How critical US sectors are coping with rising cyberattacks

The rise in cyberattacks this year has forced many companies in critical sectors to make improvements to their cyber defenses in an effort to secure their networks from hacks.

Such companies are increasing their investments in cybersecurity and seeking to hire more cyber professionals — a task proving to be challenging amid a shortage of cyber workers across industries. 

The Hill spoke to several security experts and industry leaders in the financial, health care and energy sectors to gauge how those critical industries are seeking to keep their networks secure amid the growing number of cyberattacks.

In the health care sector, which has seen a spike in ransomware this year targeting hospitals and other health care facilities, Christopher Plummer, a senior cybersecurity architect at Dartmouth Health, said having a cybersecurity program is crucial for hospitals, as they hold sensitive information — including patient data. 

But he estimated that only about 10 to 20 percent of the nation’s hospitals have a dedicated cybersecurity program.

A recent report from Kroll, an investigation and risk consulting firm, found a 90 percent increase in the number of attacks against health care organizations in the second quarter of this year compared to the first quarter. 

With cyberattacks increasing, the sector has had to increase its resources to fund cybersecurity programs and hire more cyber professionals to work on securing its networks and systems from attacks. 

“I think many HDOs [health delivery organizations] just don’t know exactly where they’re supposed to be in terms of human resources when it comes to cybersecurity — they just know they need people,” Plummer said. 

The pandemic has also put a strain on a sector that “was already in a very tough place with respect to security resources,” said Plummer.

The surge in attacks has also led lawmakers to urge the Biden administration to strengthen the federal government’s cyber defenses in the sector. 

In a letter addressed to the Department of Health and Human Services, Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) and Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) last month urged the agency to better protect the health care and public health sector from the growing number of cyber threats.  

“Ransomware attacks on the [health care and public health] sector have skyrocketed in the past two years as opportunistic criminals recognized that hospitals may pay quickly to resolve issues and protect patient safety,” the lawmakers said in the letter. 

“We remain concerned, however, about the lack of robust and timely sharing of actionable threat information with industry partners and the need to dramatically scale up the Department’s capabilities and resources. With cyber threats growing exponentially, we must prioritize addressing the HPH sector’s cybersecurity gaps.” 

By comparison, the financial industry has traditionally been ahead of other sectors when it comes to having a robust cybersecurity system. 

“Given that financial services rely on customer trust for its business and has long been highly regulated, the sector is more mature than many others in terms of cybersecurity and preparedness,” said Teresa Walsh, the global head of intelligence for the Financial Services Information Sharing and Analysis Center. 

But the industry has also recently faced a wave of cyberattacks: In particular, the cryptocurrency sector has been a high interest target this year as hackers found ways to steal millions of dollars in virtual currency. 

Over the summer, two crypto firms said hackers stole more than $100 million worth of digital currency. The companies said at the time that they were partnering up with law enforcement to try to track down the hackers and retrieve the stolen funds. 

The hacks also led the Treasury Department to impose sanctions in August against cryptocurrency mixer Tornado Cash for helping hackers launder more than $7 billion worth of virtual currency. 

The agency said Tornado Cash allowed cyber groups, including North Korean-backed hackers, to use its platform to launder the proceeds of cybercrimes. 

Amid such attacks, David Roque, senior vice president at USI Insurance Services, an insurance brokerage and consulting firm, said he’s seen “clients allocating higher funds for security.” 

Roque added that financial services, particularly those in the crypto sector, are also looking to purchase cyber insurance to cover costs associated with data breaches and other types of cyberattacks. 

“There’s been a heightened amount of interest from a lot of our clients when it comes to cyber liability,” Roque said, adding that many of his clients in the crypto sector are not covered. 

Walsh said that more resources in the industry are also being invested in business continuity, disaster recovery and other resilience practices. 

“As in many industries, the thinking has broadened from focusing primarily on cybersecurity and defense to include strategic focus on cyber resilience or ensuring continuity of operations even in the face of an attack,” Walsh said. 

