The Homeland Security Department nearly doubled its 2013 funding request for cybersecurity in an otherwise slimmed-down budget.
There is bipartisan support for improving computer network defenses, so the outlook may be positive for obtaining much of the proposed $769 million from Congress. The funding would go toward the National Cyber Security Division for protecting federal networks and coordinating with the private sector on safeguarding critical infrastructure systems such as utility grids.
In 2011, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano asked for $459 for the division. The Infrastructure Protection and Programs Directorate, which oversees the program and other cyber-related initiatives, also would be boosted from $888.2 million in estimated spending this year to $1.2 billion in fiscal 2013. By comparison, the Pentagon has asked for only a $200 million increase over last year's $3.2 billion cyber request.
"Essential services, ranging from disaster assistance to Social Security to national defense . . . rely on a safe, secure and resilient government information and communications infrastructure," President Obama stated in his budget. "Threats to this infrastructure -- whether from criminal elements or nation-states -- continue to grow in number and sophistication, creating the potential that essential services could be degraded or interrupted, and confidential information stolen or compromised, with serious effects."
The Secret Service computer crime squad, a Homeland Security unit, would receive $55 million, or 4 percent, over this year's request.
In addition, Homeland Security wants $10 million for online piracy probes, amid a fierce global debate between the entertainment industry and Internet companies over how to monitor the Web for intellectual property theft.
Overall, Napolitano would reign over a smaller department in 2013, with spending down $191 million, or 0.5 percent, from this year's enacted level.
The total $39.5 billion budget proposes slicing $155 million from the Transportation Security Administration, including cuts to screening operations. It would subtract $105 million for the purchase and installation of explosives detection systems, providing $117 million versus $223 million this year.
See more at: http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20120213_7454.php?oref=topstory
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