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City Council Meeting - City Council Workshop - 05/07/2024 (2)
Approved City Council Workshop • Workshop Regular Meeting KENT Minutes WAS M IN G 7 0 N May 7, 2024 Date: May 7, 2024 Time: 5:19 p.m. Place: Chambers I. CALL TO ORDER Council President Kaur called the meeting to order. Attendee Name Title Status Arrived Satwinder Kaur Council President Present Bill Boyce Councilmember Present John Boyd Councilmember Present Brenda Fincher Councilmember Present Marli Larimer Councilmember Present Zandria Michaud Councilmember Present Toni Troutner Councilmember Present H. PRESENTATIONS 1 Parks Natural Resources Program Garin Lee 45 MIN. Update Margaret Wagner Parks, Recreation and Community Services Operations Superintendent Garin Lee provided the Council with an overview of the City's Natural Resources Management Program. Lee presented an overview of the journey of managing parks and open space throughout the City. Lee talked about the 2022 Park and Open space Plan that detailed the top 12 amenity priority investments and what the City should emphasize over the next five years. Key areas of strategic operations and maintenance needs were reviewed in addition to the priority of strategic projects in Parks that would provide access to nature. Lee educated the Council on the Parks Operations Natural Resources Program and how it fits into Parks Operations. Parks Natural Resources Coordinator Margaret Wagner, presented the Council with details on the Natural Resource Program, including the three program areas: Natural Areas, Urban Forestry, and Community Engagement. Wagner walked the Council through how Parks is establishing a methodology to have an organized program approach. City Council Workshop Workshop Regular May 7, 2024 Meeting Kent, Washington Minutes ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................._............................................................................................................................................................................................................... Wagner talked about finding ways to be strategic in managing the program with limited resources. Wagner talked about the Green Kent program - it's a new program with the same mission. Lee closed the presentation by indicating the Natural Resources Management Program approach is to intentionally and sustainably meet challenges to maximize opportunities. 2 Information Technology Security James Endicott 30 MIN. James Endicott, Infrastructure and Security Operations Center Manager with the Information Technology Department presented the Council with an update on the work of the City's Infrastructure and Security Operations Center. Endicott talked about how the Security Operations Center protects users, network devices, emails and how it processes and analyzes daily events for malicious activity. Endicott talked about types of security breaches. Security Engineer Joe Bennett, talked about the daily attack activity the City monitors. Endicott advised that a successful Information Security Program relies on defense in depth and how the City is following Zero Trust Architecture guidelines. Endicott provided an overview of the Zero Trust implemented programs, active projects, and future projects. Endicott talked about ransomware attacks and the potential financial implications. Meeting ended at 6:48 p.m. K&mbewLey A. K&motc- City Clerk ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... Page 2 of 2 T 4^illlo FOOV N447 KIC ENT ASHI GrOW ParkOperations: Natural Resources Management Pro ram Update y..,¢•. � , "r;.l}''r j 'ir � .t'� a i y y�i•;g ��.�.; .�i:''� r ,.�".�r-.,'Y. �;; .�:'. I.''- $ r,-i�-1 a� � c �. � ."r�'g�+��-.f' < u!�, > �,.• � ,.. -. :w� �i,,l r- 'P - �.I '� w;,. -!. > - `s `z-` � , �✓,7 �4�C.. i li' S, ,� � f ,. ''1,° "� .���.�)1�' �/. .' 1N:i�C l ��,1. ,. „�< _;.. �. ,/r. / '�� 1 f��li �' i ':•U 5�', S. -�\ 1.L. I A,' i � -. .±,r.- l ,�1 s /.. 1 Y ..A;� �� t �f• <` :j° "4Z� ,^...fir/ .1fr �,V.� J,.i''",' rkhvS.r 3' s .. :t. ',,'"S'r ',6,' ,c�>;\ /• /k, - /` �s'� :v t�i �i f,,i. ,dp `;;3 t, �r, �' - - Alpope 7 4 V`�` ��,,�'y���,�,�• "''<, - '-xt;'s, Op .� .�, �. �' A r�� �, � a.1 e��. �r. ,. '°d�. .5,.�,�ry,,,���..,.�t�;,. xs �Ea - ,ice I� ''e�_- •�F, �.� ,^ ,�- � ,:� � 1 > � � a y -.�4 fie, x ✓ '�r dr a� .. ,-_ �. � �,� 4i . g��.' A';xe e � _ �?`� - � k:r `w/r`• ...-�zr'%-` -'s. ""F`'.,...,e��.°r-' ,4..,... r �..ts +,-'= .:i•.- ..�,'?`+o-. O�3 of .'_.,s !� s„ {. ... - 1 1 .,.'"� .. f'! aJr ~,1!Ik .5 F r �r .1. r If HELLO my name is: low- r _ r . F• 3. Planting day 2019 March 2021 - 2 feet tall April 2024 — 6.5 feet tall �' Nature201C) Comprehensive Recreation Program Plan • Outdoor recreation (PIR=1.54) • Outdoor programming in parks (PIR=115) ARM • programs - T� Priori#ins for Ir��r�s#mint for ���reation Pry r�m� �a��d ors #I�� Priority In�restrnent Ra#ink .".�� x Fitness&wellness programs , , -— �� : j uRural performances173147 - Qutdaar recreation154 Senior progra ms{50+� Aquatic programs ' I Enrlchmentprograrns � Priority Outdoor programming in parks Ltir"tS1�eCrafts � ( Y Prforrning arts programs105 72 Outdoor water recreation Pro�ra ms with your pet Amenity Tap Priority Investments �p o RESTRQQAMS n • rs� NATURE TRARS MEL Parks & Open Space Plan 2022 —FARAMER'S MARKET as�a �� EVENTS ' A ram` PAYED WALKING& c ` BIKING TRAILS rL NATURAL AREAS f ' WILDLIFE HABITAT f f J. �. "'� BOTANICAL IL GARDENS ' #W PARK SHELTERS& IL GATHERING AREAS W OFF-LEASH Qi IL DOG AREA AhMENnlE5 R j ALL p#- AGES&AB ILrnES r ACCESS TO WATER • • • • a+ RIVERS&LAKES Key: I I I �REGIONAL TRAILS& r: All Respondents • • • • • �+� CONNECTIONS 00 � • • � • �� PLAYGROUNDS Overall Priority Score out of 204 • • xh c ❑ re resents a aafi of e+inic and cuhurol hoc rounds areg 7 p eiy k9 Respondents' Identified Race: &oCk'includes kx)se who identify as Block ar A[Hcan American. Con'inc odes lh whD identify as lndan,Chinese,Rlipnc,Japoneme Koreark � Black !ieh arnese,or as part 4dherAAan cc 5curheast Asian allures. • • • afinoarHisprnicincludesif�asewhoidentifyaslofino,Hi nic,orofSp3nshcrigin. LalinoarHispani€ • • 1V1-ire'ndudes�hase who iderY�yasw ite,hodilior�dlyu L-rslood�=CLl.scendirg Asian -an Caucasian communiies White • • • DIher'includes those who iderdify os American Indian a Ada"Natire or RaciFie Wander Ading Nahe Hwidion,Guamanian or Chornorro,5arrwmrk archer Pacific W=L-r_ Other Parks&Open Plan 2022 ..ram. ,1 Items That Respondents Think Should Receive the Most Emphasis Over the Next Five Years by the sum percentage of respondents who chase the item as one of their top three choices 75.9% G7 1. Feeling of Safety in Parks ----2. Maintenance of Parks 58.5°Io 3. Adequacy of Lighting at Parks 4. Adequacy of Parking at Parks -- 37.5% 5. Number and Variety of Parks Offered 28 0°lam 6. Quality of Youth Recreation Programs 24`3% 7. Quality of Adult Recreation Programs 15.1% 14.9% 11.8°l0 Third Choice 8. Quality of Outdoor Athletic Fields 5 g% Second Choice 9. Ease of Regislering for Park Programs/Rentals W First Choice 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Parks&Open Space Plan 2022 NEW • ' • • • • • • - • • • • • • • seem Natural Resource Management Fund a natural resourcegroup in Park • b _ Operations to manage public use of open �: ;•, space,nature trails and support environmental community engagemenVeducation. Initial focus on Kent's urban forest and natural areas • • _ • - • • • - • • • • - • prioritizing tier 1 natural areas including natural areas along the Green River,Lake Fenwick,Clark Lake and Mill Creek Canyon. � t • • • alunteer Program Coordinator • • • • • Hi re vol unteer program coord i nator to • • leverage volunteers and partnerships to help • _ _ _ maintain Kent's publicly accessible natural • • areas.Restart Adapt-A-Park program that • _ was canceled due to budget cuts several years ago. Hold regular cleanup events • ' • to help keep Kent clean and build a sense _ of community pride in our public spaces. • ' • • Update Green Kent Management Plan and explore restarting the park steward program if resources allow. kL 2021 2024 Natural Resource Specialist Natural Resource Work Group Maintenance Worker 4 Maintenance Worker 4 Natural Resource Natural Resource Natural Area Specialist Coordinator Specialist Part Time Seasonal Maintenance Worker 4 Part Time Maintenance Worker Arborist Worker/Event Support Part Time Seasonal Worker Maintenance Worker 2 Part Time Event Coordinator Maintenance Worker 2 Arborist Position on West Ops Crew • 4,16o FTE hours -> 10,40o FTE hours Maintenance Worker 4 • Less recruitment/training time each year Arborist (FTE consistency) • Flexibility of PT hours still valuable (grant/project funded) Manage � Program Areas • Park Natural Areas • Park Urban Forestry Park Ur • Community Engagement Forestry To Achieve Outcomes • Ecological Stewardship Forested Stands Planting Events • Environmental Benefits Site • Climate Sustainability Plans Maintenance Program • Access to Nature Funding • Health and Wellness Natural • Active Transportation Areas Community • Social Equity and Inclusion Management Education Engagement • Youth Development How do Natural Resources Fit into Park Operations? Developed Parks Maintenance Teams • Park and Facility Grounds • Paved and Regional Trails • Recreation/Events Support Natural Resource Staff hours roughly doubled as • Standalone Tree Pruning and minor removals we got more resources and need for natural area Major Maintenance Team maintenance has increased. • Lifecycle Replacement • Preventative Maintenance • Manages portion of City Stormwater System in 2019 Parks and Facilities Natural Resources ManagementTeam • Urban Forestry Planning, Tree work Contracts, Forested Stands 2024 •' ' • Natural Area Stewardship • Managing Public Access for Nature-based o 20000 40000 60000 8000o i00000 120000 recreation • Environmental Education Access Natural Resources Tasks All Other Hours • Volunteer Event coordination A Kent Parks Properties and Natural Areas Normandy Properties ParkI's ■ Parks y S mmit Park Spring 181 LakeJLake Desire Park 86 [� Lake 5 Parkera Lago Youngs East ■ . • , , O'Brien H I-Meridian ei iver h N ural 0 esour es Ar a 55 Kenton Firs F4 El Misty The Lakes Nd�th Paklf Des Moines Meadows # Parks Properties with �I ' 0 LeIq H4ghl rtdNkhbors o CanterhurIM Cross ng West Hill = Meridian r e CJ Heights Natural Area n S49 19 Mi 1. reek SE 256th 5t Lake Meridian f ar orks Village Inhms r�l m P . J 1 9 � m ,_, •••np rli, I � C7 Tudar'Square Covington Glenhrook NMI r Redondo-Fed Way 167 Esri,NASA,NGA,USGS,FEMA,City of Kent GIS,King County,WA State Parks GIS,Esri,TomTom, Garmin,SafeGraph,GeoTechnologies,Inc,METI/NASA,USGS,Bureau of Land Management,EPA,NPS, 808 La LaWS keland Berkshire Glen UA,USFWS V V North Auburn Morton-Berrydale I Kent Parks Natural Areas 2022-23 Conservation Event Areas • 0 City Limits o 1 2 4 Miles KENT W wSNNGiGH UrbanPark ManagementForestry Natural Areas Community Engagement Community, Urban Forestr Engagement. Natural Areas Green Kent is Back. • Inventory: Standalone Trees Connecting People to Nature • Establishing Methodologies • Forested Stands • Site Check Frequencies • Tree and Forest Maintenance Schools • Public Education • Nature Trails • Pruning Recreation, Mental Health, • Wildlife • Planting PNW Ecology • Noxious Weeds • Establishment • Partnerships Opportunities • Ecological Restoration Projects: • Responding to Vandalism • Spectrum of Events • Critical Areas Managing Risk • Natural Areas as Intentional Host • Stewardship • Tree Assessments and Removals Partnerships Locations for events P Project and Workflow Management r Natural Areas = • Establishing MethodologiesIt- Site Check Frequencies } • Nature Trails � :- � • Wildlife Management +S s ... y .... � • Noxious Weeds n • Ecological Restoration Projects : - = • Critical Areas • Stewardship �-- • Partnerships t Park Natural Areas Building a Program for Natural Area Art Maintenance � ., _ � - = � � . •� ., . . gyp. . ,kz�y"� .