OPM Begins Training Background Investigators

Office of Personnel Management is moving forward with an

expansion of its national investigative capacity to

8,000 “fully productive investigators and support

staff,” to help clear a backlog of security clearances

– and expects to have 6,500 full-time equivalent federal

and contract investigators by the end of fiscal 2005.

The Department of Defense’s Defense Security Service

completed its transfer of about 1,800 employees to OPM

In February, and acting OPM director Dan G. Blair,

speaking at an orientation session in Atlanta said the

agency expects to manage 90 percent of all background

investigations conducted for federal agencies.

That’s a tall order considering the sizable backlog of

cases transferred to OPM. A GAO report from last year

put the backlog at over 180,000.

OPM said it is looking into ways to use IT to collect

personnel forms more quickly and to carry out overseas

fieldwork. It said it is also developing common

investigative standards to encourage agencies to accept

each other’s background clearances.

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