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Getting Clearance: The Long and Winding Road


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Tue, 2 Apr 2002 02:05:01 -0600 (CST)

http://www.washtech.com/news/govtit/15897-1.html

By Gail Repsher Emery,
Washington Technology Staff Writer
Thursday, March 28, 2002; 9:06 AM

The road to a personal security clearance is a six- to 18-month 
journey. Here's what it takes:

* A government contractor or federal agency manager determines an 
  employee needs access to classified information. 

* The employee fills out the security investigation form, usually 
  Standard Form 86, which asks for a host of personal information and 
  references. The employee is fingerprinted and signs a form allowing 
  the agency's investigators to access his or her personal records. 

* The form is sent to a personnel investigation center. An 
  investigator, either a federal employee or a private contractor, 
  conducts interviews and checks police, financial and employment 
  records, among others. Typically, the investigator conducts records 
  checks and interviews references dating back seven to 10 years. 

* The investigation results are sent to an adjudication facility, 
  where a federal employee evaluates the results using established 
  guidelines to determine eligibility for access to classified 
  material. The clearance is granted or denied. 

* Individuals must undergo a re-evaluation of their status every five 
 years for top-secret clearances and 10 years for secret clearances. 


Private-Facility Clearance

The road to a private-facility security clearance is a journey of 
about four months.

* In order to get a personal security clearance, an individual's 
  business operation must first obtain a facility security clearance. 
  The headquarters office must be cleared before any branch offices. 
  The Defense Security Service issues facility clearances for the 
  Department of Defense and 22 other agencies.

* A letter of sponsorship must be sent to the Defense Industrial 
  Security Clearance Office in Columbus, Ohio, from a federal agency, 
  or from a cleared prime contractor on behalf of a subcontractor. The 
  letter details the level of classification the facility's employees 
  require access to, and whether the information must be stored at the 
  private facility.

* DISCO makes sure the company isn't already cleared or debarred from 
  federal contracting.

* A DSS field industrial security representative identifies key 
  company officials who must receive personal security clearances in 
  connection with the facility clearance. The representative analyzes 
  the company's foreign interests and also meets with the facility's 
  security office to ensure the office has a viable security program. 

* The facility receives a Contract Security Classification 
  Specification from its customer, which provides the security 
  requirements and classification guidance needed for performance of a 
  classified contract. 

* DSS conducts oversight visits annually for facilities storing 
  classified information, and every 18 months for other cleared 
  facilities.


Common Misperceptions

One misperception about the security clearance process is that an 
applicant should hide information from investigators that could 
jeopardize his or her case. 

"It's best to be open and honest with us and state all the facts and 
let the investigation takes its course. It's a lot better than trying 
to hide something," said Tom Thompson, director of the Defense 
Security Service personnel security investigations program. Applicants 
can be disqualified for a clearance if their deception is discovered. 

Click here for more misperceptions.
[ http://www.washingtontechnology.com/news/16_24/cover/17995-5.html ]


Post-Sept. 11 Delays in Clearance Processing

Despite ongoing efforts to improve the clearance process, applicants 
are unlikely to see a dramatic drop in the time it takes — six to 18 
months on average — because caseloads are growing in response to the 
war in Afghanistan and the domestic war on terrorism, federal agency 
officials said. 

"The proliferation of IT is going to be one driver ... and all of the 
military actions going on in the Middle East will drive our immediate 
requirements up. We know that it is going to get busier because the 
services have told us their needs are increasing," said Tom Thompson, 
director of the Defense Security Service personnel security 
investigations program. The Alexandria, Va., Defense Department agency 
conducts investigations for the military services and military 
contractors. DSS expects its 1,100 investigative agents and other 
personnel to handle about 600,000 applications in fiscal 2003, 
Thompson said. 

The most time-consuming investigation comes before issuing a 
top-secret clearance to an individual for the first time, Thompson 
said. It's also the most expensive, at $2,447 to conduct, according to 
DSS estimates. The investigator is required to check records and 
references that go back seven to 10 years or more. Even if the 
applicant supplies records such as college transcripts, the 
investigator probably has to retrieve those records as well. And, 
Thompson said, "we have to go out and interview all your references — 
anywhere you've worked, neighbors, and we interview you. There is a 
lot of legwork." 


Speeding Up the Process

The cumbersome security clearance process should speed up considerably 
under a new government initiative to move the process online. The 
Office of Personnel Management leads the e-clearance effort, part of 
the enterprise human resources e-government initiative, one of 24 
government-wide e-government programs. [More].

For an in-depth look at the security clearance process, click here for 
Washington Technology's recent cover story, "The Long and Winding 
Road."

http://www.washingtontechnology.com/news/16_24/cover/17995-1.html



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