According to a 2020 Deloitte study, financial services spent about 10 percent of their annual IT budget on cybersecurity, with such spending amounting to about $2,700 per full-time employee.

Walsh added that like many other sectors, the financial industry is facing a cybersecurity talent shortage. She said one way to fix the talent gap is for companies to broaden the pool of candidates they consider. Instead of only focusing on specific backgrounds and the number of years of experience, she said employers should also look into more diverse candidates and promising entry-level applicants.  

Along with the financial and health care industries, the energy sector has also faced rising cyber threats.

Last year, the Colonial Pipeline was hit by a disruptive ransomware attack forcing it to shut down operations for nearly a week. The incident caused gas shortages in several states as fuel prices spiked. 

“This is a huge challenge worldwide,” said Suzanne Lemieux, director of operations security and emergency response at the American Petroleum Industry, referring to the rise of cyberattacks. 

Lemieux added that the oil and gas industry has made significant investments to shore up its cyber defenses following the Colonial Pipeline attack.  

Investments were also made in education as well as cross-training cyber workers so they can learn different skill sets, allowing them to be more flexible in the type of work they do. 

Lemieux said cross-training also helps with retention, which is beneficial, especially in an industry that has a labor shortage of cyber workers.   

“In this market today, if you’re not cyber secure you’re not going to be in the market for long,” Lemieux said. 

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Zelensky: Ukrainian nuclear power plant 'one step away from a radiation disaster'

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned that a nuclear power plant is “one step away from a radiation disaster” because Russian shelling damaged one of its power transmission lines on Monday.

“Today the last power transmission line connecting the plant to the energy system of Ukraine was damaged due to another Russian provocative shelling. Again — this is the second time — due to Russian provocation, the Zaporizhzhia plant is one step away from a radiation disaster,” Zelensky said during a presidential address.

“I consider the fact that Russia is doing this right now, right on the eve of the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency] conclusions, very eloquent. Shelling the territory of the ZNPP [Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant] means that the terrorist state does not care what the IAEA says, it does not care what the international community decides. Russia is interested only in keeping the situation the worst for the longest time possible,” he continued.

The Ukrainian president urged the international community to recognize Moscow as a terrorist state and to bolster sanctions against it. 

The IAEA separately issued an update on Monday saying that Ukraine had reached out to the agency to let the IAEA know that a backup power line, connected in part to the ZNPP, needed to be disconnected in order to address a fire but that there were no damages.

The developments come as two IAEA experts are set to remain on-site to monitor the nuclear power plant as the Russian military has shelled the Zaporizhzhia plant for the last month, creating fears of a possible nuclear incident.

“Director General [Raphael Mariano] Grossi will on Tuesday issue a report about the nuclear safety, security and safeguards situation in Ukraine – including the findings from the mission to the ZNPP – and later the same day brief the United Nations Security Council about the mission to the plant,” the IAEA said in its update. 

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Canadian police charge stabbing suspects with murder as manhunt continues

Canadian police on Monday charged two men suspected of fatally stabbing 10 people and wounding another 18 with first-degree murder as a massive manhunt for the pair continues.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in the province of Saskatchewan, where the stabbings occurred on Sunday, identified the suspects as Damien Sanderson, 31, and Myles Sanderson, 30.

Damien Sanderson is charged with one count of first-degree murder, one count of attempted murder and one count of breaking and entering, RCMP said in a news release.

Myles Sanderson is charged with three counts of first-degree murder, one count of attempted murder and one count of breaking and entering.

A warrant has been issued for their arrest and more charges are forthcoming, police said.

Both suspects remain at large after fleeing from the crime scenes at James Smith Cree Nation, an indigenous reserve, and the village of Weldon. They were last seen in the provincial capital of Regina.

RCMP Commanding Officer Assistant Commissioner Rhonda Blackmore in a video address asked for the community’s help in finding the suspects.

