OPM calls for more scrutiny of employees' credentials
The federal personnel office wants agencies to do a better job of screening employees to ensure that they are not claiming credentials from unaccredited colleges or universities.
The Office of Personnel Management wants agencies to do a better job of screening federal employees to ensure that they are not claiming credentials from unaccredited colleges or universities.
In a memo sent yesterday to agency heads, OPM director Kay Coles James said OPM is notifying agencies when employees claim degrees from so-called "diploma mills," but agencies are not reporting back to OPM whether they have taken any action.
Agencies base personnel decisions on OPM background investigations into employees' suitability for security clearances, but agencies aren't reporting all their actions back to OPM as required, James said.
James linked her action to recent reports, first published by Government Computer News and Washington Technology, that federal employees were putting inflated educational credentials in their resumes. GCN and Washington Technology have found dozens of federal IT and contractor employees with degrees from unaccredited schools.
"You may recently have read about the inclusion on resumes of degrees from schools that are not properly accredited," James said. "Such degrees are from schools, often referred to as 'diploma mills,' that are not accredited by an appropriate authority subject to oversight by the U.S. Department of Education, and generally involve payment of a fee in exchange for a degree, without any significant academic requirements."
James referred agencies to an OPM manual on the topic, Guidance for Agencies Concerning Bogus Degree Claims.
She said OPM would audit the personnel security programs of agencies that do not comply with her request to tighten up their reporting of personnel decisions.
Federal regulations require agencies to report personnel decisions related to security clearances to OPM. But James' memo said that in fiscal 2002, agencies failed to comply for:
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