This is historical material, "frozen in time." The web site is no longer updated and links to external web sites and some internal pages will not work.
The Clinton Administration continues its aggressive support for
protecting our critical infrastructures through the budget process.
President Clinton has increased funding on critical infrastructure
substantially over the past three years, including a 15% increase in the
FY2000 request of $2.0 billion over last year's $1.75 billion
appropriation. This includes an increase from $451 million to $606
million in funding for research and development. The President has also
developed and funded new initiatives to defend the nation's computer
systems from malicious cyber activity. The Administration has developed
and provided full or pilot funding for the following key initiatives
designed to protect the federal government's computer systems:
Establishing a Federal Cyber Services Training and Education
initiative led by OPM and NSF, which will fund a Bachelor's or
Master's-level education in information security in exchange for a
commitment to enter federal service; and a program to establish
competencies and certify our existing IT workforce. ($25 million)
Establishing a permanent Expert Review Team (ERT) at the Commerce
Department's NIST that will help agencies conduct vulnerability analyses
and develop CIP plans. ($5 million)
Designing a Federal Intrusion Detection Network (FIDNET) to protect
vital systems in Federal civilian agencies, and to ensure the rapid
implementation of system "patches" for known software defects. ($10
million)
Funding 7 Public Key Infrastructure Models pilot programs in FY2001
at different federal agencies. ($7 million)
Expanding Federal research and development investments in computer
security by more then 32% in the FY2001 budget. ($606 million)
Establishing an Institute for Information Infrastructure Protection
that will combine federal and private efforts to fill key gaps in
critical infrastructure research and development. ($50 million)
In addition, the President announced that he has requested a $9 million
supplemental appropriation for FY2000 to jump-start several of these
important cyber programs before the start of the new fiscal year. This
will fund:
$4 million to establish the Institute for Information
Infrastructure Protection;
$2 million for the FIDNET Joint Program Office;
$2 million for the Federal Cyber Service programs; and
$1 million for the establishment of an Expert Review Team at NIST.