Slipping It Under the Radar

The Office of Management and Budget has long touted the value of transparency in government. So explain this:

OMB released a report today on progress in implementation of Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12, or HSPD 12, which requires agencies to issue biometrically enabled credentials to all employees and contractors to replace standard flash badges. In that report, the total number of employees and contractors that will receive the badges were more than double what OMB reported only six months ago. OMB now reports that 4.3 million employees and 1.2 million contractors require new cards, compared to 1.9 million federal employees and 591,358 contractors, as reported in October 2007.

That change likely explains another anomaly. Ninety-seven percent of federal employees and 79 percent of contractors could not have completed the required background checks, as reported in October, because the latest report states that only 59 percent and 42 percent respectively have done so.

What’s the explanation for such a drastic difference? OMB opted not to provide one in a briefing on the latest numbers; in fact, the change in the numbers wasn’t even mentioned. When asked later, a spokeswoman attributed the undercount to faulty data. “We have better and more complete data now than we had previously,” she said.