These are the statutes, regulations, and notices regarding the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Standards (CFATS) regulatory program.
Authorized by Congress through the DHS Appropriations Act of 2007, CFATS uses a dynamic multi-tiered risk assessment process to identify chemical facilities that are high risk. Facilities determined to be high-risk are assigned a tier and are required to meet and maintain certain performance-based security standards appropriate to the chemicals of interest these facilities possess and the risks they pose.
CFATS Laws
CFATS legislation passed by Congress and signed into law by the President.Guidance
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) relies on guidance documents to express and disseminate its views, interpret statutory and regulatory provisions, and implement various programsCFATS Rulemaking
CFATS rules carried out in line with procedure prescribed by the CFATS laws and regulations.CFATS Enforcement
Enforcement actions DHS can issue to a chemical facility found to be in violation of CFATS.CFATS PRA Notices
DHS places the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) notices in the Federal Register to provide public notice and/or seek comment on proposed rules and other information.CFATS Advisory Opinions
Advisory Opinions help clarify CFATS rules, whenever appropriate, and in the interest of effective administration of the CFATS program.
Last Updated Date: July 20, 2020