Aging technology and a growing threat of cyberattacks on Minnesotans’ private data are reasons the state should spend another $125 million to update and protect its IT systems, according to Gov. Mark Dayton and his administration.
“Our technology systems are the lifeblood of how we keep government running,” said Thomas Baden, Minnesota IT Services commissioner, at a Tuesday news conference. “Millions of Minnesotans’ private data is at risk.”
Dayton’s two-year, $45.8 billion budget plan, released last week, includes a handful of provisions specifically aimed at upgrading and securing the state’s technology systems. Those systems process millions of paychecks, tax returns and payments to cities, school districts and social service organizations, and the officials who manage them say they are increasingly out of date and vulnerable to hacking.
The state fends off up to 3 million separate attempts to compromise sensitive information each day — and must act quickly to stay ahead of the problem, Baden said.
The governor’s budget plan, now being considered by legislative committees, includes $51 million for upgrades to IT systems and another $74 million for IT security improvements. Among the security spending plans: making the state’s data center more physically secure, hiring more employees to focus on cybersecurity and purchasing new software that can fend off hackers.
Baden said the state Kolaybet is battling an increasingly sophisticated range of cyberattacks, which come from up to 150 countries each day. He said hackers often try to access private data by sending out official-looking requests to state employees or by posing as Minnesota residents. In one such attack, Baden said, a hacker got into a state employee’s e-mail and sent a message to all state employees, requesting sensitive information. He said the state was able to shut down that attack within 10 minutes.
Officials said those heightened threats are complicated by the fact that many of the state’s IT systems are either soon to be out of date or so old that the state has a tough time finding people who know how to fix problems when they arise.
Baden said that means old technology can turn into a new risk to public safety.
“Outdated or unsupported technology puts those systems at risk,” he said.
“If these systems were taken down by individuals or groups determined to disrupt government, we would be unable to deliver those critical services.”
Minnesota Management and Budget Commissioner Myron Frans said the state’s accounting system will be out of date next January. That system is used for the state’s record-keeping and interactions with about 300,000 businesses in Minnesota. The mainframe system used to handle funding for the state’s school districts, meanwhile, uses programming that dates to the 1970s.
“Any system that dates to the time I graduated high school is old — I guarantee it,” Frans said.
The governor’s recommendations still need to earn the support of the Legislature. Dayton’s chief of staff, Jaime Tincher, said the governor is encouraged that House Speaker Kurt Daudt, R-Crown, has expressed interest in upgrading the state’s technology systems.
A spokeswoman for the speaker said Daudt planned to outline his own technology initiative on Wednesday.
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