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Congressional Record: October 6, 2000 (House)
Page H9053-H9103

CONFERENCE REPORT ON H.R. 5408, FLOYD D. SPENCE NATIONAL DEFENSE
AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2001

Excerpts on Secrecy and Security Policy
With Report Language (from H.Rept. 106-945) in Italics

Sec. 1071 Limitation on Granting of Security Clearances
Sec. 1072 Process for Prioritizing Background Investigations
Sec. 1073 Authority to Withhold Certain Sensitive Information from Public Disclosure
Sec. 1074 Expansion of Authority to Exempt Geodetic Products from Public Disclosure
Sec. 1075 Expenditures for Declassification Activities
Sec. 1076 Enhanced Access to Criminal History Information
Sec. 1077 Extension of Authority to Engage in Commercial Activities as Security for Intelligence Activities
Sec. 1078 Coordination of Nuclear Weapons Secrecy Policies and Consideration of Health of Workers
Sec. 3135 Modification of Counterintelligence Polygraph Program
Sec. 3193 Frequency of Reports on Inadvertent Disclosures of Restricted Data
Provisions Not Adopted: FOIA Exemption for the Defense Intelligence Agency


[...]

                      TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                      Subtitle H--Security Matters

     SEC. 1071. LIMITATION ON GRANTING OF SECURITY CLEARANCES.

       (a) In General.--Chapter 49 of title 10, United States 
     Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
     section:

     "Sec. 986. Security clearances: limitations

       "(a) Prohibition.--After the date of the enactment of this 
     section, the Department of Defense may not grant or renew a 
     security clearance for a person to whom this section applies 
     who is described in subsection (c).
       "(b) Covered Persons.--This section applies to the 
     following persons:
       "(1) An officer or employee of the Department of Defense.
       "(2) A member of the Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine 
     Corps who is on active duty or is in an active status.
       "(3) An officer or employee of a contractor of the 
     Department of Defense.
       "(c) Persons Disqualified From Being Granted Security 
     Clearances.--A person is described in this subsection if any 
     of the following applies to that person:
       "(1) The person has been convicted in any court of the 
     United States of a crime and sentenced to imprisonment for a 
     term exceeding one year.
       "(2) The person is an unlawful user of, or is addicted to, 
     a controlled substance (as defined in section 102 of the 
     Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 802)).
       "(3) The person is mentally incompetent, as determined by 
     a mental health professional approved by the Department of 
     Defense.
       "(4) The person has been discharged or dismissed from the 
     Armed Forces under dishonorable conditions.
       "(d) Waiver Authority.--In a meritorious case, the 
     Secretary of Defense or the Secretary of the military 
     department concerned may authorize an exception to the 
     prohibition in subsection (a) for a person described in 
     paragraph (1) or (4) of subsection (c). The authority under 
     the preceding sentence may not be delegated.
       "(e) Annual Report.--Not later than February 1 each year, 
     the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on 
     Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives a 
     report identifying each waiver issued under subsection (d) 
     during the preceding year with an explanation for each case 
     of the disqualifying factor in subsection (c) that applied, 
     and the reason for the waiver of the disqualification.''.
       (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the 
     beginning of such chapter is amended by adding at the end the 
     following new item:

"986. Security clearances: limitations.''.

     Limitation on granting of security clearances (sec. 1071)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 1074) that 
     would prohibit any officer, employee, or contractor of the 
     Department of Defense, or any member of the armed forces, 
     from receiving a security clearance if that person: (1) has 
     been convicted in any court within the United States and 
     sentenced to imprisonment for a term exceeding 1 year; (2) is 
     an unlawful user of, or addicted to any controlled substance; 
     (3) is currently mentally incompetent; or (4) has been 
     discharged from the armed forces under dishonorable 
     conditions.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes with an amendment that would authorize 
     the Secretary of Defense or the secretaries of the military 
     departments to waive this provision in meritorious cases for 
     persons who would otherwise be prohibited from receiving a 
     security clearance.



     SEC. 1072. PROCESS FOR PRIORITIZING BACKGROUND INVESTIGATIONS 
                   FOR SECURITY CLEARANCES FOR DEPARTMENT OF 
                   DEFENSE PERSONNEL AND DEFENSE CONTRACTOR 
                   PERSONNEL.

