Government ID, Smart Cards, Identification and Authentication

Alliance: First responders need credentials

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

The Smart Card Alliance has released a white paper detailing best practices for issuing first responder credentials.

“Emergency Response Official Credentials: An Approach to Attain Trust in Credentials across Multiple Jurisdictions for Disaster Response and Recovery” is designed to identify best practices and defines use cases for credentials based on the FIPS 201 standard, and outlines how these credentials can meet identity goals of trust, privacy, interoperability, and usability.


The paper also describes demonstrations and pilots of the First Responder Authentication Credential (FRAC) that have involved emergency response officials in the National Capital Region, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Texas, Illinois, Florida and Colorado.

“Secure and trusted identification credentials achieve two goals,” the paper states. “First, they enable emergency response officials to perform day-to-day activities efficiently, by providing access to facilities, locations, and information. Second, they provide identity authentication with a high assurance level during emergency response and recovery activities.”

This paper answers the following questions:

  • What are the primary requirements for emergency response officials credentials and how does FIPS 201 help to meet these requirements?
  • How can FIPS 201-based emergency response officials credentials be used for both emergency response and recovery and for daily access to physical facilities and online resources?
  • What are the benefits of using FIPS 201 smart card-based identity credentials?
  • What credentialing programs have been demonstrated or piloted by DHS and the states?

The full report can be downloaded here[end] 

The General Services Administration (GSA) has implemented its first cloud-based physical access system at the Neal Smith Federal Building in Des Moines, Iowa.

The GSA contracted with BridgePoint Systems to utilize its TrustAlert Physical Access Control Systems. BridgePoint partnered with EmbarkIT to install the system, which replaced the GSA’s 10-year-old legacy system. The system leverages the GSA’s Kansas City, Missouri-based WAN and remote IT infrastructure, which allows the building to shrink its carbon footprint.

read more »

Florida-based Codebench has released IDSync, a software development kit that enables automated provisioning and deprovisioning of users and credentials into a supported physical access control system.

read more »

The U.S. Government Printing Office designed and printed an FBI special events credential that was used at Super Bowl XLVI in Indianapolis by public safety personnel.

read more »

Operational Research Consultants Inc. (ORC), a subsidiary of WidePoint Corp., has been authorized to issue PIV-I as a certified non-federal issuer.

As a non-federal issuer, ORCs identity credentials, issued to government contractors, state and local governments, first responders and health care providers, have additional interoperability for customers who wish to conduct e-government and e-commerce transactions with other entities across the Federal Bridge.

read more »

Codebench Inc. and Hirsch Identive announced the integration of Codebench’s PIVCheck Plus software with Hirsch Identive’s Velocity Management Software, which aims to provide federal government and commercial customers with a solution for identity validation, authentication and PACS registration using mobile handheld devices.

read more »

Intercede Group plc and Oxford Computer Group LLC (OCG) have formed a strategic alliance to sell PIV products to non-Federal organizations in the United States.

read more »