“We are undertaking every effort to locate them as quickly as possible,” Blackmore said. “To those of you who have lost a loved one, our hearts ache and break for you.”

Police received the first report of a stabbing around 5:40 a.m. on Sunday. The suspects allegedly attacked the victims at 13 different locations.

RCMP said Damien Sanderson is 5-foot-7, 155 pounds and has black hair and brown eyes. Myles Sanderson is 6-foot-1 and 240 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. They were last seen driving a Black Nissan Rogue.

Blackmore said in a statement that hundreds of law enforcement personnel were working aggressively to apprehend the suspects.

“To the people of Saskatchewan and beyond, please be assured that we are using every human, investigational and technological resource we have available to locate and arrest the persons responsible for this tragedy and to ensure your safety,” she said.

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Newsom signs bill aimed at creating standards for fast food working conditions in California

California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) on Monday signed legislation aimed at creating standards for working conditions for the fast food industry in the state. 

Newsom signed a bill on Labor Day that includes the creation of a 10-member Fast Food Council, all of whom will be appointed by Newsom and other state lawmakers. The council will establish standards on things such as working hours and wages. 

“California is committed to ensuring that the men and women who have helped build our world-class economy are able to share in the state’s prosperity,” Newsom said in a statement.

“Today’s action gives hardworking fast-food workers a stronger voice and seat at the table to set fair wages and critical health and safety standards across the industry. I’m proud to sign this legislation on Labor Day when we pay tribute to the workers who keep our state running as we build a stronger, more inclusive economy for all Californians.”

The bill was lauded by state politicians and groups alike.

“ICYMI: @CAGovernor has signed landmark labor legislation #AB257 into law, setting the bar for giving workers a say in their wages and empowering them to shape industry standards   @ChrisHoldenNews @Fightfor15LA @NorCalFF15 #CALeg,” tweeted SEIU California, whose local unions include janitors, health care workers and others.

“Thank you @GavinNewsom for signing this landmark bill standing up for workers rights and worker dignity. It can be a model for the country. Thank you to @SEIU workers for your tireless advocacy,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) tweeted.

Newsom has been widely floated as a possible 2024 Democratic candidate for president, though he has not formally announced any plans. He has prompted more speculation in recent months after he started running ads in Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantsi (R) has been floated as a possible GOP presidential candidate, saying “Don’t let them take your freedom.”  

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Maryland County to enforce juvenile curfew after deadliest month in decades

Police and local officials in a Maryland county near Washington, D.C., on Monday announced a curfew for youth after a spate of violent crimes in the community and a homicide count that reached a three-decade high last month.

For at least 30 days starting this weekend, Prince George’s County will implement a curfew for those under 17 years old from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and 11:59 p.m. and 5 a.m. Friday and Saturday unless they are accompanied by an adult. The curfew is enforced through fines.

Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks said at a news conference that there have been more than 350 carjackings this year, compared to 91 in 2019.

She argued there is a problem with the system when police are “arresting and re-arresting the same children” who she said are out committing crimes at 3 a.m.

“At this point these kids don’t just need a hug, they also need to be held accountable,” the county executive said. “They must be held accountable.”

The news conference was held after August saw 24 homicides, the single deadliest month for the Maryland county in about three decades, according to police.

On Sunday, an 18-month-old girl was shot twice in Glenn Dale, NBC Washington reported. The child survived but suffered critical injuries, authorities said.

Besides the curfew, Alsobrooks said she is working to tackle the challenge from other angles, including through funding mental health programs at schools and a summer jobs program.

“This is just one tool in the toolbox,” she said of the curfew. “I cannot stand by and continue to watch children who were shot and killed — [and children] who are not only committing crimes but harming others — and do nothing about it.”

In February, the county executive announced officials were working more closely with the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) in Washington, D.C., to identify repeat offenders.

Law enforcement says violent crime has risen across the country, jumping from roughly 380 per 100,000 people in 2019 to about 398 per 100,000 people in 2020, according to the FBI. Data for 2021 is set to come out this fall.

