The Pentagon plans to meet interested companies and request
proposals before Sept. 30, the end of fiscal year 2016, after
finalizing requirements for a more flexible and adaptive
replacement, said Richard Hale, the Pentagon's deputy chief
information officer for cybersecurity.
In an interview with Reuters given late last week, he said the
Pentagon hoped to build the new system as quickly as possible, but
its progress would be measured by testing and events rather than
preset dates.
Big arms makers like General Dynamics Corp, Raytheon Co, Lockheed
Martin Corp and Northrop Grumman Corp are expected to bid for the
work.
The White House last month set up a new agency, the National
Background Investigations Bureau, to replace the Office of Personnel
Management’s (OPM) Federal Investigative Services (FIS), which
currently handles more than 2 million background checks for federal
agencies and industry.
Still reeling from the massive OPM hack, the White House has said
the Pentagon would handle the new agency's information technology
(IT) to ensure its security, but gave no details.
The Pentagon's fiscal 2017 budget proposal includes $95 million in
initial funding for the system, and foresees $520 million in
additional spending through fiscal 2021, said Pentagon spokeswoman
Army Lieutenant Colonel Valerie Henderson.
Hale said the new system would be developed and built over time,
with some parts in place by the start of fiscal 2018, or sooner if
possible.
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Hale said the Pentagon was confident about working with contractors
despite last year's breach.
"We have quite a lot of faith in the cleared defense industry," he
said. "We believe that we can develop this information technology
with industry as safely as we could as if we were to do the
development entirely in house."
Hale said the new agency's IT structure would be designed to be
flexible enough to support whatever new investigative process the
government settled on for the new background check agency.
The idea was to continuously evaluate information about people with
security clearances, including "all kinds of sources" such as
financial and travel records, he said.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; editing by John Stonestreet)
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