       (a) Establishment of Process.--Chapter 80 of title 10, 
     United States Code, is amended by adding after section 1563, 
     as added by section 542(a), the following new section:

     "Sec. 1564. Security clearance investigations

       "(a) Expedited Process.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
     prescribe a process for expediting the completion of the 
     background investigations necessary for granting security 
     clearances for Department of Defense personnel and Department 
     of Defense contractor personnel who are engaged in sensitive 
     duties that are critical to the national security.
       "(b) Required Features.--The process developed under 
     subsection (a) shall provide for the following:
       "(1) Quantification of the requirements for background 
     investigations necessary for grants of security clearances 
     for Department of Defense personnel and Department of Defense 
     contractor personnel.
       "(2) Categorization of personnel on the basis of the 
     degree of sensitivity of their duties and the extent to which 
     those duties are critical to the national security.
       "(3) Prioritization of the processing of background 
     investigations on the basis of the categories of personnel 
     determined under paragraph (2).
       "(c) Annual Review.--The Secretary shall conduct an annual 
     review of the process prescribed under subsection (a) and 
     shall revise that process as determined necessary in relation 
     to ongoing Department of Defense missions.
       "(d) Consultation Requirement.--The Secretary shall 
     consult with the Secretaries of the military departments and 
     the heads of Defense Agencies in carrying out this section.
       "(e) Sensitive Duties.--For the purposes of this section, 
     it is not necessary for the performance of duties to involve 
     classified activities or classified matters in order for the 
     duties to be considered sensitive and critical to the 
     national security.''.
       (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the 
     beginning of such chapter is amended by adding after the item 
     relating to section 1563, as added by section 542(b), the 
     following new item:

"1564. Security clearance investigations.''.
       (c) Deadline for Prescribing Process for Prioritizing 
     Background Investigations for Security Clearances.--The 
     process required by section 1564(a) of title 10, United 
     States Code, as added by subsection (a), for expediting the 
     completion of the background investigations necessary for 
     granting security clearances for certain persons shall be 
     prescribed not later than January 1, 2001.

     Process for prioritizing background investigations for 
         security clearances for Department of Defense personnel 
         and defense contractor personnel (sec. 1072)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 1043) that 
     would require the Secretary of Defense to establish a process 
     for prioritizing background investigations for security 
     clearances for Department of Defense personnel.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes with an amendment that would require the 
     Secretary of Defense to establish a process for prioritizing 
     background investigations for security clearances for 
     Department of Defense personnel and contractors of the 
     Department of Defense.



     SEC. 1073. AUTHORITY TO WITHHOLD CERTAIN SENSITIVE 
                   INFORMATION FROM PUBLIC DISCLOSURE.

       (a) In General.--Chapter 3 of title 10, United States Code, 
     is amended by inserting after section 130b the following new 
     section:

     "Sec. 130c. Nondisclosure of information: certain sensitive 
       information of foreign governments and international 
       organizations

