After Ransomware Attack, District Hopes to Mandate Security Awareness

After Ransomware Attack, District Hopes to Mandate Security Awareness

An Illinois school district is working "around the clock" to bring its network back up after a ransomware attack. The problems struck Rockford Public School District 205 on Sept. 6, 2019, during the same week its 28,000 students returned to the classroom.

Outages included many of the district's phones, as well as its website and student information systems. Currently, the district is using its Facebook page to communicate with the community.

In statements to parents and staff, the school system reported that its IT team was working with an outside forensics firm to restore access. "Our No. 1 priority is the safety of our students and staff," an early notice stated. "This includes protecting staff and students' data and information. We have field experts helping our IT team evaluate the impact of this outage. We are working to get a complete picture of this incident and understand any impact to our data. We will provide additional updates and information when they’re available."

In a subsequent post last week, the district said that while it didn't appear that any personal information had been accessed by attackers, "user names and passwords might have been involved." As a result, when the computing systems are back online, users will need to change their passwords to gain access. They were also advised to change the passwords used on district-issued devices as well.

This week the district predicted that it would "hit several milestones" in its repair efforts, including restoring access to phones, bells and PA systems; providing staff with access to Google, Google Classroom and Google Drive; and restoring access to districtwide Wi-Fi so students could use their Chromebooks in class. "Our Information Technology team is working around the clock to rebuild our network and restore access," the Rockland officials wrote.

School board officials at Rockland will also vote later this week on spending $376,300 for IT upgrades. In a recommendation submitted by Executive Director of Technology, Jason Barthel, the allocations include $41,108 for "mandated" security awareness training from KnowBe4, which will be "specifically targeted to every...staff member".

The proposal also requested renewals of security software, including a Palo Alto Networks firewall subscription ($178,770 for three years), Sophos antivirus ($125,787 for four years) and Veeam for backup ($30,634 for an annual license).

Barthel noted in the document that his division would also begin reporting on the district's IT security status quarterly to the cabinet.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Engineering team implements digital guardrails on AI

    3 Starting Points for Integrating AI Guardrails in K-12 Districts

    As education leaders start to craft an AI policy that is both practical and flexible enough to evolve with this fast-changing technology, there is at least one principle that should be foundational: AI should serve to augment human critical thinking and creativity but never replace human interaction and decision-making.

  • large cloud icon on the right in an abstract world above a polygon with a dark blue background

    Cloud Security Alliance Expands Agentic AI Governance Work

    The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) has announced a series of CSAI Foundation milestones aimed at securing what it calls the agentic control plane, including a new catastrophic risk initiative, CVE Numbering Authority authorization, and the acquisition of two agentic AI specifications.

  • Double exposure image of coin stacks on technology financial graph background

    The Budget Cut that Changes Everything in K-12

    ESSER funding, the post-COVID lifeline that enabled many districts to invest in data collection and research, is coming to an end. For districts that relied on those dollars to conduct surveys and gather community feedback, the impact is significant.

  • futuristic representation of interconnected individuals within a digital network

    OpenAI Launches Fellowship to Fund External AI Safety Research

    OpenAI is expanding safety efforts beyond its walls with a new six-month Safety Fellowship that will fund external researchers to study AI risks.