� First Reflecting on Lessons Learned Program Establishment r 7F Creating sustainable level of service with -- - = allocated resourcesf • Data Collection • Gaining control of sites that we've "lost" Moving Forward Mill Creek Lessons: Sustained/Routine Maintenance -> More Proactive/Effective Staff Hours • Set Level of Service Zo21 Zo22 • Frequencies # Needles removed 1066 702 • Standard Approach #PD postings requested 22 26 • Keeping control of Sites under control Hours picking up trash 994 743 • Begin Ecological Restoration Hours Scouting 500 274 • Keep Parks Safe for Recreation/Events Data Collection (field) Hours 26 5 Invasives Removal Hours 62 266 Planting Hours o 156 Trails Hours o I o TOTAL 21670 -T-21172 Heig is E C N ¢ h `�0 _ a Sai S 182nd St 'tr 0 Vantage Glen Site Check Frequency P m w Weekly 2021 2024 Parks Natural Areas 99 Summit Park a 0 Biweekly ` Chinquapin o Pa Snake Hil Ridge 0 Monthly Weekly: Weekly: Mill Creek Canyon, 181 t67 Quarterly 1site 4sites GRNRA/Van Doren's, Salt Air S200thSt 0 Kent Parks (Mill Creek) Vista Morrill Meadows of Q o — Kent City Limits / > PaRtera Lago s Youngs Biweekly: Biweekly: Cottonwood North Meridian, Des Moines r s r' East 1 site 8 sites Old Fishing Hole,West Creek Trail r 484 ft O'Brien ill-Meridian (Salt Air) Fenwick, Campus, Lake a iver a a v Fenwick, Park Orchard,Clark Ural s Q 0 s S 222nd St gg es Area o Lake SE 224th St Kenton Firs Monthly: Monthly: Chestnut Ridge, Glenn Nelson, S 228th St R. Misty g sites g sites East Hill North Matinjussi El Meadows t t Des Moines The Lakes A 6t �t ,tr� ("problem Riverview, Russell Woods, � Iddrth Parlk_.l spots"only) 181 ° "> > Fieldstone a N p Y) Scenic Hill, Service Club,Three ❑ Mill Creek- y r SE 2ggth St SE 240th St > Friends Kent 6,6 11 w end G Highl ^ s C plex Cross i > ghbors of Ken't_. Canterbury a Quarterly: Quarterly: Boeing Rock 2 2nd Property, S It Air Hills West Hill 516 _ � ' ® SE 248th St Meridian Valley � Merid Y Y g t 7 p yt � _ c Scenic Hill Country Club Heig �N/A 14 sites 277th Corridor,Garrison Creek, > South Kent 6 Ikuta, Meridian Glen, Puget '" reek SE 266th St Lake Meridian Power Trail, Pine Tree, Rainier a E ks a VillageTnhm� Seven Oaks L View, Springbrook Greenbelt, East Lake Meridian Tudor Square,Valley Floor, Greenfield West Hill Park Park < Tudquare w S 277th St utumn Glen © v 55tarLakena r'� M+an Glen Glenbrook 516 Frequency Prioritization tied to 2022 Park f IJI !S and Open Space Plan Need and Access to � a Z � e dando-Fed .. � 52g8thst 2 SE 284th St Nature Goals. way m Z stsn Miles 37th St NW Park Natural Areas Staff Standards for Site Checks �y4✓ �. - C xx f � • Ecological and Access to Nature Actionsr • ID new concerns (camps, 4 trail issues, tree concerns, ,;,r .- ,� � ,a •_ �- _ graffiti) _ - 1 3 • Pick up incidental litter or IDZI S= need for a larger cleanup ;�r fr3117 • See AND be seen / hear from ` •° I � ,. 1 t+,. the public i ! _ � i (• '"+"*i+ + r� s t,r: 5i. rk f'�� C'?;f/-i ` A�^: • Goal : Reactive/Proactive Balance &N'J" 1 R -r zV fY{ t CLOSE ,f MEl0 UN, ` Wk NEW At 7" iF N 1J� iN \ y Z "ldY 7�1 y�i"."*.S\01� , C ',� _..� -may 1� ��ve7'� - ''✓S•}"'y, e :r� y i r r .' rk • Natural Areas Identify and communicate Safety concerns Trail Cameras Manage threats to critical infrastructure Information forBMPs regarding sitework timing �- Washington Department of avoid • • - • season) #:_- ` Fish&Wildlife - -� -' - gg �1 .� HYDRAULIC PROJECT APPROVAL Permitting (3fi0)902-2200 KENT PARKS Issued date: September 13,2021 Permit Number: 2021-4-672+01 _ • as Department liaison COUSERVATION SITE Project End Date: November 10,2021 FPAlPublic Notice Number N1A Application ID: 25032 • WashingtonDepartment • MY PERMITTEE AUTHORIZED AGENT OR CONTRACTDR Fish City of Kent-Parks Opera[ioin5 • • Wildlifen9t di-st-rb this are,. WDIFW-permittLd site ATTENTION:Margaret Wagner 220 4th Ave S. p +. - Kent,WA 99032 Project Name: Beaver Exclusion Fencing at Clark Lake Park-Phase 2 _ Project Description: Install up tv 900 square ft of fencing(150 linear feet,6 feet high}to exclude beaver from an r existing dam.That would be the worst case scenario,it we need ro fence both sides of the ,n but� '� � creak from the lake outlet t0 a small footbridge On Site.More likely wOUld be Dne Side of the °Y'"r°+�'+�nnrsrrnrr= �,� Lcreek about 2/3 of the way to the bridge,in which case it would only be 70 linear feet,6 feet - r]rb�'� kFHT high. _ Additionally,to reduce the adverse effects of high water level posing 1)a structural threat to -_ -- ,�. � the dock and boardwalk during freezing temperatures and high precipitation events and 2)to prepare for fence installation we would like to gradually lower water level by 6 inches by - - removing the top of an existing beaver dam. r •! i Park Natural Areas T limitationsLower Priority due to resource New — • Poison HemlecklConium maculatum �,' �� S _ Parks GIS • • Holly/Ilex aquifoliurn ' has • _d new Parks • BlackberrylRubusarmenlacus � r!� � � .' -. Common Hawthorn 1 Crataegus Natural Resource _ • monogyna � - ��� - �w..� team toinventory our priority sites for • English ivyl Hedera helix ��. - > Knotweed{s}/Fallopia spp. noxious weeds Al • LaurellPrunuslaurocerasus ■ Arurn/Arum italicum • Bindweed/Convolvulusarvensis • Bird Cherry/Prunus avium ■ Bittersweet Nightshade 1 Solanum lows • rks N R Tea otrackdulcamara • butterfly Bush/Buddleia davidii � i performance ■ Canada ThistlelCirsiumarvense • Clema#islClematisvitalba + • European Mountain-Ash I Sorbus _ Dedicated liaisonaucuparia + • Hawkweed(s]I Hieracium spp, 4 f • Kna ��. Public Works • d g County pweed{s]1 Centaurea spp. �� RFMS � Lesser Celandine/Ficaria verna • s improved • Mixed-Climbing species +. L ■ Mixed-Herbaceous species • Mixed-Woady species � coordination • shows Poison Hemlock , Dots) along amongTrail Park Natural Areas Site Selection Criteria • 2022 Park and Open Space Plana� ergs • Leverage investments fromA, 5 + Parks Planning F - Ecologically damaged site g Y g • PubIiclyAccessibleArea • High Site Check Frequency to � � f ti ` is 7 ensure work is maintained Or- �i Salt AirVista Park Example _ • Removed invasive Holly x }_ � y� i .t 1 y 40 • Improved Site Lines =_ :.a. ��P -; Decom acted and replanted • Restored area degraded by P dumping/pollutants .;`" p " :=r former encampment • Improved access to newly renovated Park for Kent �k~ i4��f4�� T_. W- - �`1. '-��Fr. #. w`�iy4 �� ' }11 - � �-� � ry•Jf � - l��y�� Residents = t,• ;: t - t:f� ;:, _ ,,i'!, 4s tail 1, .::ti�4 `-'r $'rir �•._��• " - -�. .'