging the understanding and responsibilities of the recipient.
State and Local governments receiving such information will acknowledge
in such arrangements the primacy of PCII protections under the CII Act;
agree to assert all available legal defenses to disclosure of PCII
under State or Local public disclosure laws, statutes, or ordinances;
and will agree to treat breaches of the agreements by their employees
or contractors as matters subject to the applicable criminal code or
employee code of conduct for the jurisdiction.
(c) Disclosure of information to Federal, State, and Local
government contractors. Disclosure of PCII to Federal, State, and Local
government contractors may be made when necessary for an appropriate
purpose under the CII Act, and only after the PCII Program Manager or a
PCII Program Officer certifies that the contractor is performing
services in support of the purposes of the CII Act. The contractor's
employees who will be handling PCII must sign individual nondisclosure
agreements in a form prescribed by the PCII Program Manager, and the
contractor must agree by contract, whenever and to whatever extent
possible, to comply with all relevant requirements of the PCII Program.
The contractor must safeguard PCII in accordance with these procedures
and may not remove any ``PCII'' markings. An employee of the contractor
may, in the performance of services in support of the purposes of the
CII Act and when authorized to do so by the PCII Program Manager or a
PCII Program Manager's Designee, communicate with a submitting person
or an authorized person of a submitting entity about a submittal of
information by that person or entity. Contractors will not further
disclose PCII to any other party not already authorized to receive such
information by the PCII Program Manager or a PCII Program Manager's
Designee, without the prior written approval of the PCII Program
Manager or a PCII Program Manager's Designee.
(d) Further use or disclosure of information by State and Local
governments. (1) State and Local governments receiving information
marked ``Protected Critical Infrastructure Information'' will not share
that information with any other party not already authorized to receive
such information by the PCII Program Manager or a PCII Program
Manager's Designee, with the exception of their contractors after
complying with the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section, or
remove any PCII markings, without first obtaining authorization from
the PCII Program Manager or a PCII Program Manager's Designee, who is
responsible for requesting and obtaining written consent from the
submitter of the information.
(2) State and Local governments may use PCII only for the purpose
of protecting critical infrastructure or protected systems, or as set
forth elsewhere in these rules.
(e) Disclosure of information to appropriate entities or to the
general public. PCII may be used to prepare advisories, alerts, and
warnings to relevant companies, targeted sectors, governmental
entities, ISAOs, or the general public regarding potential threats and
vulnerabilities to critical infrastructure as appropriate pursuant to
the CII Act. Unless exigent circumstances require otherwise, any such
warnings to the general public will be authorized by the Secretary of
the Department of Homeland Security, the Director, the Executive
Assistant Director for Infrastructure Security of CISA, or the
Executive Assistant Director for Cybersecurity of CISA. Such exigent
circumstances exist only when approval of the Secretary, the Director,
the Executive Assistant Director for Infrastructure Security for CISA,
or the Executive Assistant Director for Cybersecurity for CISA cannot
be obtained within a reasonable time necessary to issue an effective
advisory,
[[Page 77978]]
alert, or warning. In issuing advisories, alerts, and warnings, DHS
will consider the exigency of the situation, the extent of possible
harm to the public or to critical infrastructure, and the necessary
scope of the advisory, alert, or warning; and take appropriate actions
to protect from disclosure any information that is proprietary,
business sensitive, relates specifically to or might be used to
identify the submitting person or entity or any persons or entities on
whose behalf the CII was submitted, or is not otherwise appropriately
in the public domain. Depending on the exigency of the circumstances,
DHS may consult or cooperate with the submitter in making such
advisories, alerts, or warnings.
(f) Disclosure for law enforcement purposes and communication with
submitters; access by Congress, the Comptroller General, and the
Inspector General; and whistleblower protection.
(1) Exceptions for disclosure.
(i) PCII will not, without the written consent of the person or
entity submitting such information, be used or disclosed for purposes
other than the purposes of the CII Act, except:
(A) In furtherance of the investigation or prosecution of a
criminal act by the federal government, or by a State, Local, or
foreign government, when such disclosure is coordinated by a federal
law enforcement official;
(B) To communicate with a submitting person or an authorized person
on behalf of a submitting entity, about a submittal of information by
that person or entity when authorized to do so by the PCII Program
Manager or a PCII Program Manager's Designee; or
(C) When disclosure of the information is made by any officer or
employee of the United States;
(1) To either House of Congress, or to the extent of matter within
its jurisdiction, any committee or subcommittee thereof, any joint
committee thereof or subcommittee of any such joint committee; or
(2) To the Comptroller General, or any authorized representative of
the Comptroller General, in the course of the performance of the duties
of the Government Accountability Office.