       "(a) Exemption From Disclosure.--The national security 
     official concerned (as defined in subsection (h)) may 
     withhold from public disclosure otherwise required by law 
     sensitive information of foreign governments in accordance 
     with this section.
       "(b) Information Eligible for Exemption.--For the purposes 
     of this section, information is sensitive information of a 
     foreign government only if the national security official 
     concerned makes each of the following determinations with 
     respect to the information:
       "(1) That the information was provided by, otherwise made 
     available by, or produced in cooperation with, a foreign 
     government or international organization.
       "(2) That the foreign government or international 
     organization is withholding the information from public 
     disclosure (relying for that determination on the written 
     representation of the foreign government or international 
     organization to that effect).
       "(3) That any of the following conditions are met:
       "(A) The foreign government or international organization 
     requests, in writing, that the information be withheld.
       "(B) The information was provided or made available to the 
     United States Government on the condition that it not be 
     released to the public.
       "(C) The information is an item of information, or is in a 
     category of information, that the national security official 
     concerned has specified in regulations prescribed under 
     subsection (f) as being information the release of which 
     would have an adverse effect on the ability of the United 
     States Government to obtain the same or similar information 
     in the future.
       "(c) Information of Other Agencies.--If the national 
     security official concerned provides to the head of another 
     agency sensitive information of a foreign government, as 
     determined by that national security official under 
     subsection (b), and informs the head of the other agency of 
     that determination, then the head of the other agency shall 
     withhold the information from any public disclosure unless 
     that national security official specifically authorizes the 
     disclosure.
       "(d) Limitations.--(1) If a request for disclosure covers 
     any sensitive information of a foreign government (as 
     described in subsection (b)) that came into the possession or 
     under the control of the United States Government before the 
     date of the enactment of the Floyd D. Spence National Defense 
     Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 and more than 25 years 
     before the request is received by an agency, the information 
     may be withheld only as set forth in paragraph (3).
       "(2)(A) If a request for disclosure covers any sensitive 
     information of a foreign government (as described in 
     subsection (b)) that came into the possession or under the 
     control of the United States Government on or after the date 
     referred to in paragraph (1), the authority to withhold the 
     information under this section is subject to the provisions 
     of subparagraphs (B) and (C).
       "(B) Information referred to in subparagraph (A) may not 
     be withheld under this section after--
       "(i) the date that is specified by a foreign government or 
     international organization in a request or expression of a 
     condition described in paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection (b) 
     that is made by the foreign government or international 
     organization concerning the information; or
       "(ii) if there are more than one such foreign governments 
     or international organizations, the latest date so specified 
     by any of them.
       "(C) If no date is applicable under subparagraph (B) to a 
     request referred to in subparagraph (A) and the information 
     referred to in that subparagraph came into possession or 
     under the control of the United States more than 10 years 
     before the date on which the request is received by an 
     agency, the information may be withheld under this section 
     only as set forth in paragraph (3).
       "(3) Information referred to in paragraph (1) or (2)(C) 
     may be withheld under this section in the case of a request 
     for disclosure only if, upon the notification of each foreign 
     government and international organization concerned in 
     accordance with the regulations prescribed under subsection 
     (g)(2), any such government or organization requests in 
     writing that the information not be disclosed for an 
     additional period stated in the request of that government or 
     organization. After the national security official concerned 
     considers the request of the foreign government or 
     international organization, the official shall designate a 
     later date as the date after which the information is not to 
     be withheld under this section. The later date may be 
     extended in accordance with a later request of any such 
     foreign government or international organization under this 
     paragraph.
       "(e) Information Protected Under Other Authority.--This 
     section does not apply to information or matters that are 
     specifically required in the interest of national defense or 
     foreign policy to be protected against unauthorized 
     disclosure under criteria established by an Executive order 
     and are classified, properly, at the confidential, secret, or 
     top secret level pursuant to such Executive order.
       "(f) Disclosures Not Affected.--Nothing in this section 
     shall be construed to authorize any official to withhold, or 
     to authorize the withholding of, information from the 
     following:
       "(1) Congress.
       "(2) The Comptroller General, unless the information 
     relates to activities that the President designates as 
     foreign intelligence or counterintelligence activities.
       "(g) Regulations.--(1) The national security officials 
     referred to in subsection (h)(1) shall

[[Page H9133]]

     each prescribe regulations to carry out this section. The 
     regulations shall include criteria for making the 
     determinations required under subsection (b). The regulations 
     may provide for controls on access to and use of, and special 
     markings and specific safeguards for, a category or 
     categories of information subject to this section.
       "(2) The regulations shall include procedures for 
     notifying and consulting with each foreign government or 
     international organization concerned about requests for 
     disclosure of information to which this section applies.
       "(h) Definitions.--In this section:
       "(1) The term `national security official concerned' means 
     the following:
       "(A) The Secretary of Defense, with respect to information 
     of concern to the Department of Defense, as determined by the 
     Secretary.
       "(B) The Secretary of Transportation, with respect to 
     information of concern to the Coast Guard, as determined by 
     the Secretary, but only while the Coast Guard is not 
     operating as a service in the Navy.
       "(C) The Secretary of Energy, with respect to information 
     concerning the national security programs of the Department 
     of Energy, as determined by the Secretary.
       "(2) The term `agency' has the meaning given that term in 
     section 552(f) of title 5.
       "(3) The term `international organization' means the 
     following:
       "(A) A public international organization designated 
     pursuant to section 1 of the International Organizations 
     Immunities Act (59 Stat. 669; 22 U.S.C. 288) as being 
     entitled to enjoy the privileges, exemptions, and immunities 
     provided in such Act.
       "(B) A public international organization created pursuant 
     to a treaty or other international agreement as an instrument 
     through or by which two or more foreign governments engage in 
     some aspect of their conduct of international affairs.
       "(C) An official mission, except a United States mission, 
     to a public international organization referred to in 
     subparagraph (A) or (B).''.
       (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the 
     beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after the 
     item relating to section 130b the following new item:

