BIA begins phased reconnection to the Internet
A federal judge has ruled that FISMA effectively cancels a 2001 court order that prohibited the Bureau of Indian Affairs from connecting to the Internet without the court’s consent.
A federal judge, lifting a court order that lasted nearly seven years, has told the Bureau of Indian Affairs it can reconnect employees’ desktop PCs to the Internet. The judge ruled that federal law — the Federal Information Security Management Act of 2002 — effectively cancels a 2001 court order that prohibited BIA from connecting to the Internet without the court’s consent.
The May 14 ruling came in a long-running class-action suit brought against the Interior Department for allegedly mishandling Indian trust records. The ruling means that BIA and employees in four other offices affected by the court order can get back to normal: They will no longer have to leave their desks to do work on a limited number of Internet access computers set up without connections to the department’s internal computer networks.
“We’ve been anticipating this [ruling] for a long time,” said Michael Howell, Interior’s chief information officer. The department’s plans for reconnecting BIA and four other offices have been sitting on a shelf waiting for the disconnection order to be lifted, Howell said.
“We have a very detailed recconnection plan that we’re executing now,” he said.
The reconnection order, which affects about 10,000 employees in hundreds of locations nationwide, will permit the Office of the Special Trustee, the Office of Historical Trust Accounting, the Office of Hearing Appeals and the Office of the Solicitor, in addition to BIA, to reconnect to the Internet. Howell said it will take a couple of months to complete the phased reconnection plan.
Cobell v. Kempthorne
NEXT STORY: Input opens contract library to the public