VA two years behind schedule on issuing secure ID cards, IG concludes

The Veterans Affairs Department is nearly two years behind schedule in implementing secure credentials for employees and contractors as required by Homeland Security Presidential Directive-12.

“While VA has made little progress in implementing a reliable and effective program in compliance with HSPD-12, management efforts are underway to strengthen program implementation,” Finn wrote.

The Veterans Affairs Department is nearly two years behind schedule in implementing secure credentials for employees and contractors under a governmentwide directive, according to a new report from the VA's Office of Inspector General.

To date, the VA has issued approximately 9 percent of the necessary credentials to its workforce, including contractors, under Homeland Security Presidential Directive-12 HSPD-12), Belinda Finn, assistant IG for audits and evaluations, wrote in the Sept. 30 report.

In comparison, federal agencies overall issued about 59 percent of their HSPD-12 credentials by the deadline. Also, the VA issued some of those credentials without the required background investigations, the report said.


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“VA is almost 2 years behind the governmentwide October 2008 deadline for full compliance with HSPD-12,” she added.

Furthermore, VA also is unlikely to meet the VA chief of staff’s October 2011 deadline and, if current issuance rates continue, probably will not issue all 741,000 credentials until 2017, Finn wrote.

Under the directive, federal agencies must issue personal identification cards that meet federal standards for access control and security.

In addition, the IG found that at the VA, the personality-identity verification program being used to support the credentialing does not meet all critical mission requirements, and controls needed to track and provide accountability over costs are week.

Finn blamed the VA’s lack of progress on an ineffective management and failure to make the program a priority.

Although a Program Management Office for HSPD-12 has been in place at the VA since October 2009, the office lacks the resources and critical management tools necessary to direct and operate a departmentwide program, Finn wrote in the report.

The IG made two recommendations:

  • That the VA's assistant secretary for operations, security, and preparedness ensure that the program management office has the necessary resources and management tools in place to direct and implement the HSPD-12 Program.
  • That the assistant secretary for operations, security, and preparedness and the assistant secretary for information technology address deficiencies in the personal identity verification system and other operational deficiencies in the HSPD-12 program.

VA officials agreed with the findings and recommendations.