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CodeBlox wrote: » okay thanks. I was thinking that they would need to go to the former employer and request certain documents. I than began to think that the former employer could refuse to produce the "documents". Is that ever a possibility?
instant000 wrote: » Let's just say that he had a significant emotional event with the manager.
CodeBlox wrote: » So I remember reading in another thread that the clearance isn't tied to the job. So my question is: If I went to another job that required it, how would I go about proving that I have it to the possible employer? Will they just contact the "right people" to find out?
MrAgent wrote: » His clearance is probably under investigation because he has to do a 5 year periodic update. At a TS level, it has to be done every 5 years.
the_Grinch wrote: » Every agency doesn't use eQIP (wish they did because eQIP makes it very easy). Some use pdf files....
colemic wrote: » Same thing with the SF86, definitely keep a copy in a safe place. Otherwise you'll never remember all your old addresses and contact info for someone at each place.
instant000 wrote: » I thought the eQIP was just an electronic version of the SF-86? I remember the first time I did the SF-86, many years ago, it was paper-based. When I had to fill out the e-QIP this time around, much easier. Also, what I used to fill out the SF-86 the first time around is a lot different than what I needed for the e-QIP this time around ... the first time around I had basically never had a job, lived at home, and had only gone to college ... not much background there to contend with. For this latest one, I ... have begun moving annually, the last few years, so I'm not sure how bad that looks on the record, to move around so much. (And it wasn't moving for jobs, I was changing the places I was staying, while working with the same employer.) It was a workout confirming people who could be contacted to vouch where I had stayed and worked.
rwmidl wrote: » Instant - my understanding is the moving around shouldn't be an issue, it may just take longer to get the background investigation done because agencies in the different locations have to be contacted, do their research etc (that is if you moved between different states). If you stayed in the same state, just different addresses/cities it shouldn't be that big of an issue.
But I do agree in that getting people/neighbors to vouch that you lived at a certain address can be a pain. I guess worst case, if you didn't know any of your neighbors you could always give the apt. complex name and the investigator could contact the management company..
LordQarlyn wrote: » And ironically eQIP is itself very complicated (though more simpler than the other procedures in use). Mine was, printed out, almost 100 pages long hahaha.
Everyone wrote: » TS takes a lot longer than just Secret too. I had my Secret before I even got out of tech school for the Air Force. It was about a year later before they finished up my TS. The reinvestigation for my TS back in 2008 went a lot quicker than I thought it would, only a few months. I thought I was going to have problems, because I had gone through a bad divorce and even had my clearance temporarily suspended during the divorce. After I got everything cleared up though it wasn't an issue.
higherho wrote: » Yea the investigation processes now is much faster. I went from no clearance to a TS in 4 months.
JDMurray wrote: » The time it takes to clear any given person is highly dependent on how much diversity you have in your background (legal, financial, places lived and worked, previous clearances, etc.), the ability to satisfactorily interview your references, and the amount of backlog on the investigating agency's desk. Sometimes an investigation will take a long time to complete simply because of misplaced paperwork, or an investigator moves on to a new job and his/her cases are reassigned to another investigator that gives them a lower priority to complete. Just remember that obtaining a clearance is 99% a bureaucratic process, so there's no telling what (or where) the hang up is.
instant000 wrote: » I thought the eQIP was just an electronic version of the SF-86? QUOTE] eQIP is intended to be the website that houses digitized copies of the traditional forms (SF-85, 86, etc.) Not a one-for-one replacement. My last go-round I had a word version of the SF86 I had to fill out, in the not-too-distant past.
JDMurray wrote: » Some new info:Security Clearance Jobs Blog Detailed Instructions Now Available for New SF86How to Prepare for a Security Clearance Polygraph Examination
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