From Military.com:
“DoD Takes Over Troubled
Background Check Agency and Its Backlog “
The Defense Department on Tuesday
completed its takeover of the troubled agency that conducts about 95% of the
background checks on federal workforce personnel. It also inherited its backlog
of 202,000 security clearances, defense officials announced. The transfer of
the National Background Investigations Bureau (NBIB) and its nearly 3,000
employees from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and into DoD's Defense
Counterintelligence and Security Agency met a deadline for the switch on Oct.
1, the officials said. In a background briefing, defense officials said that
bringing NBIB into the Pentagon would enhance the overall security of the force
and critical technology. NBI conducts background checks for more than 100 departments
and agencies. The officials described NBIB as "the single largest
security-focused agency in the federal government." In a statement, Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence Joseph Kernan said that the transfer
would advance the National Defense Strategy by bolstering security to allow the
force to "maintain lethality by protecting critical defense information
from theft or disclosure." On background, the officials described the
transfer as a simple bureaucratic procedure to improve efficiency, and did not
respond directly when asked whether it came about because of problems in how
OPM was managing the background checks and security clearances. A defense
official said the transfer was authorized by Congress in the 2016 National
Defense Authorization Act and approved by executive order in April. "I
can't speak for Congress, why they did that," the official said. NBIB was
created in 2015 following a huge security breach at OPM that exposed the
sensitive personal information of more than 21 million current and prospective
federal employees and contractors. NBIB itself then drew criticism for the
backlog in security clearance investigations, which topped 700,000 in 2018. The
transfer involved about 3,000 NBIB personnel, who became Defense Department
employees Oct. 1, the officials said. The backlog of security checks has been
cut and now stands at about 202,000, a second defense official said. "We've
got a lot more space to cover" in cutting the backlog further and assuring
that the transfer is seamless, the official said. Currently, individuals
seeking top secret clearance can wait more than 100 days for approval, and the
wait for secret clearances is about 75 days, the official said.
^ While the backlog now stands at
202,000 (which is much lower from the 700,000 it used to be) the current wait-time
and backlog is still too long and needs
to be addressed. Each of those 202,00 people is a man or woman with a family to
support and with all the different conflicts around the world today the US
really needs them working to keep us safe. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2019/10/03/dod-takes-over-troubled-background-check-agency-and-its-backlog.html
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