Florida's cybersecurity law requires protection against power line exfiltration.
Most agencies haven't implemented it yet.
Florida Statute 282.3185 aligns local government with NIST SP 800-53 — which directly addresses Power Line Exfiltration under control PE-19. Your 911 CAD, FCIC-NCIC terminals, election systems, and water SCADA are in scope. The tool below maps your specific exposure in under two minutes.
| System | Risk level | Recommended product | Per-device price |
|---|
Two products cover most Florida agency deployments
Both are built on the same patented inductor-primary circuit. Both address PE-19 at the outlet level. Both are SLCGP grant-eligible expenditures.
Citadel RM1440
For rack-mounted infrastructure — 911 dispatch racks, server rooms, Emergency Operations Centers, and election equipment racks. 1U rack mount, real-time LCD power monitoring, 8 outlets.
Vanguard PP18004A
For workstations and desktop systems — RMS terminals, FCIC-NCIC access points, court workstations, tax collector desktops, and EOC operator stations. 4 outlets, 15A, lifetime warranty.
Florida counties may use State and Local Cybersecurity Grant Program (SLCGP) funds to purchase and deploy Bantam products as a documented physical security control implementation under NIST SP 800-53 PE-19. Grant applications must cite the specific control being addressed. We can provide the compliance documentation your grant application requires. Stop by Booth 810 or contact us to discuss before you submit.
30 minutes. Your systems.
Your compliance exposure. A plan.
Bring your assessment results to Booth 810. We will review your agency's specific system inventory, map each asset class to the applicable mandates, and walk you through a per-system deployment plan. No sales pitch. Just the technical answer to your compliance question — and documentation you can take back to your leadership and your auditors.
July 20–22, 2026 · Booth 810
US Patents 8,223,468 · 11,775,645 · 12,019,751 · 12,271,477
NTS Laboratories verified · UL E521973
