Coast Guard said to fall short on IT security

The Coast Guard did not make large-scale progress last year to fix more than 40 weaknesses in information technology security that pertains to its financial systems, auditors have found.

The Coast Guard showed little progress in 2007 in correcting more than 40 weaknesses in its information technology security that pertains to its financial systems, according to a recent audit. Auditors found 42 IT-related control deficiencies, of which 40 were repeated deficiencies, either partially or fully, from the year before. The 52-page IT Management Letter with that conclusion was released by KPMG LLP auditing firm as part of the 2007 Homeland Security Department Financial Systems Audit. Among the problems the audit found:In general, problems were found with excessive access to financial applications, too few controls on processes to change applications, completeness of personnel background checks, weaknesses in patch management for software, and lack of testing for system recovery after a disaster, the report said. “Several significant and serious IT general control weaknesses remain that collectively limit Coast Guard's ability to ensure that critical financial and operational data is maintained in a manner to ensure confidentiality, integrity, and availability,” KPMG wrote.








  • Thirteen outside contractors were foreign nationals with sensitive IT security positions who did not have appropriate waivers from DHS;



  • System change requests from the Coast Guard’s Personnel Service Center were not always being appropriately documented;



  • A major financial application was not properly certified and accredited in compliance with departmental policies.





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