(ii) If any officer or employee of the United States makes any
disclosure pursuant to these exceptions, contemporaneous written
notification must be provided to CISA through the PCII Program Manager.
(2) Consistent with the authority to disclose information for any
of the purposes of the CII Act, disclosure of PCII may be made, without
the written consent of the person or entity submitting such
information, to the DHS Office of Inspector General.
(g) Responding to requests made under the Freedom of Information
Act or State and Local government information access laws. PCII will be
treated as exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act
and any State or Local government law requiring disclosure of records
or information. Any Federal, State, or Local government agency with
questions regarding the protection of PCII from public disclosure must
contact the PCII Program Office, who will in turn consult with the CISA
Office of the Chief Counsel.
(h) Ex parte communications with decision-making officials.
Pursuant to 6 U.S.C. 673(a)(1)(B), PCII is not subject to any agency
rules or judicial doctrine regarding ex parte communications with a
decision-making official.
(i) Restriction on use of PCII in civil actions. Pursuant to 6
U.S.C. 673(a)(1)(C), PCII will not, without the written consent of the
person or entity submitting such information, be used directly by any
Federal, State, or Local authority, or by any third party, in any civil
action arising under Federal, State, or Local law.
Sec. 29.9 Investigation and reporting of violation of PCII
procedures.
(a) Reporting of possible violations. Persons authorized to have
access to PCII must report any suspected violation of security
procedures, the loss or misplacement of PCII, and any suspected
unauthorized disclosure of PCII immediately to the PCII Program Manager
or a PCII Program Manager's Designee. Suspected violations may also be
reported to the DHS Office of Inspector General. The PCII Program
Manager or a PCII Program Manager's Designee will in turn report the
incident to the appropriate security officer and to the DHS Office of
Inspector General.
(b) Review and investigation of written report. The PCII Program
Manager, or the appropriate security officer must notify the DHS Office
of Inspector General of their intent to investigate any alleged
violation of procedures, loss of information, and/or unauthorized
disclosure, prior to initiating any such investigation. Evidence of
wrongdoing resulting from any such investigations by agencies other
than the DHS Inspector General must be reported to the United States
Department of Justice, Criminal Division, through the CISA Office of
the Chief Counsel. The DHS Office of Inspector General also has
authority to conduct such investigations and will report any evidence
of wrongdoing to the United States Department of Justice, Criminal
Division, for consideration of prosecution.
(c) Notification to originator of PCII. If the PCII Program Manager
or the appropriate security officer determines that a loss of
information or an unauthorized disclosure of PCII has occurred, the
PCII Program Manager or a PCII Program Manager's Designee must notify
the person or entity that submitted the PCII, unless providing such
notification could reasonably be expected to hamper the relevant
investigation or adversely affect any other law enforcement, national
security, or homeland security interest.
(d) Criminal and administrative penalties. (1) As established in 6
U.S.C. 673(f), whoever, being an officer or employee of the United
States or of any department or agency thereof, knowingly publishes,
divulges, discloses, or makes known in any manner or to any extent not
authorized by law, any information protected from disclosure by the CII
Act coming to the officer or employee in the course of his or her
employment or official duties or by reason of any examination or
investigation made by, or return, report, or record made to or filed
with, such department or agency or officer or employee thereof, shall
be fined under title 18 of the United States Code, imprisoned not more
than one year, or both, and shall be removed from office or employment.
(2) In addition to the penalties set forth in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, if the PCII Program Manager determines that an entity or
person who has received PCII has violated the provisions of this part
or used PCII for an inappropriate purpose, the PCII Program Manager may
disqualify that entity or person from future receipt of any PCII or
future receipt of any sensitive homeland security information under 6
U.S.C. 482, provided, however, that any such decision by the PCII
Program Manager may be appealed to the Director.
Alejandro Mayorkas,
Secretary, Department of Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2022-27171 Filed 12-20-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110-9P-P
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</html>Indexed from Federal Register on December 21, 2022.
This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.