Audit committee moves to executive session to discuss cybersecurity vulnerabilities at Springfield Public Schools
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The Springfield City Audit Committee voted in open session to enter executive session to discuss cybersecurity vulnerabilities at Springfield Public Schools; legal counsel cited an open-meeting-law exemption for security measures and the committee did not return to open session.
After the audit follow-up presentation, auditor Young Ngo introduced a cybersecurity review at Springfield Public Schools and said the report contains vulnerabilities "not appropriate for public consumption." Ngo characterized cybersecurity as "the number 1 risk, number 1 enterprise risk" for organizations and recommended the discussion be held in executive session.
City counsel Tony Moore explained that the open-meeting law permits executive-session discussion of deployment of security personnel, devices or strategies and confirmed that the cybersecurity topic fits that exemption. Counselor Zaida Govan moved to enter executive session "for the reason stated" and added that the committee would not return to the open meeting. Chair called for favor; committee members responded "Aye," and the public portion ended.
No substantive cybersecurity details were disclosed in the public record; the committee cited the sensitivity of vulnerabilities as the reason for the closed session. The meeting proceeded to executive session and the public transcript ends when members left the public meeting.
