$375M Added to State, Local Cyber Grant Program, Deadline to Apply is Oct. 6

The Department of Homeland Security has added $374.9 million in grant funding to the State and Local Cybersecurity Grant Program administered by CISA and FEMA, as the program enters its second year, according to a news release.

The SLCGP is funded through state governments, which then pass the awards the state and local agencies, including public schools, to help them strengthen their cybersecurity posture. Launched last fall with $185 million the first year, the SLCGP was established to help state and local public sector agencies develop capabilities to detect, protect against, and respond to cyber threats.

According to the funding notice on Grants.gov, state governments must apply for the funds by Oct. 6, 2023; awards are expected to start at $500,000 apiece. 

The program is jointly administered by CISA and FEMA. CISA provides expertise and guidance on cybersecurity issues while FEMA manages the grant award and allocation process. Award recipients may use funding for a wide range of cybersecurity improvements and capabilities, including cybersecurity planning and exercising, hiring cyber personnel, and improving the services that citizens rely on daily. 

This year’s focus for the program, according to the announcement, includes: 

  • Understanding current cybersecurity postures and identifying areas for improvement based on continuous testing, evaluation, and structured assessments;

  • Ensuring organization personnel are appropriately trained in cybersecurity; and

  • Implementing security protections commensurate with risk.

All the program changes for this year’s funding can be found in the FY23 SLCGP fact sheetkey changes document, and FAQs, DHS said.

“State and local governments are facing increasingly sophisticated cyber threats to their critical infrastructure and public safety,” said CISA Director Jen Easterly. “As the Nation’s Cyber Defense Agency, CISA is pleased to make available yet another tool to that will help strengthen cyber defenses for communities across the nation and bolster our collective cybersecurity.” 

Learn more about the program at CISA’s webpage: cisa.gov/cybergrants.

About the Author

Kristal Kuykendall is editor, 1105 Media Education Group. She can be reached at [email protected].


Featured

  • hand holding AI brain circuit with graduation cap surrounded by hexagonal education icons including books, videos and learning tools

    U.S. Department of Labor Defines 5 Key Areas of AI Literacy

    The United States Department of Labor (DOL) has released a new AI Literacy Framework detailing key aspects of AI literacy as well as "delivery principles" for effective AI literacy training.

  • abstract colored blocks

    OpenAI Drops Sora Short-Form AI Video Platform

    OpenAI is reportedly dropping Sora, its generative AI model that creates short video clips from text prompts, images, or existing video inputs. The move upends the company's December partnership with The Walt Disney Company.

  • person typing on a touch screen schedule plan calendar

    DOJ Extends Deadline for ADA Title II Compliance

    Institutions working to meet the Americans with Disabilities Act Title II regulations for digital accessibility have received a temporary reprieve: The United States Department of Justice has published an interim final rule to push back the compliance deadline by one year.

  • silhouette of business person facing wall of data

    Why AI Strategy Belongs in the President's Office

    Institutions that are succeeding with AI share one thing in common, and it is not a better committee, a larger budget, or a more sophisticated technology stack. It is a president who never handed off the steering wheel.