HomeMy WebLinkAbout2324-12 Follow-up Personal Information Data Privacy (Final 12-11-23)Follow-up Personal Information Data Privacy #23/24-12 December 2023
Follow-up Report
Personal Information Data
Privacy
(Internal Audit report #22/23-2 issued February 2023)
The Office of County Internal Audit:
Elizabeth Pape, CIA, CFE – County Internal Auditor
Aaron Kay – Performance Auditor
Audit committee:
Daryl Parrish, Chair - Public member
Jodi Burch – Public member
Joe Healy - Public member
Kristin Toney – Public member
Summer Sears – Public member
Stan Turel - Public member
Patti Adair, County Commissioner
Charles Fadeley, Justice of the Peace
Lee Randall, Facilities Director
To request this information in an alternate format, please call (541) 330-4674
or send email to internal.audit@Deschutes.org
Recommendations
4
Follow-up Personal Information Data Privacy #23/24-12 December 2023
Table of Contents:
1. Introduction ....................................................................................... 1
Background on Department and Original Audit ......................................................... 1
2. Follow-up Results .............................................................................. 2
3. Appendix A: Updated workplan (status as of December 2023) ... 3
4. Appendix B: Objective, Scope, and Methodology .......................... 6
Objective and Scope ....................................................................................................... 6
Methodology ................................................................................................................... 6
Follow-up Personal Information Data Privacy #23/24-12 December 2023
Deschutes County Office of the Internal Auditor Page 1 of 6
1. Introduction
Audit Authority
The Deschutes County Audit Committee has suggested that
follow-ups occur within nine months of the report. The Audit
Committee would like to make sure departments satisfactorily
address recommendations.
Background on Department and Original Audit
This initial assessment of personal information data privacy was
to demonstrate a commitment to and thoughtful protection of
personal information. Personal information is data that
distinguishes an individual, such as full legal name, driver’s
license, or social security number. Additional risk comes with
additional pieces of personal data. Generally, one piece of
personal information alone cannot be used to steal a person’s
identity. It’s the various pieces put together that risks compromise
of an individual’s identity.
Overall, the County demonstrated a strong grasp of data privacy
handling and only a couple of areas resulted in
recommendations. Staff in departments/offices handling personal
information exceed 99% of County staff. The County’s
departments/offices that deal with HIPAA or law enforcement
were unilaterally found to have greater awareness and
procedures.
The audit identified the following areas for further improvement,
including:
• additional administrative safeguards could help with personal
information awareness;
• department/office utilization of technology with personal
information could be strengthened;
• some departments/offices retain or collect personal
information they do not need; and
• county policy does not reflect update to statute.
Follow-up Personal Information Data Privacy #23/24-12 December 2023
Deschutes County Office of the Internal Auditor Page 2 of 6
2. Follow-up Results
The follow-up included four outstanding recommendations
agreed to by multiple County departments and offices. Figure I
provides an overview of the resolution status of the
recommendations. The details of the follow-up are included at
the end of the report in Appendix A. In interpreting the status,
Internal Audit may sometimes raise or lower the status provided
by the department based on communication received from the
department.
With this follow-up, none of the
outstanding recommendations
have been fully addressed. This
outcome is not wholly unexpected,
given the breadth of the
recommendations spanning the
entirety of County operations.
Many County departments/offices
have reported completing portions
of the four recommendations, but
until an updated policy is approved
and a countywide program
including a risk assessment
process have been established, the
status will be considered
underway.
Figure I –
How were
recommendations
resolved?
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Deschutes County Office of the Internal Auditor Page 3 of 6
3. Appendix A: Updated workplan (status as of December 2023)
Recommendation Status Estimated
Resolution
Updated Comment
It is recommended
for the County
departments/offices
to assign an
employee over each
department’s/office’s
personal
information security
program who will
also be responsible
for establishing
appropriate training
and compliance with
County policy.
Underway September-
24
Admin- After GA-9 is updated and
resources are identified, County
Administration will begin coordinating
with Department Heads to implement
this recommendation.