In Prince George’s County, police have investigated 80 killings this year, although there were 89 homicides last year.

Police have also responded to 211 non-fatal shootings so far this year, compared to 209 last year.

Police have recovered more than 1,000 firearms in 2022 and arrested around 2,700 offenders in connection to gun-related crimes.

Prince George’s County Police Chief Malik Aziz spoke in support of the curfew on Monday, saying violent criminals “should not be allowed to reoffend and further victimize our residents.”

“No one should have to tolerate living in fear and being a victim of crime in your own neighborhood,” Aziz said.

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Biden shows support for unions, touts legislative victories at Wisconsin labor event

President Biden expressed his support for labor unions and boasted about Democratic legislative victories during a Wisconsin labor event just two months ahead of the November midterms. 

Speaking at Milwaukee’s Laborfest event, the president said Labor Day is “a special day to me as well, because the fact of the matter here is I wouldn’t be here without unions! Unions. Electricians, iron workers … teamsters, laborers, bricklayers, transit workers, plumbers and pipefitters, steel workers.”

He also said union support that helped propel him to the Senate years ago, saying that “union labor endorsed me and fought for me.”

Biden also continued his attacks against “MAGA Republicans,” referring to former President Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign slogan.

Borrowing language from his Thursday speech in Pennsylvania, Biden said that “Not every Republican is a MAGA Republican. Not every Republican embraces that extreme ideology. I know because I’ve been able to work with mainstream Republicans my whole career. But the extreme MAGA Republicans in Congress have chosen to go backwards, full of anger, violence, hate and division.”

Biden on Thursday delivered remarks from Independence Hall in which he portrayed Republicans aligned with Trump as a threat to democracy and many rights.

Those who attended the Monday labor event included Gov. Tony Evers (D), Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) and President of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) Liz Shuler. 

Biden also used the event in a swing state with a crucial Senate race to tout a number of his administration’s legislative victories, including a coronavirus relief package; the bill he signed last month to fuel investments in domestic semiconductor manufacturing and scientific research; and aspects of the sweeping health, tax and climate reconciliation package.

Wisconsin will hold two closely watched contests in November for governor and Senate. Democrats are hopeful they can unseat Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), who is considered one of the most vulnerable Senate Republicans fighting for another term. 

A Fox News poll released last month found 49 percent of Wisconsin voters backing Barnes while 45 percent supported Johnson. The polling falls within the margin of error, effectively tying the two. 

“For decades, Big Pharma tried to block giving lower drug prices for those on Medicare or anywhere else. For decades, Big Pharma won year in year out because they own chunks of the Congress. Because they had the help, like your senior senator, Ron Johnson, who said,” Biden said to boos after saying Johnson’s name.

“I want to say what he said,” Biden continued. “He said he opposed lowering drug costs because we result in punishing the pharmaceutical industry. Bless me, Father, for I have sinned. I mean, come on man.”

Biden was referring to an interview Johnson did with Fox News host Brian Kilameade in August. Kilameade asked Johnson about his thoughts on Medicare being allowed to bid on pharmaceutical prices, alleging the pharmaceutical industry and innovation would be negatively affected. The Democratic reconciliation package will allow some drug prices to be negotiated by Medicare. 

“When you start punishing the pharmaceutical industry, you’re going to have less innovation, you’re going to have fewer life-saving drugs. That’s not a good thing,” Johnson commented at one point. 

Source: TEST FEED1

Watch live: Biden delivers Labor Day speech at Pittsburgh-area union hall

President Biden will make his second stop of Labor Day at the United Steelworkers union hall in the Pittsburgh suburb of West Mifflin, Pa.

The event is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m.

Watch the live video above.

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Biden responds to heckler at speech: 'Everybody's entitled to be an idiot'

President Biden responded to a heckler while delivering remarks in Milwaukee on Monday, saying, “Everybody’s entitled to be an idiot.”

