TOPICS
TOPICS
OMB aims to further streamline security clearance process
The Office of Management and Budget announced this week the details of its
In a Thursday conference call, Johnson said the time frame for the plan's implementation would not be outlined until a June 30 executive order is issued, but the structure will be in place by the end of 2008 so security clearance reform can continue into the next administration. "We have been making security clearance determinations the same way for 50 years, and it's time to change the way we do that," he said.
The plan relies on an automated verification system using government and commercial databases to save time and reduce manual labor in hiring and clearing workers who handle classified information. The reforms, prompted by a Feb. 5 memo from President Bush directing the federal government to modernize its security clearance process, also include developing an electronic application to collect comprehensive biographic details of each candidate, requiring reinvestigations of employees and contractors to better identify security risks, and developing a computer system that identifies and grants "clean" applications for Secret clearances -- allowing agency adjudicators to focus on more complex cases.
Johnson did not provide any cost estimates for the reforms, which have different target dates for implementation. "If you do it all in a very short period of time it's very expensive, and if you implement it over a longer period of time, it's less expensive," he said.
The 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act resulted in more resources devoted to improving the security clearance process. OMB managed to reduce the time it took to make security clearance decisions from 162 days to the current average of 112 days. The law mandates that the process be streamlined even further to 60 days. OPM oversees roughly 9,000 employees responsible for processing security clearances governmentwide.
"The current system -- even though it's improved -- taking as long as it does, means it's hard for [contractors] to get their contract employees on the field," said Johnson. He added that contractors have pushed to post 100 percent of their applications on eQIP, an electronic clearance submissions system, to streamline the clearance process.
COMMENTS
- Why are they not trying to streamline the process for all employees. I recently accepted a position in another agency. It has taken almost two months to find out if the security clearance was approved. Why is this necessary. Would't it make more since to provide me with a form that stated that nothing had changed over the last year (my current period of employment)? This is a total waste of government funds and it makes me not want to work for the Federal Government because for two months I have missed out on a substantial salary increase because of government inefficiency. Earline Shaw Posted August 1, 2008 4:22 PM
CORRECTION: The original version of this story incorrectly stated that the Office of Management and Budget has about 9,000 employees responsible for processing security clearances governmentwide. OMB does not conduct background investigations. The Office of Personnel Management oversees those 9,000 employees responsible for processing security clearances.









