The Division of Administration, which oversees the technology office that dispatches staffers throughout the state to respond to various cyberattacks, spent the money on five incidents over the past year, according to figures provided by the division.
Jacques Berry, an administration spokesman, said the vast majority of the costs were from paying for staffers to who went to various school districts, state agencies and New Orleans to help reimage computers afflicted with ransomware.
“The vast majority is human assets,” he said. “Along with that there were some equipment software licensing costs for upgrades here and there that we took advantage of the situation to go ahead and do.”
The state spent the bulk of the money – about $1.7 million – responding to the ransomware attack on state government in November, which crippled the state Office of Motor Vehicles for weeks.
The state also spent about $333,000 responding to cyberattacks against seven school districts last summer in north Louisiana, $65,348 on the ransomware attack against New Orleans’ city government, $61,268 on an attack in St. Helena Parish and $184,985 on an attack against the St. Landry Parish School Board.
Gov. John Bel Edwards’ administration is seeking to recoup the costs in a supplemental budget bill that will be debated by lawmakers this spring. That bill spends the excess tax collections from the current fiscal year.
New Orleans city government said last month it would spend more than $7 million in past and future costs responding to the ransomware attack that hit City Hall in December. Those costs came primarily from fixing city email services and networking infrastructure.
The $2.3 million figure does not include any future plans to modernize agencies' computer systems, which Commissioner of Administration Jay Dardenne suggested would need to be funded in the coming years during a budget hearing last month.
Cyberattacks, in which hackers gain access to government computers and lock users out unless they pay a ransom, have proliferated in Louisiana in recent months and caused headaches for a host of state and local agencies. Gov. Edwards created a cybersecurity commission to respond to the attacks and last month warned local officials such ransomware attacks would inevitably come for them.
Dardenne, in a budget hearing last month, said many state agencies are in “the dark ages” operating on outdated computer systems that need replacing.
The state Office of Motor Vehicles, which had locations shuttered for weeks after the ransomware attack in November, has a 45-year-old computer system that is in the middle of being updated.
Karen St. Germain, commissioner of the OMV, said the agency is about nine months into a three-to-four-year project updating the computer systems. So far, the agency has spent nearly $2.4 million on that project, she said.
“The biggest obstacle is getting the information moved from the system it’s in now and that’s really the lengthy part into something that’s at least 20th century instead of 19th century,” St. Germain said.
Dardenne told lawmakers last month the administration also plans to create a pot of around $10 million to serve as a cybersecurity emergency response fund to deal with cyberattacks. He also said various agencies have old computer systems that need upgrades.
“We have addressed that and it’s a big, big challenge,” Dardenne said. “We’ll have to make collective decisions on where we put that money. It’s a growing concern and it’s not going away.”
©2020 The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.