Bismarck   (NDDoH)  As the Nation continues to respond to COVID-19, it is important that considerations regarding essential critical infrastructure workers continue to inform response policies and activities. The ability of these workers to perform their jobs safely is critical to our Nation’s ability to maintain resilience of National Critical Functions. It is for this reason that the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), in collaboration with other federal agencies, State and local governments, and the private sector, has issued the Essential Critical Infrastructure Workforce Guidance for COVID-19 response. The current version of this guidance, Version 4.0, was released in August 2020. This guidance is intended to help State, local, tribal, and territorial officials and organizations protect their workers and communities and ensure the continued safe and secure operation of critical infrastructure, by identifying the universe of essential workers that may require specialized risk management strategies so that they can work safely. It can also be used to begin planning and preparing for the allocation of scarce resources used to protect essential workers against COVID-19.

We are now entering a new phase of our pandemic response, when vaccines are available but in short supply and when infection rates are driving the continued application of public health measures in communities. For this reason, we want to re-promote the Essential Critical Infrastructure Workforce Guidance Version 4.0. Although this version of the guidance is unchanged from the August 2020 release, we want to reiterate our belief that it remains an important tool for COVID-19 planning, even in this new environment.

The advisory list identifies workers who conduct a range of operations and services that are typically essential to continued critical infrastructure viability, including staffing operations centers, maintaining and repairing critical infrastructure, operating call centers, working construction, and performing operational functions, among others. It also includes workers who support crucial supply chains and enable functions for critical infrastructure. This includes critical workers who will be involved in the research, development, manufacturing, distribution, and administration of COVID-19 vaccines. The industries that essential workers support represent, but are not limited to, medical and healthcare, telecommunications, information technology systems, defense, food and agriculture, transportation and logistics, energy, water and wastewater, and law enforcement.

This is the fourth version of the list, as it has evolved over time based on lessons learned from the pandemic and as additional essential workers returned to work. The earlier versions of the list were meant to assist officials and organizations identify essential work functions and to allow essential workers access to their workplaces during times of community restrictions. Now, many months into the pandemic, most essential workers have the necessary access and freedom of movement to perform their critical work functions. However, given the recent surge of increased nationwide infection and subsequent community restrictions, this list can continue to be used for the purpose of worker access.

The list is also useful as a tool to help appropriate officials identify essential critical infrastructure workers that may need specialized risk management strategies to ensure that they can work safely and to begin planning and preparing for the allocation of scarce resources used to protect essential workers against COVID-19.

To that end, this guidance may be used to support prioritization decisions related to COVID-19 vaccines, especially in the early stages when the vaccines are in short supply. This guidance is referenced in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) COVID-19 Vaccination Program Interim Playbook for Jurisdiction Operations as one framework against which jurisdictions could evaluate essential worker populations for the purposes of vaccine allocation. The CDC Playbook details certain essential critical infrastructure workers and vulnerable populations that will be prioritized for vaccines in the early phases of distribution as well as the plan for the eventual vaccination of the entire population.

State, local, tribal, and territorial governments are responsible for implementing and executing response activities in their communities, while the Federal Government is in a supporting role. Officials should use their own judgment in making decisions regarding resource allocation and other public health measures. Similarly, while adhering to relevant public health guidance, critical infrastructure owners and operators are expected to use their own judgement on issues of the prioritization of business processes and workforce allocation to best ensure worker safety and the continuity of the essential goods and services they support. All decisions should appropriately balance public safety, the health and safety of the workforce, and the continued delivery of essential critical infrastructure services and functions.

CISA will continue to work with our partners in the critical infrastructure community to update this advisory list, if necessary, as the Nation’s response to COVID-19 evolves.
Should you have questions about this list, please contact CISA at
CENTRAL@CISA.GOV.
Should you have questions regarding COVID-19 vaccine planning in your state, please reach out to your state COVID-19 Vaccine Planning and Coordination Team.