DOD names chair for cyber certification program

Ty Schieber will head the accrediting body for DOD's upcoming cybersecurity certification program.

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The Defense Department has named a chair to lead its impending cybersecurity certification program.

Ty Schieber, the senior director for executive education at the University of Virginia’s Darden School Foundation, will head a 13-member governing body for the organization charged with certifying auditors for DOD’s upcoming unified cybersecurity standard, the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification.

Inside Defense first reported the news.

Members of the governing body will come from the defense industrial base, the cybersecurity community and academia. Selection is underway, DOD spokesman Lt. Col. Mike Andrews told FCW.

The selection process is expected to wrap by the end of January. DOD is also on track to finish and release the final version of the CMMC plan.

"The plan is for the initial subset of contracts with the CMMC requirement to be identified in Requests for Information in the June 2020 time frame, with the corresponding Requests for Proposals released in the September 2020 time frame," Andrews said.

"The CMMC certificate will be required at the time of contract award," he said.

The CMMC model has garnered praise from senior defense officials, such as Navy CIO Andrew Weis, for having the "right perspective" and criticized by industry, namely small-business advocates, regarding its cost. But DOD is intent on creating a cyber-validation standard that doesn’t rely on a company’s self-assessment.

Defense acquisition head Ellen Lord previously said there were concerns about supply chain vulnerabilities six to seven levels down from prime contractors and that DOD is working on ways to minimize costs for small businesses. Part of that plan is having primes and trade associations take on a mentor role for smaller companies to usher them through the certification process.

Katie Arrington, chief information security officer in DOD's acquisition office, also said that while CMMC will be required for defense contracts, there’s discussion of developing a reciprocity arrangement with other cyber certifications, such as the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program.