�4 gyp. } Park Urban ForestLy � . � �' � �� A _ ,yy F,b entor : Standalone Treesrested Standsin 0, 4 Aft Of A ree and Forest Maintenance Pruning N�PK.�� • Planting . ° ti �� . • Establishmenty[,. • Responding to Vandalism e V . Managing Risk . : n Removals f Tree Assessments a d R e o a � � � • Tr• ProJ ject and Workflow Mana ementg _ Park Urban Forestry w�1 a !t a s r- • Record and track health and maintenance of stand-alone P park trees/ trees of note/ trees of concern/ I—and complaint • _ --� �- ��� i� Angle � 7 -s1a�us• �E.x. j r ::; trees 1 LakeP a a:lw �* • Data Collected: location, picture, species, height, DBH h a, �._ = 1 : '" r�, ;;,;�Il Ker;t ..eHyhSchool , lT� I rr � 4•aa }. (diameter at 4.5') crown spread maintenance needed :, •"':-' "' -' �■ defects, and any notes � a f �il� �� Y j �1'• '"- R�J '�]■■�11 � 4 e. • © ■gyp• ■� LAt'�r'I��, ��' '�• ��F��'�s���" � �� w. N � q,`_ k,+��rr a '.��'��,e�. Over 8,000 parks trees recorded, each represented by a ;` - triangle on the map High " fayFuII�.. !■ ■ �:' - �. cF 71f" fit• • i_L4J'.,:1 E'STI}TILL P` ■ '� �.E-g'C HI. .... J4�•6.1: AIL �b . 1 tilt _ �.. Y j : ■-� •`�T\�■ �" - ■�'a des / • / I f rLal��Drlierl ices s. ray■u- SALT AIR VISTA PARK fly'. ■a• ..L'I R �)■ ^F_b[dh5' ri • - S starsChilC FD HIGHP( Herill age Tree No L _ Trunks I _ f, THOF.145 ■ .P� d r .. MainlenanGe monitor Task Task IPFiOrity mediurn Task Delail unassigned Formerly i ■ leaf maple Height: Spread: decay ■ Winner of the grand opening tree I Commenis vote. dogwood. PlanteF dead wood, cavities. ■ - • down. ■ ■ i ■ 5131123 December Park Urban Forestry Stand-alone Trees • Part of formaly. Y' ✓ CV CIO, Y• ,`yam. landscapingri . y`d. �,; • General) spaced outtl `. 3 tw�� • Easier to locate individual treesAL • Require more pruning f - (sightlines, clearance, V -Qj ` a3 etc.) - '�` ,; Lake Fenwick Park •. •,� :� green=rp�ti�fi lh , Forested Stands a�a lauch • Part of natural areas or borders t w= - •� a 'r _AKF F 7N I • Generally dense • Record trees of F y concern or notable y�y. �n,� . -°x`gyp!!•., � �:Ty y, -� y r� +�f • Require pruningonlyin A certain situations ;. 5 4 - Park Urban Forestry Developing standards for: • Removals • Pruning • �Tree Selectionx rt Y r t w ar. p*p qP • Planting Establishment } • Coordination re: ■6` _ _ '� { = : Construction/PPDVo ` V%� New and Young Trees Established Trees Mature Trees 1-3 years old 3-60 years old 60+ years old • Planting • Annual Monitoring • Annual Monitoring • Mulching • Pruning — Every 7 • Pruning — Health • Watering years and Safety • Bracing Assessment and Fertilizing • Training/Pruning Inventory - update • Pest Management every 7 years 0 Removal Park Urban Forestry Increased Tree Loss due to Human Causes rt • Site ChecksKENT PARKS • Working with KPD • Signage to alert the publicNAT RAL AREA ids, Significant increase in the last year • Roots cut and/or burned a Trees Cut down 1 tr ees s t e e c r a Lake F nwi k • Old Fishing Hole VEGETATION MODIFICATION • Mill Creek Canyon ' WITHOUT KENT PARKS PERMISSION IS } • Tree Girdled at Clark Lake Park 4, • Graffiti STRICTLY PROHIBITED t � PURSUANT TO KENT CITY CODE 4.01.020 _ ;t If you have questions,or information regarding - ` existing vandalism, please contact: � M KentParks@KentWA. o� � Forested Stand Tree Risk Management VaIYY 5eaTae � _ a 4 Ahyk uk 1� I I • • • • • • • • • ' • a m s 1 _ pf.ti 1•J Ii11 �. _ _ y ' • 1 • • ' • .. - 5 l 5E e.Y th al •1 f 5 21511 SI % ♦ - • • •°I r Al 527>rtl�r fi _ ' •� Cc 1 J i.V. ':j� C I•�• , I '�v J.1ryC• '.1 Q C " '�'f� •� N .. Api rtmertlsf � � + 1 �` �:� del � lr•1 �' .. .III' � •� SE 2 Yllh SI Z Z cr Sc ur.'t �� �y '��� t ■ 8C 2;ar•',3� Vary . .� SE 240lh _ u �■ Y�" !A S 1 CoonW l`lub I ;--"" SISE a' ft MWpEsP eV■ ; �r • __... �F,2•13 rtl 51 �• � I '� a} ; 1 n�PY-R ��r+. Lake •} �S 3PI•i 6 w �• / •a I I fif 1. ovington d 5t St sE 245m Si :S:ol_ L . 3 1. ■ c 4/23/2024 1107,000 — — o o.e 1 2 mi Praperty_Line_Hazard -- SEz�RI„sl Low 0 KentParkProperties 1 '' , , , '' � , , - , - ---1 0 1 2 4km High None I— -— City Limits Bureau of Laid Management,Esi Caiada, Etn,HERE, C—n. USGS- y _ NGF4 EPA,Ugak NIPS,City of ICen[GIS Medium Tree Risk Assessmentsw � �S Tree lD#4353-Maple, Big leaf(Acermacrophyllum) ,. 35 g0 12 VERY POOR Sall Air Park.-122.3D.47.38 Decimal Degrees.PIN:36018OD605 • • • • Crown and Branches - There was major dieback throughout the canopy. 75% overall. 110. Many of the large branches had cankers mostem. A large diameter, >3', branch was i�gk hanging in the canopy unattached-Bud break _ • was beginning on-15%of the branches.TWe , majority Of [he branches dltl n0[ have viable • • • buds- t< Trunk There was a small cavity at the base of �•;, �, ' ! • the trunk with Kretrschmana deusta decay s'•' s;: - ; r:.A„_, 'P,• pathogens present. ` W Roots and Root Cellar-The tree was growing inof a lawn area. Aplaygroundwas recently s W ^T completed to the east Or the tree just outside the ]• s dri line. �1 _ - Y j x • • • �� Risk Categorization The likelihood of tree failure as tree health ;.¢ + ! • • • declines is PRO GABLE with a H[GFI risk of - •`• '1 fie G- ! C impacting the nearby playground-This event isJll LIKELY and the consequences of impact are • • • SEVERE. +a v y I • Overall Tree Risk Rating: HIGH - - •pS �� Mitigation Options PRIORITY 1 REMOVAL _ .�, -• Residual Risk: NONE F°x !''