"130c. Nondisclosure of information: certain sensitive information of 
              foreign governments and international organizations.''.

     Authority to withhold certain sensitive information from 
         public disclosure (sec. 1073)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 1044) that 
     would authorize the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of 
     Transportation, and the Secretary of Energy to withhold from 
     public disclosure otherwise authorized by law sensitive 
     information provided by a foreign government or an 
     international organization which is itself protecting the 
     information from disclosure. The provision would not 
     authorize the withholding of information from Congress or, 
     except in the case of foreign intelligence or 
     counterintelligence activities, the Comptroller General.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes with a technical amendment.



     SEC. 1074. EXPANSION OF AUTHORITY TO EXEMPT GEODETIC PRODUCTS 
                   OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FROM PUBLIC 
                   DISCLOSURE.

       Section 455(b)(1)(C) of title 10, United States Code, is 
     amended by striking "or reveal military operational or 
     contingency plans'' and inserting ", reveal military 
     operational or contingency plans, or reveal, jeopardize, or 
     compromise military or intelligence capabilities''.

     Expansion of authority to exempt geodetic products of the 
         Department of Defense from public disclosure (sec. 1074)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 916) that 
     would expand the authority of the Secretary of Defense to 
     exempt geodetic products from public disclosure.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes.



     SEC. 1075. EXPENDITURES FOR DECLASSIFICATION ACTIVITIES.

       (a) Identification in Budget Materials of Amounts for 
     Declassification Activities.--Section 230 of title 10, United 
     States Code, is amended--
       (1) by striking ", as a budgetary line item,''; and
       (2) by adding at the end the following new sentence: 
     "Identification of such amounts in such budget justification 
     materials shall be in a single display that shows the total 
     amount for the Department of Defense and the amount for each 
     military department and Defense Agency.''.
       (b) Limitation on Expenditures.--The total amount expended 
     by the Department of Defense during fiscal year 2001 to carry 
     out declassification activities under the provisions of 
     sections 3.4, 3.5, and 3.6 of Executive Order 12958 (50 
     U.S.C. 435 note) and for special searches (including costs 
     for document search, copying, and review and imagery 
     analysis) may not exceed $30,000,000.
       (c) Compilation and Organization of Records.--The 
     Department of Defense may not be required, when conducting a 
     special search, to compile or organize records that have 
     already been declassified and placed into the public domain.
       (d) Special Searches.--For the purpose of this section, the 
     term "special search'' means the response of the Department 
     of Defense to any of the following:
       (1) A statutory requirement to conduct a declassification 
     review on a specified set of agency records.
       (2) An Executive order to conduct a declassification review 
     on a specified set of agency records.
       (3) An order from the President or an official with 
     delegated authority from the President to conduct a 
     declassification review on a specified set of agency records.

     Expenditures for declassification activities (sec. 1075)
       The House bill contained a provision (sec. 1035) that 
     would: (1) Clarify section 230 of Title 10, United States 
     Code; (2) limit the amount of funds expended during fiscal 
     year 2001 by the Department of Defense to carry out 
     declassification activities; and (3) prohibit the Department 
     of Defense, as part of a special search, from being required 
     to compile records that have already been declassified.
       The Senate amendment contained no similar provision.
       The Senate recedes.



