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GAO REPORT: GOVERNMENT'S IDENTITY THEFT EFFORTS
LACKING -- Most of the two dozen federal agencies
examined
had not implemented five federal recommendations
aimed at protecting personal information.

For complete information on VA data theft issues,
click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/va%20data%20theft%20news.htm
Full GAO report here...
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d08343.pdf
Report highlights here...
http://www.gao.gov/highlights/d08343high.pdf
Report summary here...
http://www.g
ao.gov/docsearch/abstract.php?rptno=GAO-08-343
Today's story here...
http://ap.google.com/article/A
LeqM5iu_CHebo7JgbnwGmsXxUKxLGI14gD8UVFMK01
Story below:
-------------------------
Report: Identity Theft Efforts Lacking
By FREDERIC J. FROMMER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly two years after an embarrassing flap in which
veterans' personal information was put at risk of identity theft, federal
agencies are still not doing all they can to prevent further lapses,
investigators have found.
Most of the two dozen federal agencies examined by the Government
Accountability Office, Congress' investigative arm, had not implemented
five federal recommendations aimed at protecting personal information.
Only two agencies — the Treasury and Transportation departments — met each
of those recommendations. Two others — the Small Business Administration
and the National Science Foundation — had met none of them, the GAO found.
The other 18 agencies met the recommendations to varying degrees.
Article continues below:
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The recommendations were among those issued by
the White House Office of Management and Budget following the 2006 VA
incident, when a computer hard drive containing millions of names, Social
Security numbers and birth dates was stolen from a VA employee's home in
Maryland. The hard drive was later recovered intact.
A spokesman for the Small Business Administration, Sean Rushton, said
Friday his agency has implemented all five recommendations since the GAO
did its review.
The National Science Foundation had no immediate comment on the report
Friday morning.
"The findings released in this report are very troubling — indicating that
agency after agency has failed to make securing citizens' personal
information a high priority," said Sen. Norm Coleman, a Minnesota
Republican, who asked for the GAO report along with Rep. Susan Davis, D-Calif.
"The clock is ticking and we need to know when the agencies are going to
have the protections in place to stop the numerous data breaches we have
seen over the past few years," he said.
Coleman, the ranking Republican on the Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations, and Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, the ranking Republican on
the Homeland Security Committee, wrote to the agencies asking them how
soon they'd be able to implement the recommendations.
"The federal government collects and stores large amounts of personal
information that is a tempting target for identity thieves," Collins said.
"Agencies cannot act quickly enough to implement policies to help protect
and secure this sensitive data."
Coleman and Davis asked for the report after the 2006 VA incident. A
separate GAO report last September found that the VA had yet to implement
several safety measures.
In the new report, the GAO looked at OMB recommendations such as
encrypting data on mobile computers and other devices that carry agency
data; and using a checklist to protect personally identifiable information
that is accessed remotely or physically transported outside the agency.
Only four agencies met that last recommendation. The VA was not one of
them, but it did meet the other four recommendations.
"VA is committed to ensuring the personal information of our veterans is
secured," VA spokesman Matt Smith said in a statement. "We are continually
enhancing our protections and welcome opportunities to improve."
Karen Evans, OMB's administrator for e-government and information
technology, said in a statement: "OMB continues to work with the agencies
and monitor their progress in addressing the recommendations of the
president's Identity Theft Task Force. We are working to ensure that
agencies have the proper security controls in place to minimize and
prevent risks to the public's information."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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