�•.., ^+x - - '�"�y � v44 a , Prepared by:00,4y R.so.'Ce Group Rrbari$t R[pOA a A - Prepared for:City of Kent•Task 912 Page 7 of 13 May 1.2023 Park Urban Forestry Community Participation SALT AIR • If opportunity is there, tree r ry r selection with the community ..,r VISTA PARK Replanting • Incorporated into public eventsAq - • Staff • Contractors _ tm r r ` r K� r � Air i I� f� K , �� Cnmmllnit a ement r • Green Kent is Back! • Connecting People to Nature ' • Schools • Public Education � 1 + I ,,A;• Recreation, Mental Health, PNW .. Ecology • Partnerships Opportunities pp • Spectrum of Events s ` • Natural Areas as Intentional Host Locations for events Lessons Learned : Updates to Green Kent Community Engagement .� • Focusing on Priority Sites � • � > N. • for Iong term L maintenance • Events as part of N R team site r .. maintenance plans • Stewards ("super volunteers ) ! will be coming back in 2025, with some updates and more staff support First 2024 Event was Arbor Day on April 6th at Riverview Park Hands - on Stewardship Community Engagement ag ement Y� 2024 EVENT SCHEDULE GREEN KENT* . ARBOR DAY.April 6 • AUGUST GREEN KENT WORK PARTY:August 17 Kau �1F►�P�'IN� ra6 EARTH DAY:April 20 • 5EPTEMBER GREEN KENT WORK PARTY: September 21 NEW LOOke � E� KENT KID5T0 PARKS DAY: May 18 ORCA RECOVERY DAYwlth ��vE� actober 19 NEWPROGRA*0 + JUNE GREEN KENT WORK PARTY:June 15 a NOVEMBER GREEN KENTWORK PARTY:November 16 SAMEMISSIONe + CONSERVATION DAY.July 20 I'll REGISTER TODAYF n hAYKENTPARKS.CQ[tiAfGREEhxICEE�IT o 00001c ENT .y b7R4 F tIR 'Y,1 d '• i' SL QS � �,yy yy� � ' f II Ar AL tik t I d{ I` z � 1 i k l h Arbor Day 204 School Sites in Icing CDunty } x se xxt PI I SE 5E 223rd St 5E 12 o Sf 224th St r4 Uf Or School-Elementary Q R � • School-Junior High/Middle � Kenton Firs Q School-High r� S€ 227th PI .. SE 2Z8th St PARK ORCHARD PART{ • School-Alternative } NORTH MERIFIN I 9I}LAY FIRLpgiAist r * MeadowsPak L 0 School-Other Facility F1 z�� TURNKEY 0 School-College or EY PARK T University �} ��3stt,5" 487 1 0 School-K-12 ti a EieldstonC ParkPraperty- KentParks o m =E Zpiuh SS L A FOR HEI HTS 36H PUHLIC_BOUNDARY_CityLimits SE244th t lilghIan CLARKL.4KE,PARK "# f m CrosMn t` C;tyl-i mits IiORKS PARK "' m Canterhury MORRILL MEADOW PEAR . Ir 1 �$C?fF+CoNef&W- OFfty WOO IUIeFIdI t w Q {6L41'Ft 1� oFIun ElQmentaMonl ' C-A! P#U5 PARK Ke t-M idian High SCI}O valnut St SE 256th 51 M11!L CREEK OANYON � n O.4m i Community Engagement 2024 Kent ParksField Trip O ! i ■ ` r r NMI • At Maps as planning tools - ' � • 'y 2�'A� - "'_ ' ' u • Schools ' _ - :_ • Non-Profits • Staff ■ - _ . �; IN�� . -L III_ NI•Airlr - c ; • ,,, • Park sites assessed for field trippotential = . " r'% rr- ., .a .� .. • Restrooms and Parking • Access to waterbodies b H • Restoration projects • WildlifeOn • School locations Er_ :�..� ` � -. +ter •j r-• AI i L . • Sites with current programs = ' r. y` _ .,. r r' ' • ` running ■ 1 W■ ii ,� r ., // • Geographic Variety ofCOLLEGE UNIVERMY SCHOOL:MIDDLE SCHOOL MidSou,dFivlhe,i.s Schools 2024 Nature Vision Schools 2024 0.380.75 Opportunities )SCHOOL:ELEMENTARY C41-innits Mtns to Sound Greenway Sthools Moderate HL E i.Sci Center 56.11,;2024 High Field Tip Potential ta SO H iIN ra .. . .. Community • • - ® PUGETMOUNTAINS RAINIER AUDUBON SOCIETY • • Sousrd ,\ Serving Soufb King County and North Pierce County � R ■ R R A �ii1lri. V I S I O N KENT SCHOOL DISTRICT ; Mid Sound Fisheries ENVIRONMENTAL T� � EQUITY I EXCELLENCE.COMMUNITY ■ ■ R�J�}y �" �� ���� SCIENCE CENTER iuvi.l GREENWAY �w� Enhancement Group NATIONAL HERIT6DE AREA Community Engagement 71!1�_P Examples of Recent Non-Profit Events • Nature Vision (Zoe3/Z school year): � ` �74 : • Brought students from 1 classes in different Kent schools (George T. Daniel KentSt- Elementa5 , East Hill Elementary, Neely5O'Brien and Pine Tree) to Kent Parks �� 4 Y� Y� • Environmental Science Center (fall 2023): � • Clark Lake (Martin Sortun, 3 classes, 68 students, 13 adults) • Mill Creek Canyon Earthworks Park (Mill Creek MS, Z classes, 30 students, 3 adults); • Upcoming 20e4 plans - will be going to Clark Lake with Martin Sortun again with the 3 classes; hoping to get all 7th grade classes next fall with Mill Creek MS at Earthworks (around 12-15 Kent"parks staff speaks to groups at classes) Earthworks(above) and Salt Air(below). • Also have applied for a grant to work with Kent elementary afterschool programs - potentially visiting GRNRA, Earthworks, and Chestnut Ridge • Mid Sound Fisheries ( spring 2023): " • Mill Creek Middle School, Z classes with 60-70 students, 8-9 teachers/chaperones. Field trip including blackberry removal at Earthworks Park • Puget Soundkeeper (fall 2023): , • Water quality workshop at Earthworks Park: Lost Urban Creeks youth, Unleash the Brilliance, World ` Relief Staff and Youth, Sno-King Water Shed Council, Earthcorps w �.�.k. , 1 3 PUGET SOUNDKEEPER' ' • SCHOOL ■ ■ ■ Fisheries y Enhancement f ■ Community • • - ll�V]KinqCounty Revegetation Tracker Find address, pin or place Q - . - ■ ' � I Rewegetation Project Data M z Reuegetatian project si=es Ravagatation Prulactaitaa � D t� Project name Riverview Park � Stewardship -"° � Projettsponsor Green River Coalition Reuegetation project phase Promettcontatt Greg Wingard D •� Project parcners Ciry of Kent,Green Planning outreach f M River College � Year initiated 2019 ■ Site preparation Funding source . A=.e= ��� # �, Planting establishment unearfeetlfor � riparian projetts) , �ii I Maintenance and monitoring No att chments found ,' R znnm=Q ,c � No phase ' ����. � � • + Riparian Sun Map `- "'� � _ • Critical .`'+,...= t� � • High • Medium '�. •,r4 Low i KIND C�LINTY DIRT CORPS M IS C AL RES70RATI ON - TH t Community Engagement Balancing Work, Learning, and Fun Emphasis on Natural Areas Benefits �M b *Environmental , �� Education with planting, * Site Adoption and Training Crews invasive removal data � � �•�'' �� collection " *Monthly Green Kent ` Work Parties *Trained "Super Volunteers" like Green Kent Stewards \` Emphasis on Participant Education AfA4 g r ty *Signage and *Nature-based Field _ r h i i Communcaton that Trips PARKS.RECREATIONCOMMUNITY SERVICES ' makes our Natural Areas >° u more available for self- j. -! directed recreation, *Parks NR Staff at Y - exploration, relaxation artner Events _, ' ` K Community Engagement Amazon staff at Earth Day 2024 y4, '. .