CISA: Guidance on the Essential Critical Infrastructure Workforce
Alexandre Petrescu
alexandre.petrescu at gmail.com
Fri Mar 20 13:53:24 UTC 2020
LF/HF
Le 20/03/2020 à 13:48, Ryland Kremeier a écrit :
>
> This really depends on particulate size. A mask may only save you from
> touching your face. You are much better off just washing your hands
> constantly and keeping your distance as much as possible from others.
> Remove, wash your clothes, and shower immediately when you get home.
> Use hand sanitizers throughout the day and don’t touch your face.
>
> When wearing gloves, you DO NOT change them after you touch something.
> The objective is not to keep the gloves clean, but your hands;
> excessive changing of gloves will only lead to more particulate
> transfer onto your skin.
>
In France I must show a paper (not smartphone) printed permit, each
sortie one different paper. The receiver of it (police) takes it in
his/her gloved hands then s/he passes it back to me. I do not have
gloves. I wished the receiver did not use the same gloves for each
pereson who passes by and delivers that paper to him.
TRansmission should be analyzed.
Alex
> -- Ryland
>
> *From:* NANOG <nanog-bounces+rkremeier=barryelectric.com at nanog.org>
> *On Behalf Of *Heart Rate Var LF/HF==
> *Sent:* Friday, March 20, 2020 7:09 AM
> *To:* nanog at nanog.org
> *Subject:* Re: CISA: Guidance on the Essential Critical Infrastructure
> Workforce
>
> I hope they give them masks, and ideally total body coverage, one time
> use, like One Time Passwords.
>
> I really hope it.
>
> Lots of key workers here without masks.
>
> I dont know whether you know the joke about going to war without
> weapons. We did kid about Russians doing that in WWII, and about
> others in WW1.
>
> If you do not have masks, please make mask yourself, do it yourself,
> tissue, elastics, its easy; cut a rear pocket from the jeans.
> Constalty wear it, but also when distanced from others remove it. One
> can see to a longer distance than one can breath the virus spread.
> But stay away and dont breath if mask down. It's also good to wear
> eye glasses, like 'shades', to avoid virus intake by the eyes.
>
> When one shows face to others its good, somebody can tell have seen
> that person.
>
> If you do wear gloves then make sure you change them after each time
> you touched something. Changing gloves involves a particular
> technique: whhen ungloving avoid touching the external side of glove
> with your skin.
>
> Do not put your gloved hands in your elbow angle while waiting
> patiently and showing force (some security people wear gloves, then
> cough in elbow, and then display force by putting palms in elbow angle
> - 'croiser les bras', french).
>
> Alex
>
> Le 20/03/2020 à 07:27, colin johnston a écrit :
>
> UK gov notification of key worker status inc
> Telecommunication/Data Centre workers
>
> https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-maintaining-educational-provision/guidance-for-schools-colleges-and-local-authorities-on-maintaining-educational-provision
>
> Col
>
>
>
>
>
> On 19 Mar 2020, at 21:36, Sean Donelan <sean at donelan.com
> <mailto:sean at donelan.com>> wrote:
>
>
> The U.S. Cyber and Infrastructure Security Agency (part of
> the U.S. Department of Homeland Security) has issued new
> Guidance on the Essential Critical Infrastructure Workforce.
>
> The memorandum is advisory, not presecriptive. DHS is
> only one of several agencies assigned some National
> Essential Functions so it is not exhaustive list. It
> looks like someone found the three-ring emergency plan
> binders. Sad its needed, but appreciative of the experts
> which helped write those planning documents over the years.
>
>
> https://www.cisa.gov/publication/guidance-essential-critical-infrastructure
> -workforce
>
> [...]
> The attached list identifies workers who conduct a range
> of operations and services that are essential to continued
> critical infrastructure viability, including staffing
> operations centers, maintaining and repairing critical
> infrastructure, operating call centers, working
> construction, and performing management functions, among
> others. The industries they support represent, but are not
> necessarily limited to, medical and healthcare,
> telecommunications, information technology systems,
> defense, food and agriculture, transportation and
> logistics, energy, water and wastewater, law enforcement,
> and public works.
>
> We recognize that State, local, tribal, and territorial
> governments are ultimately in charge of implementing and
> executing response activities in communities under their
> jurisdiction, while the Federal Government is in a
> supporting role. As State and local communities consider
>
> COVID-19-related restrictions, CISA is offering this list
> to assist prioritizing activities related to continuity of
> operations and incident response, including the
> appropriate movement of critical infrastructure workers
> within and between jurisdictions.
>
> Accordingly, this list is advisory in nature. It is not,
> nor should it be considered to be, a federal directive or
> standard in and of itself.
> [...]
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/attachments/20200320/7bf64c78/attachment.html>
More information about the NANOG
mailing list