@pawngobbler, congratulations!!!
@pawngobbler congratsâŚhow did you know when your case entered adjudication? I have been trying to figure out for months now if Iâm there yet.
@Rkf4ever to do this, you need to submit a FOIPA request to DMDC. The easiest way to do this is purchase a template for $10 here: https://bigleylaw.com/security-clearance-investigation-records. I went with JPAS Records
Ok thanks, Iâll check that out.
Oh wow it took them 3 months to adjudicate. I was told by my new employer that my case was assigned to adjudication last week and should expect a few weeks until I get granted my TS. I really hope it doesnât take 3 months
Does anybody know backlog numbers for adjudication these days and the average time it could take for TS/SCI (contract with DOD), no financial/criminal/drugs issues?
contact Gerry Conollyâs congressional office. the 2020 NDAA required adjudication reports to congress
@WengerOut
Thanks, my report was just recently submitted. I was just curious what people see now in terms of time spent in adjudication, I know nobody can predict the actual time but I would think it should be shorter even compared to a few years ago.
P.S. my condolences to your team, another year without Champions Leage.
My BI wrapped up in 2018, so YMMV.
There have been a couple of reports that once they cleared up the backlog of investigations, now the bottleneck has moved to adjudications.
I also wonder if they are focusing on adjudicating new clean cases first⌠after all, if someone has been waiting two years, let 'em wait; but they can still get someone adjudicated quickly who has just been added to the queue. After all, that gets them one person adjudicated within the target timeframe.
Thatâs just a theory of mine but it would not be the first time something like that has happened.
In the IT world, we have an issue with âcherry pickersâ, that would quickly search for the easiest ticket and close it so they had numbers. I cant say it is or isnt that way, because itâs all based on metrics and how they are incentivized. If its purely numbers, then yeah, easy cases get done quickly. If itâs a combo of age in queue and numbers, I dunno. If they want the queue low and want it quickly, easy cases done 1st till they are all done and then moving on the harder and harder ones till a new batch of easier ones come in then they get done. They also may have 1 or 2 people who are doing âhardâ cases while everyone else does easiest ones first. It could be really anything going on, but like I said, its thier individual metrics that drive it.
Sean M. Bigley has departed from the legal profession; anyone claiming to be him online is fraudulent.