• t — ` Outpatient Physical Therapy brings a group to 14=9- w7n Earth Day at Clark Lake every year! .o LAW GREEN RIVER _ .. i. Ate. CLEANUPGREEN RIVER. TRAILREAD aj s Ball Foundation Clean ups TH WED. MAY 4 2021, 22,`23 ` E �� _ Community Engagement Fauna Birds Mammals Waterfowl Owls Starlings and Mynas M Rodents Mesocarnivores American Wigeon Barred owl European Starling American beaver Coyote Bufflehead Western Screech-OwlThrushesCottontail rabbR Long-tailed Weasel Cackling GooseKingfishersAmerican Robin Douglas squirrel River otter Canada Goose Bet ed Kingfsher Hermit Thrush Eastern fox squirrel Omnivores GadwallWoodpeckersSwainson's Thrush Eastern grey squirrel Opossum Lesser Scaup Downy Woodpecker Varied Thrush Mice spp_ Racoon Mallard Northern FlickerWaxwingsMole spp_ Ungulates Ring-necked Duck Pileated Woodpecker Cedar Waxwing Muskrat PAule deer Wood Duck Red-breasted Sapsucker Pocket gopher spp. American Goldfnch Vole spp. geons and Pied-billed Grebe Peregrine Falcon Evening Grosbeak Doves Tyrant Flycatchers:Kingbirds,and Allies Amphibians &House Finch Reptiles Band-tailed Pigeon Willow Flycatcher Pine Siskin Bull frog Turtle spp- Rock Pigeon Xj Purple Finch Northwestern Salamander RocklBand-tailed Pigeon Hutton's VireoNew World SparPacifc tree frog SwiftsWarbling Vireo DJaysark-eyed Junco Western red backed salamander Vaux's Swift and Ravens Fox Sparrow HummingbirdsAmerican Crow Golden-crowned SparrowFish Anna's Hummingbird Lincoln's Sparrow Black Crappie Cash spp. Rails,Gallinules,and Allies Tits,Chickadees,and Titmice Shorebirds Martins and Swallows Blackbirds Rufous Hummingbird Steller's Jay Savannah Sparrow Bluegill Largemouth bass Song Sparrow Common Carp American Coot Black-capped Chickadee Spotted Towhee Virginia Rail Chestnut-backed Chickadee WhRe-crowned Sparrow • Killdeer Barn Swallow Brown-headed Cowbird Spotted Sandpiper Northern Rough-winged Red-winged Blackbird Swallow Wilson's Snipe Tree Swallow Gulls,Terns,and SkimmeWViolet�reen Swallow Black-throated Gray Warbler Glaucous-winged Gull e CommonYellowthroat Cormorants and An h i ngas. Bushtt Grange crowned Warbler ;��°` ~ ❑ouble-crested Cormorant Townsend's Warbler Herons,Ibis,and AlGolden-crowned Kinglet Wilson's Warbler � �.� _ Great Blue Heron Ruby-crowned Kinglet Yellow Warbler { -akr,and Yellow-rumped Warbler Vultures,Hawks,and AlliesRed-breasted hJu[hatch Allies ,t�eo /.; Bald Eagle Black-headed Grosbeak �� Cooper's Hawk Brown Creeper Western Tanager /�� j • Osprey � � � �, �� ` • Red-tailed Hawk Bewick's Wren - ��► y r _ Sharp-shinnedlCooper'sHawk Marsh Wren �. i,; i � �. 1 ~ ,� Pacifc Wren Summary and Themes . r q ParkUrban '� - }� Forestry - L Community Engagement APIPI We will need your input--please register to the right for updates fur the upcoming public engagement events! r � �I I •i � r _ "Y' i } s Bringing it all Toqether Summary and Themes • 15 years of lessons learned • Growing, changing community • Changing environment • And as a result, we reset/re-evaluated • We are developing methodologies to maximize resources to work towards our goals. • Challenges and Opportunities • Resources and Prioritization • Current resources determine extent of our Natural Resource Program • Strive to strike a proactive/reactive balance. • Manage Expectations and Set Sustainable Goals • We now have an understanding of additional resources needed if we want to do more in any of our 3 program areas • As investment in Parks Natural Resources grows, our ability to leverage outside sources does too • New Parks Natural Resource Work Group has already resulted in additional Positive Outcomes for Kent residents • Ecological Benefits • Invasives Removal and Replanting • Urban Forest Planning and Planting • Access to Nature Benefits • More numerous and varied events • Recreation Opportunities Natural Resources Management Program Approach : Intentionally and sustainably meet challenges to maximize opportunities ■ S - . Summary and Themes fq lw OW, I 6 1' Summar and Themes Future Resource Needs/O pportunitiesl: . ,r • New Priority Areas are emerging that will require new resources to manage. ,. } • Stretch of Green River Trail along Riverbend Golf Complex • Volume of garbage and pollutants going into the Green River_' • Security issues created at Riverbend Golf Complex and surrounding community • Cost of repeated contracted cleanups • Potential to leverage partnerships to address need for Natural Resource/Outdoor Recreation Programming as identified in Comprehensive Recreation Program Plan. • Continue to invest in Capital Improvements at Priority Park Sites with Natural Areas like: Mill Creek Canyon • Clark Lake Park • Van Doren's Landing/GRNRA • North Meridian Park • Campus Park p �� y. Questions ? Contact Info: ` J I►' a E Garin Lee $, v •i �M glee@kentwa.gov y wF Margaret Wagner mwagner@kentwa.gov A J Wr Remaining Green Kent Location Activity Events 202 Mayi8thVan Doren's/GRNRA— . Friendlyfor Nat Blackberrydigging, native • . walk/bingo. Kids to Parks D. June 15tnNorth . . Blackberrycutting/digging. JUG 20tnMorrill Meadows • prior planting areas. AU USt 1]thLake Fenwick Blackberry, bindweed, Se tember 21stClark Lake Scotchbroom removal . . to . places(fences, .•_ October igtnRiverview Planting, mulching, blackberry,education t.• • (Orca Recovery D. November 16tnEarthworks/MillPlanting, ivy pulling 110PI`O N T cc> c IT — ISOC Infrastructure & J 1 J �'7 �J� Security Operations Center TROCTURE&Sc Provides infrastructure support, operations & security services for voice, data and information systems • 800- 1000 users depending on the time of year • 3800 network devices (Servers, laptops, desktops, routers, switchers, IoT sensors) • 130,000 weekly emails processed for phishing, viruses and malware • Over 50 million events are processed and analyzed daily for malicious activity • Internet Traffic • March 2020 350 GB per day • January 2023 950 GB per day • March 2024 1 . 