Argyle council considering audit for town’s cybersecurity

Published: Wed, 07/05/23

Argyle council considering audit for town’s cybersecurity


The Argyle Town Council wants to look at ensuring the town's information technology system is protected.
(Don Munsch/Community Impact)

Community Impact
By Don Munsch
Updated 

Argyle Mayor Rick Bradford wants to ensure the safety of the town’s information technology system.

At the June 26 council meeting, he proposed a full-scale inspection of its system.

The background

Bradford pointed to what other cities have encountered.

“Considering what has recently happened in the city of Dallas with their cyberattack, [and] someone else just went through one—Fort Worth just went through one—I think it would be very prudent for us to do a full IT security audit that would entail not only the technology systems, but it would look at policies and procedures, really the whole thing, to make sure that we’re compliant,” he said, noting that would include employees being educated and systems being secure.

Zooming in

Bradford said he has talked with a representative from CIBR Ready—based in Holly Springs, North Carolina—about its services and that the company would provide a proposal. The mayor said the cost would be “pretty minimal for what they provide,” explaining the company would examine the town’s systems to ensure safety and then provide recommendations, and the company would look at policies and procedures—not just the technology component.

“Once we have a little more information from them and essentially a proposal, then [we’ll] determine whether it meets the threshold where we have to go out to bid,” Bradford said, adding that whatever is needed, a full security audit should be conducted.

What they’re saying

Council Member Ronald Schmidt said he supported the idea of the audit. Fellow Council Member Cynthia Hermann said there were security and email issues in the last year or so, and cyberattacks are common now and security is nothing to take for granted. Hermann said the town does need to examine where it stands and determine its next steps, including the costs.

“It’s just the next layer of protection for ourselves,” she said.
By Don Munsch - Don Munsch joined Community Impact Newspaper in February 2023. He holds a journalism degree from Northwest Missouri State University and has worked for newspapers all over Texas and one in Oklahoma. During his time as a reporter, he has covered all aspects of news and sports, and he can say he has covered high school football—regular season and playoffs—just about everywhere in the state, from Crane to Krum to Katy to the Super Centex. When he’s not working, he enjoys reading, walking and watching movies and sports.
 


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