Biden traveled to Wisconsin on Labor Day to deliver a speech at Milwaukee Laborfest, where he spoke about his support for unions and lauded Democratic legislative victories such as last year’s coronavirus relief package and a bill to invest in domestic semiconductor manufacturing that he signed into law last month. 

At one point, someone in the audience could be heard trying to disrupt the speech.

“No, no, no, don’t — let him go. He’s, look, everybody’s entitled to be an idiot,” Biden said. It was not immediately clear what prompted the heckling or what the person was saying.

Biden also responded to protesters while delivering a prime-time speech at Independence Hall in Philadelphia on Thursday. Hecklers shouted “F Joe Biden” and the anti-Biden phrase “Let’s go, Brandon.”

“They’re entitled to be outrageous. This is a democracy,” Biden said during that speech, also saying, “Good manners is nothing they’ve ever suffered from.”

Biden’s stop in Wisconsin comes two months ahead of the November midterms. Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) and Democratic Senate nominee Mandela Barnes are gearing up for high-profile contests against Republican gubernatorial candidate Tim Michels and Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), respectively. 

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Russia sanctions 25 more Americans, including US officials and actors

Russia on Monday banned 25 more Americans from entering the country, including Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, multiple U.S. senators and actors Ben Stiller and Sean Penn.

The additions, which brings the total number of Americans banned from entering Russia to 1,073, are in response to U.S. sanctions on Russians following the country’s invasion of Ukraine, Russia’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

In addition to Raimondo, Russia’s newest sanctions target multiple senior Commerce Department officials, including Deputy Secretary Don Graves and two assistant secretaries.

The list also includes six senators: Sens. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.). Russia had previously sanctioned more than a dozen other sitting senators.

Russia also on Monday banned from entering the country actors Sean Penn and Ben Stiller, both of whom visited Ukraine during the war.

Penn was in Ukraine in February to film a documentary as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s forces moved in, and he met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on the eve of the invasion.

“I do know that we have to invest everything that we have to support the Ukrainian people and to support President Zelensky, or I do not think we will have a legitimate memory of what America hopes to be,” the “Milk” star told CNN’s Anderson Cooper during a March interview.

Stiller met with Zelensky in late June in connection with his role as global goodwill ambassador to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees.

“It’s one thing to see this destruction on TV or on social networks. Another thing is to see it all with your own eyes,” Stiller said during the visit. “That’s a lot more shocking.”

Russia’s latest round of sanctions also included multiple private-sector executives at firms like geospatial analytics company HawkEye 360 and fertilizer manufacturer CF Industries.

The sanctions also include people working at NGOs and nonprofits, like former Rep. Tom Perriello (D-Va.), the executive director of Open Societies, a grant-making organization chaired by Democratic megadonor George Soros. 

“The hostile actions of the American authorities, which continue to follow a Russophobic course, destroying bilateral ties and escalating confrontation between Russia and the United States, will continue to be resolutely rebuffed,” Russia’s statement announcing the sanctions read.

The Biden administration has imposed multiple rounds of financial sanctions and visa restrictions on wealthy Russians, Kremlin-linked individuals and Russian financial institutions to increase pressure on the Kremlin amid its war in Ukraine.

Source: TEST FEED1

2022 is the most promising Labor Day for unions in several decades

This is an unusually promising Labor Day for American unions — maybe the most hopeful for many decades — for several reasons. 

First, the annual Gallup poll released last week showed a 71 percent public approval rate for unions – the highest level since 1965. The sky-high approval rate is even more remarkable given the organizational weakness of organized labor. Unions currently represent just 10.3 percent of the American workforce.

