Protected Critical Infrastructure Information (PCII) Program
Congress created the Protected Critical Infrastructure Information (PCII) Program under the Critical Infrastructure Information (CII) Act of 2002 to protect private sector infrastructure information voluntarily shared with the government for the purposes of homeland security. The Final Rule at 6 C.F.R. Part 29, published in the Federal Register on September 1, 2006, established uniform procedures on the receipt, validation, handling, storage, marking, and use of critical infrastructure information voluntarily submitted to the Department of Homeland Security.
The protections offered by the PCII Program enhance the voluntary sharing of critical infrastructure information between infrastructure owners and operators and the government, and give homeland security partners confidence that sharing their information with the government will not expose sensitive or proprietary data.
How Does the PCII Program Support Infrastructure Protection?
The PCII Program protects information from public disclosure while allowing the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and other federal, state, tribal, and local security analysts to use PCII to:
- Analyze and secure critical infrastructure and protected systems.
- Identify vulnerabilities and develop risk assessments.
- Enhance recovery preparedness measures.
How Does PCII Protect My Information?
Critical infrastructure information voluntarily shared with the government and validated as PCII by the Department of Homeland Security is protected from:
- The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
- State, local, tribal, and territorial disclosure laws
- Use in regulatory actions
- Use in civil litigation
PCII can only be accessed in accordance with strict safeguarding and handling requirements, and only trained and certified federal, state, and local government employees or contractors may access PCII. The PCII Program enforces these requirements through PCII Program Compliance Reviews. Learn more on how the PCII Program protects critical infrastructure information.
PCII Program - Rulemaking Update
After 10 years of operation, the PCII Program Office is looking to update the entire Final Rule to strengthen and align the language to support the evolving needs of the critical infrastructure community and the cyber landscape. On April 21, 2016, DHS released an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) on the PCII Program, with a 90-day comment period to elicit any viewpoints, impacts, concerns, and benefits from possible revisions to the entire Final Rule. The comment period is now closed. The Department will utilize both the feedback and the PCII Program's knowledge to begin developing the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM).
- ANPRM on the PCII Program
- PCII ANPRM: Frequently Asked Questions
- PCII Program ANPRM - Federal Register
Contact Information
To learn more about how the PCII Program can support your organization’s homeland security efforts, please contact PCII-Assist@hq.dhs.gov.