OMB Issues New Draft Cyber Guidance for Contractors


On August 11, 2015, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued a draft guidance memorandum intended to improve cybersecurity protections in federal acquisitions. Specifically, the proposed memorandum provides direction to federal agencies on “implementing strengthened cybersecurity protections in Federal acquisitions for products or services that generate, collect, maintain, disseminate, store, or provides access to Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) on behalf of the Federal government.” CUI is defined in a recently issued proposed FAR rule as “information that laws, regulations, or Government-wide policies require to have safeguarding or dissemination controls, excluding classified information.”

Although the OMB memorandum is a laudable attempt to create uniformity across the federal government, the Guidance leaves many questions unanswered and the details of its implementation by federal agencies remains to be seen. As described below, even with this Guidance, contractors will continue to encounter inconsistent requirements for what constitutes a “cyber incident,” how quickly a cyber incident must reported to the government, and what security controls are considered “adequate” for safeguarding CUI.

Scope of the Guidance

Although not entirely clear, the OMB Guidance appears to impose requirements on two types of systems: (1) those “operated on behalf of the government” where the contractor provides data processing services that the Government might otherwise perform itself but has decided to outsource; and (2) “internal contractor systems” used to provide a product or service for the government where the processing of CUI is incidental to contract performance.

Under the proposed OMB Guidance, information systems “operated on behalf of the government” will be required to meet NIST SP 800-53 and conform to the same standards as government-operated systems. “Internal contractor information systems” generally will be subject to the requirements described in NIST SP 800-171. Importantly, OMB’s Guidance makes clear that the applicable NIST standards will only provide “the appropriate baseline” for security controls and, as a result, each federal agency will still be required to tailor the NIST standards to meet their own unique “risk management requirements.” For example, information systems operated “on behalf of the government” for multiple users will likely require variations from the standard government processes or terms of service.

Five Areas of Guidance

The OMB Guidance states that the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council should amend the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to include contract clauses that address, as appropriate, five cyber-related areas: (1) security controls, (2) cyber incident reporting, (3) information system security assessments, (4) information security continuous monitoring, and (5) business due diligence.

Security Controls

 

Cyber Incident Reporting

 

 

Information System Security Assessments

 

 

Information Security Continuous Monitoring

 

 

Business Due Diligence

 

 

OMB’s Guidance Leaves Important Questions Unanswered

As is evident from the foregoing, and the Guidance itself, OMB left several important questions unanswered, including:

 

 

 

 

Comments are Due on September 10, 2015


© 2025 Covington & Burling LLP
National Law Review, Volume V, Number 225