1 TB per day Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 4 t ISP — Information Securi Program Did you know! In 74% of breaches, human factors played a role, encompassing social engineering tactics, mistakes, or misuse. 90% of security breaches in corporations stem from phishing attempts. Most popular attack channel • Email 46% (Phishing) • Phone 27% (Vishing/Spoofing) • SMS 15% (Smishing/Pretexting) • Other 12% (FB Messenger/WhatsApp/Instagram) In 2023 there was a successful ransomware attack every 11 seconds. In 2031 it will be one attack every 2 seconds. Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 4 t t . ISP — Information ecu ri Program Daily Attack Activity - Example Iceland Sweden Norway / Russia Canada United Koigdom `Beiarus g34 France U 2 e Kazakhstan Torohto N o r h r.- i Mongolia , 7 North `.• �a� �_ s N United States A t 1 a n tic Spain` 4 ,r P a c i f i c New York Greece Turkmenistan Japan O c e a n ' . China p P c -�_ Morocco j-::araq.,� Iran 4g O c e a n -J i y r�� Pakista Mexico Lib a Egypt ,,VBangi `sh Cuba aMa6ritania OmanNiger g_>.' Ca�odia ,'''' • ,L"�Ethiapia, LJ a e w I Cameroon Mala si Colombia,,,-r �,:�f Kn a Maldives y y' Indonesia Tanzania (Papua New Peru Brazil Ang ola'--� Guinea J Bolivia` -- So u t h Namibia Madagascar n d i a n 0 1J t h Chile Paulo Australia Brisbane 5 Atlantic South Africa Ocean • Pacific Urg y 0 c e a n Perth e•Sydney n (- Pgn Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 3 4 t ISP — Information Securi Program • The overall objective of the Information CYBER SECURITY Security Program is to protect the DEFENSE IN DEPTH IR information and systems that support the RALWARE operations and assets of the city. PH==H=N4 3PAM • The city is actively implementing a Zero Trust Architecture . We also leverage the Defense in Depth methodology for cybersecurity. This provides multiple layers of defense when protecting the city. ' Y Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 4 4 t t . ISP — Information ecu ri Program Zero Trust Architecture Trust Nothing — Verify Everything Zero Trust is a security philosophy where nothing is trusted by default, whether inside or outside the city's network. Every user, device and service must authenticate their identity and needs explicit authorization to access network resources, each and every time. Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 4 t� t . ISP Information ecu ri Program a Kea _ AAI�A - Oark- �k- ZTA ISE F Ind6.. Mgmt RRA.0 RC/DR BC/DR �Mn PEH 2TA , DC/DR SSPPA nMgmm IAM Hammer XNR NG • XDR BC/DR `B NG DOW PNI Oefen NtDN4 Port - - Incleent XDR der der Sec Mgmr BC/DR /I,-NG Inuderrt - DLp XDR Mg— NG Visibility • AnalyticsXDR IJG Automation w XDR SOAR Governance AM Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government Active Projects Unidentified Controls 4 t ISP — Information ecuri Program Highest Risk • Social Engineering • Phishing • Vishing • Smishing • Quishing • Al (Artificial Intelligence) • Constant Threat Actor evolution (Whack-a-mole) • "Why hack when you can just log in" Additional Risks • Insider Threat • Outsider Threats • Information Security • Compliance Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government ISP — Information Security Program Ransomware Malware that permanently blocks access ( encrypts ) to or threatens to publish the victim ' s data unless a ransom is paid . L Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government il Sre 1 �-060�T Ransomware attacks by focused industry (20211 2022, and 2023) 60 58 50 SCE 40 38 32 33 30 24 20 13 13 10 0 .. —.■ m — — — I♦ 1♦ munlcipaifty Educatlott Naaithcere Dmars ]nffastructure Financial 2021 ■ 2022 . 2023 kA(Barracuda- Your journey,secured. 4 t ISP — Information ecuri Program Ransomware o Costs of Ransomware o Notable attacks o City of Wichita - May 2024 o Details unknown o City of Baltimore 2019 o Original demand of $76k. o Final cost over $20M o MGM Casino - $ 100 million in lost revenue + $ 10 million cleanup o Recovery 0 2019 average recovery $ 1 . 45 million 0 2022 average recovery $4 . 5 million 0 2023 average recovery $ 5 . 13 million Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 10 �r ISP — Information Securi Program Ransomware Growing Demands $20B $lk.5'B $8B $5B $325 M................. 2015 2017 2018 2019 2021 -Ransomware Demands •••••• Expon.(Ransomware Demands) Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 11 ISP — Information Security Program Cybersecurity Demo Social Engineering - Cell phone account hack Social Engineering - MFA Fatigue Attack so Kent 101 Your Guide to Cary Government 12 tM ues ions Kent 101 Your Guide to City Government 13 i I i I I Fef TYkY}d3aa � `' i a � • a • • Incident' Mgmt BC/DR BC/DR Incident P' Mgmt BC/DR SSPM i • • Mgmt Incident IAM Bitlocker X R /NG BC/DR • AF XDR NG Port Incident XDR PKI d�[ Sec Mgmt � BC/DR Bnmcker ,I sy - NG Incident . .DLP XDRVisibility and Mgmt NG AnalyticsXDR NG Automation Orchestration XDR Governance IAM I Project Roadmap Active Projects Unidentified Controls I Zero Trust Pillars Think of it like: Your driver's license. It proves who you are and Identity what you're allowed to access. Zero Trust wants to be super sure only the right people get in and can only do the specific things they're meant to. Think of it like:Your personal laptop or phone. Zero Trust checks if Device the devices being used are healthy and safe. No outdated software or suspicious activity allowed! Think of it like:The roads and highways you drive on. Zero Trust Network sets up checkpoints and monitors the flow of traffic, making sure everything moving around is supposed to be there. Think of it like:The apps you have on your phone. Zero Trust Application checks if each app is trustworthy and