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Thread: Pentagon Halts Contractor Clearances




Pentagon Halts Contractor Clearances
user name
2006-05-01 05:42:04
http://www.washingtonpost.c
om/wp-dyn//content/article/2006/04/28/AR2006042801878.html

By Renae Merle
Washington Post Staff Writer
April 29, 2006

The Pentagon stopped processing security clearances for
government
contractors this week, potentially exacerbating a shortage
of
employees authorized to work on the government's most
secret programs.

The Defense Security Service blamed overwhelming demand and
a budget
shortfall for the halt, which caught the government
contracting
community by surprise. Already, 3,000 applications have been
put on
hold, said Cindy McGovern, a DSS spokeswoman.

"We're holding them [the applications] now to see if
we can resolve
the issue. The more drastic step would be not accepting
them" at all,
McGovern said, a step the agency considered but dropped for
now.

The demand for security clearances among private companies
has grown
dramatically since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks as
the
government increasingly relies on contractors to do
intelligence
gathering and work on classified programs. There has been
growing
frustration with the wait time, which some companies have
described as
up to a year, to obtain clearances for new employees. Some
firms have
reverted to gimmicks and large bonuses to attract employees
with
pre-existing clearances, and industry officials worry that
this week's
action will increase competition and salary demands.

The move affects not only defense contractors, but also
those who work
on projects for more than 20 other agencies, including NASA
and the
Department of Homeland Security.

"We have companies right now that have positions that
are funded that
they can't find people for," said Stan Soloway,
president of the
Professional Services Council. "This could completely
shut the system
down."

The Defense Security Service blames, in part, the sheer
volume of
requests. Between October and March, more than 100,000
security-clearance applications were submitted.

The service is also struggling with a budget shortfall,
McGovern said,
noting that its funding was cut by $20 million this year.
McGovern
said she did not know how much of a shortfall the agency
faces.

Last year, the Office of Personnel Management took over the
job of
conducting background investigations. But the Defense
Security Service
picks up the tab, which can be as much as $3,700 for a
top-secret
clearance.

The Office of Personnel Management can also charge a premium
of 19 to
25 percent for the work, which was not factored into the DSS
budget,
said David Marin, staff director for the House Government
Reform
Committee. Marin estimates the agency's shortfall at
between $75
million and $100 million.

The agency's efforts to cut costs began earlier this month
when it
alerted contractors that it would no longer offer a more
expensive
expedited application process.

On Tuesday, the agency stopped forwarding new applications
to the OPM
altogether.

The decision is "both baffling and disturbing,"
Rep. Thomas M. Davis
III (R-Va.), chairman of the Government Reform Committee,
said in a
letter to the agency yesterday.

Davis expects to hold a hearing on the issue, according to
his office.

"It sure could get to be a real problem really
fast," said John
Douglas, president of the Aerospace Industries Association,
a lobby
group that represents companies including Lockheed Martin
Corp. and
Boeing Co., the Pentagon's largest contractors.
"There doesn't seem to
be any exceptions, and you would think that if you were
working on a
classified project to stop IEDs [improvised explosive
devices], there
would be."

© 2006 The Washington Post Company



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