Second, there’s a mini-organizing wave — driven by worker-organizers, not full-time union officials — taking place across the low-wage service sector. Most notably, workers at 235 Starbucks stores have voted to unionize since Starbucks Workers United historic first victories in Buffalo, N.Y., last December; the independent Amazon Labor Union (ALU) won at a Staten Island warehouse with 8000 workers in AprilApple retail store workers in Towson, Md., formed the company’s first union in June, as did Trader Joe’s workers in Massachusetts and MinneapolisREI workers in New York City and Berkeley, and  Chipotle workers in Lansing, Mich. There hasn’t been this much excitement around labor activism in low-wage, non-union sectors of the economy for decades.

Third, the number of workers — often young, progressive, college-educated working-class — talking union continues to grow by the weekcultural (museum and gallery) workers, non-profit workers, digital media workers, video game designers and even Facebook workers.

But the news isn’t all positive. There’s a huge disconnect between the energy and enthusiasm for union among young workers versus national union membership trends. Because of weak laws and strong employer opposition, national union membership rates have been falling for decades. Private sector union density was just 6.1 percent in 2021.

Moreover, when you think about what it would take to bring about union revival, and consider all the factors that have contributed to union decline — globalization, automation, new employment forms such as gig work, deregulation, non-union domestic competition, changes in the structure of corporate governance and so on — meaningful revival seems virtually impossible. But the current moment offers some hope.

Grassroots Campaigns Key to Sparking Organizing and winning Labor Law Reform 

I have long believed that the current wave of “self-organization” is the only possible way that meaningful union revival could happen in the United States. The Starbucks and Amazon union campaigns have excited young workers and made them believe that organizing is possible, even in the face of ferocious union busting by the wealthiest corporations. 

Moreover, this kind of grassroots organizing is the only way we’re likely to gain stronger labor laws. Survey evidence shows that almost half of non-union workers would like to have union representation but strong employer opposition and weak legal protection for the right to choose a union means they are unlikely to get it. But we’ll never get labor law reform unless the public understands the issues, cares about them, and feels it has a stake in the outcome.  

Consider the campaign for the Employee Free Choice Act, the failed effort to strengthen the right to choose a union during the early days of the Obama administration. I left my academic job at the London School of Economics and took a position as research director at the University of California Berkeley Labor Center at that time in large part because I believed it possible that unions could win labor law reform. But, on reflection, EFCA likely never stood a chance: it was a quiescent period in union organizing, no one was paying attention to the issue — one could never meet anyone who had even heard of EFCA unless they had a professional interest — and President Obama didn’t lift a finger to help it; but his lack of meaningful action was inevitable given the first two issues.

Today, in contrast, we have dynamic organizing campaigns at Starbucks, Amazon and several others; many more people are paying attention to union issues than has been true for decades — in large part because of the incredible traditional and social media coverage generated by those campaigns — and we have a White House whose occupant wants to be remembered as the “most pro-union President in history.” Those factors won’t be enough to win labor law reform, but without them, unions don’t stand a chance: their allies will never be able to force labor reform through the Senate while no one is looking, so to speak, because the corporate lobby will always be stronger than the union lobby and will always have sufficient votes to block it.   

Something’s Happening Here…. 

We don’t know what the legacy of the current union moment will be; it could yet all go up in a puff of smoke, but that doesn’t mean that there’s not something historic happening. As a result of the inspirational campaigns at Starbucks and Amazon, unions have overcome the parochialism that has always defined them, even in their heyday, and entered the media mainstream. Union issues have become a matter of general interest. Throughout the country young workers are excited about labor activism — and much of this grassroots activism among younger workers is happening despite the national labor movement, not because of it. The organizing dynamism is coming from below, not above.  

Starbucks Union is the Best Model Yet for Union Revival 

Starbucks Workers United provides the best model for how the established labor movement can interact with the young, insurgents who want to organize in the low-wage service sector and beyond; it has also developed a replicable model that has resulted in 235 unionized stores at a ferociously anti-union superstar corporation — a unique achievement in the history of U.S unions. 

The best hope for any meaningful union revival in the United States is that next Labor Day we have dozens more Starbucks Workers United style of organizing campaigns. 

John Logan is professor and director of Labor and Employment Studies at San Francisco State University. 

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