if it should be allowed to access certain information. Think of it like:Your precious photos and files. Zero Trust puts Data extra layers of protection around your data to make sure it stays private and isn't accessed by anyone who shouldn't have it. Pillar Short Name Full Name Description JRoadmap atus i Process where a user must present to forms of evidence, or factors, to be authenticated. (ex. Identity Duo MFA Multi-Factor Authentication Password and 6 digit code from phone) implemented Identity, Data KnowB4 KnowB4 Security Awareness Security Awareness Program for users, includes training and test phishing email plemented Identity, Data Netwrix Netwrix Auditor Compliance Auditing software plemented Identity RBAC Role Based Access Control Security method of assigning access based on the user's role. A subset of]AM. Overarching security framework where the approach is to deny all access unless it is explicitly Identity, Device, Network,Application, Data ZTA Zero Trust Architecture granted and that access is continually verified. Roadmap Penetration testing is when an approved outside entity attempts to find and exploit vulnerablilites, Identity, Device, Network, Application, Data PEN Penetration Testing both externally and and internally, within an organizations systems and network. admap A program where an organization develops the roles, steps, process and documentation, and testing Identity, Device, Network, Application, Data Incidnet Mgmt Incident Management for preparation of a security breach. Active Business Continuity- Program to continue critical business processes in the event of a Disaster. Identity, Device, Network, Application, Data BC/DR Business Continuity/Disaster Recovery Disaster Recovery- Program of Recovering all business processes from a disaster. Active Identity PAM Privilged Access Management Solution to protect, monitor and manage Privileged IT user and system accounts Active A security framework that facilitates the management and control of identities within the Identity IAM Identity Access Management organization. A subset of ZTA Active Next Generation Extended Detection Concept of utilizing a stuite of Next Generation security tools to detect and respond to a security Identity, Device, Network, Data ING XDR land Response Ithreat jActive Identity, Device Defender Windows Defender(M365) A Micorsoft Suite that offers Security products for Office, Azure, as well as computers and servers. Not Identified Device Cortex Palo Alto Cortex Anti-malware software for computers and servers. Implemented Insight Vulnerability Management Vulnerability Management Software that detects vulnerabilities on devices so IT can patch or Device IVM (Rapid 7) mitigate those them Implemented J Device, Network Software to monitor and detect server and device reltated failures and alerts. Implemented Device, Network Darktrace Darktrace Application that detects and responds to malicous behaviors on our intermal networks. Implemented Device, Data BitLocker BitLocker Encryption software for computer and server interanl disc drives. Active Software that creates and manages public security certificates (or keys) that are used to encrypt and Device PKI Public Key Infrastructure secure internal and internet data transfers. Active Device MDM Mobile Device Management A tool that administers, manages and secures mobile devices (phones, tablets, laptops, etc.) Not Identified Network NGFW Next Generation Firewall Firewalls that take advantage of the latest technologies and security. Implemented A firewall designed to protect web applications that are directly connected to the intenet, as Network, Application, Data WAF Web Application Firewall opposed to Firewalls the protect all internal applications/systems. Roadmap A way to secure a network switch by enforcing rules to limit or prevent certain activities for the Network Port Sec Port Security device that is connected to the switch. Active Application, Data Securelink Securel-ink Software that manages and controls outside vendors access to our internal network and systems. Implemented Secure File Transfer(Internet Content Software that will scan any external files before allowing them to be transferred into our internal Application, Data ICAP Adaptation Protocol) network. Active Cloud security tool that secures the access and use of cloud applications, such as Drop box, Office Application CASB Cloud Access Security Broker 365, Google Workspace Not Identified Cloud security tool that protects email from Spam and malware within M365 (Microsoft 365 Cloud Data EOP Exchange Online Protection suite) Implemented Clous security tool that provides advanced threat detection and prevention in the M365 Data ATP Advanced Threat Protection environment. Implemented Data M365 DLP Microsoft 365 (Data Loss Protection) Tool the protects sensitive data from being accessed or possibly exfiltrated malicously. Implemented Data SEG Secure Email Gateway A robust email security tool to protects the organiziations inbound and outbound email. Roadmap A program that classifies the level of sensitivity/criticality of the organizations data and assigns Data DLP Data Loss Protection policies to secure data by it's assigned classifiacion. Not Identified Security Orchestraton Automation and Automation and Orchestration (not a pillar) SOAR Response The process of automating existing security tools to respond to and prevent cyberattacks. Not Identified SaaS security posture management (SSPM) is a type of automated security tool for monitoring Application SSPM SaaS Security Posture Management security risks in software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications. Active Network access control solution that manages access to your network resources (WIFI, Network ISE Identity Services Engine Networkdevies, etc). Implemented Network VPN lVirtual Private Network A VPN creates a secure tunnel between internet connected devices and the City's Local network. jimplemented l' i I I