Technocrat | March 15, 2019: In the Clear
By Bloomberg Government
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More than half of all federal jobs — approximately 3 million federal civilian and military positions — require security clearances ranging from confidential to top secret.
A year ago, the National Background Investigations Bureau was facing a backlog of 725,000 pending security clearances and other investigations. Today, that number stands at 542,000, while about 103,000 federal employees and contractors are working under an interim security clearance, according to NBIB director Charlie Phalen.
The current clearance process is spread across multiple federal agencies and has an average 13-month case turnaround. But the Defense Digital Service, the Pentagon’s team of in-house software developers, wants to change that by automating government background checks.
In a March 12 request for information, the team announced plans to build a prototype system for clearances. The System for Automated Background Evaluation and Review, or SABER, will resemble a case-management tool that collects a person’s information, enables the processing of background investigations, and then records the government’s decision to issue clearance.
Federal market analyst Chris Cornillie explains why the Defense Department is turning to automation to help bring down its clearance backlog in BGOV’s exclusive story.
The other big news last week was President Donald Trump’s $4.7 trillion budget proposal. The 2020 budget request calls for domestic spending cuts. But it could also boost various tech efforts across the federal government, including the Technology Modernization Fund. More on that below, so keep reading!
According to the Pentagon, space funding could increase by 17 percent. The proposed budget includes $72 million that would go toward the Space Force — the first new military branch created since 1947 — if Congress approves the president’s plan (which is unlikely). Another $150 million would fund the Space Development Agency, which would procure and foster new technology.
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“The Defense Digital Service has a reputation as the Pentagon’s ‘geek squad,’ often called in to fix complex IT projects that are past deadline and over budget.”
—Chris Cornillie, federal market analyst with Bloomberg Government
Read more in this week’s exclusive from Bloomberg Government.
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Explore How the Government is Leveraging Innovation.
Join BGOV for a free webinar taking an in-depth look at emerging digital strategies in the federal government’s modernization journey. Hear the challenges and opportunities agencies are facing, discover the latest data and spending trends, and learn how you can benchmark your success in the government technology space.
Click here to view our speaker lineup, agenda- and to register.
This free 60-minute webinar will cover:
- Agencies’ progress in achieving their digital services goals
- Analysis on the opportunities available in this space
- How the administration is pivoting its approach to digital services
- Government reforms that could possibly affect opportunities
- Congress’s role in promoting digital transformation
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