IT- The IT department has assigned an
employee who is responsible for
ensuring that the data that IT collects for
our business processes is compliant with
regulations and training is provided to
the IT department. Data that is stored on
behalf of departments/offices within IT
infrastructure and systems is the
responsibility of the respective
department/offices.
911- Our Administrative
Manager/Technical Manager will jointly
be responsible for this task. We maintain
secure records with locking
cabinets/offices, and our computers are
locked when someone is not at their
desk. Our technical and physical
safeguards are managed. Between both
our Administrative and Technical
Manager they can identify
internal/external risks and train
employees as required in policy GA-9. If
training is a requirement county-wide it
would be great to have a universal
training for employees. Outside of our
locked personnel files we do not house
store any PHI information elsewhere.
Additionally, staff must be certified
biannually in information security best
practices as a requirement to access CJIS
and LEDS. If/when the policy is updated
we will review and make necessary
adjustments pertaining to the policy.
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Deschutes County Office of the Internal Auditor Page 4 of 6
Recommendation Status Estimated
Resolution
Updated Comment
It is recommended
for
departments/offices
to consider the risks
and develop and/or
deploy technology
appropriate to the
situation for
communicating and
sharing personal
information.
Underway June-24 Admin- County Administration is
currently working with IT to identify tools
and resources to assist departments with
implementation.
IT- We have successfully partnered with
many departments on safeguards related
to transferring personal information via
Secure File Transfer Protocol (FTP) and
have created documented processes that
can be shared and adapted for use by
other teams. What has not been created
or communicated is where not to share
PII data. Today, the County’s shared drive
is secure at the business unit level. IT is
currently responsibly for defining security
permissions for the department’s top
level shared drive based on HR's input to
IT which includes people who have been
hired or terminated. IT recommends that
the departments maintain this level of
security and perform auditing, if needed.
Departments can work with IT to develop
reporting so that managers can
periodically monitor permissions of
shared drives.
911- After discussion with amongst our
Leadership Team it was determined that
we do not have the need to send
encrypted emails since we do not send
PHI or other confidential information via
email. However, we did train all the
admin staff on how to turn encryption on
in their email if we deem it necessary. In
a circumstance where there is a question
on if it needs to be turned on the
employee will reach out to County Legal
for direction.
Finance- Completed. Staff training
occurred in February 2023 and access to
files and servers was verified with IT to
Follow-up Personal Information Data Privacy #23/24-12 December 2023
Deschutes County Office of the Internal Auditor Page 5 of 6
Recommendation Status Estimated
Resolution
Updated Comment
limited Finance personnel or those with
necessary business needs.
It is recommended
County
departments/offices
consider whether
they are following
policies and could
reduce the amount
of personal
information they
collect or retain and
make changes to
associated
processes.
Underway June-24 Admin- County Administration is
currently working with IT to identify tools
and resources to assist departments with
implementation.
IT- We agree with this recommendation
and can support departments/offices
with finding technical solutions, if
necessary.
It is recommended
the County update
policy GA-9 to reflect
the substantive
changes from the
revised Oregon
Consumer
Information
Protection Act.
Underway February-
24
Admin- County Administration is
currently updating GA-9.
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Deschutes County Office of the Internal Auditor Page 6 of 6
4. Appendix B: Objective, Scope, and Methodology
Objective and Scope
Objective:
The objective was to follow up on recommendations from the
original audit.
Scope and timing:
The follow-up included four recommendations from the internal
audit report for Personal Information Data Privacy #22/23-2
issued in February 2023. The original internal audit report should
be referenced for the full text of the recommendations and
associated discussion. The follow-up reflects the status as of
December 2023.
Methodology
The follow-up report was developed from information provided
by Whitney Hale, Deputy County Administrator, Tania Mahood,
County Information Technology Director, Robert Tintle, County
Chief Financial Officer, and Sara Crosswhite, 9-1-1 Director.
Follow-ups are, by nature, subjective. In determining the status of
recommendations that were followed up, we relied on assertions
provided by those involved and did not attempt to independently
verify those assertions. The updates received were included in
Appendix A.
Since no substantive audit work was performed, Government
Auditing Standards issued by the Comptroller General of the
United States were not followed.
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“Audit objectives”
define the goals of
the audit.