     SEC. 1076. ENHANCED ACCESS TO CRIMINAL HISTORY RECORD 
                   INFORMATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY AND OTHER 
                   PURPOSES

       (a) Coverage of Department of Transportation.--Section 9101 
     of title 5, United States Code, is amended--
       (1) by adding at the end of subsection (a) the following 
     new paragraph:
       "(6) The term `covered agency' means any of the following:
       "(A) The Department of Defense.
       "(B) The Department of State.
       "(C) The Department of Transportation.
       "(D) The Office of Personnel Management.
       "(E) The Central Intelligence Agency.
       "(F) The Federal Bureau of Investigation.'';
       (2) in subsection (b)(1)--
       (A) by striking "by the Department of Defense'' and all 
     that follows through "Federal Bureau of Investigation'' and 
     inserting "by the head of a covered agency''; and
       (B) by striking "such department, office, agency, or 
     bureau'' and inserting "that covered agency''; and
       (3) in subsection (c), by striking "The Department of 
     Defense'' and all that follows through "Federal Bureau of 
     Investigation'' and inserting "A covered agency''.
       (b) Repeal of Expired Provision.--Subsection (b) of such 
     section is amended by striking paragraph (3).
       (c) Expanded Purposes for Access to Criminal History 
     Information.--Subsection (b) of such section is further 
     amended--
       (1) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph (4);
       (2) in the first sentence of paragraph (1)--
       (A) by inserting "any of the following:'' after 
     "eligibility for''; and
       (B) by striking "(A) access to classified information'' 
     and all that follows through the end of the sentence and 
     inserting the following:
       "(A) Access to classified information.
       "(B) Assignment to or retention in sensitive national 
     security duties.
       "(C) Acceptance or retention in the armed forces.
       "(D) Appointment, retention, or assignment to a position 
     of public trust or a critical or sensitive position while 
     either employed by the Government or performing a Government 
     contract.'';
       (3) by designating the second sentence of paragraph (1) as 
     paragraph (2); and
       (4) by designating the third sentence of paragraph (1) as 
     paragraph (3) and in that sentence by striking ", nor 
     shall'' and all that follows through the end of the sentence 
     and inserting a period.
       (d) Use of Automated Information Delivery Systems.--Such 
     section is further amended--
       (1) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (f); and
       (2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new 
     subsection (e):
       "(e)(1) Automated information delivery systems shall be 
     used to provide criminal history record information to a 
     covered agency under subsection (b) whenever available.
       "(2) Fees, if any, charged for automated access through 
     such systems may not exceed the reasonable cost of providing 
     such access.
       "(3) The criminal justice agency providing the criminal 
     history record information through such systems may not limit 
     disclosure on the basis that the repository is accessed from 
     outside the State.
       "(4) Information provided through such systems shall be 
     the full and complete criminal history record.
       "(5) Criminal justice agencies shall accept and respond to 
     requests for criminal history record information through such 
     systems with printed or photocopied records when 
     requested.''.
       (e) Technical Amendments.--Subsection (a) of such section 
     is amended--
       (1) in paragraph (1), by striking "includes'' and all that 
     follows through "thereof which'' and inserting "means (A) 
     any Federal, State, or local court, and (B) any Federal, 
     State, or local agency, or any subunit thereof, which''; and
       (2) in paragraph (4)--
       (A) by inserting "the Commonwealth of'' before "the 
     Northern Mariana Islands''; and
       (B) by striking "the Trust Territory of the Pacific 
     Islands,'.
       (f) Conforming Amendments.--(1)(A) The heading for chapter 
     91 of title 5, United States Code, is amended to read as 
     follows:

"CHAPTER 91--ACCESS TO CRIMINAL HISTORY RECORDS FOR NATIONAL SECURITY 
                         AND OTHER PURPOSES''.

       (B) The item relating to chapter 91 in the table of 
     chapters at the beginning of part III of such title is 
     amended to read as follows:

"91. Access to Criminal History Records for National Security and 
    Other Purposes..........................................9101''.....

       (2)(A) The heading of section 9101 of such title is amended 
     to read as follows:

     "Sec. 9101. Access to criminal history records for national 
       security and other purposes''.

       (B) The item relating to that section in the table of 
     sections at the beginning of chapter 91 of such title is 
     amended to read as follows:

"9101. Access to criminal history records for national security and 
              other purposes.''.
       (g) Repeal of Superseded Provision.--(1) Section 520a of 
     title 10, United States Code, is repealed.
       (2) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 31 of 
     such title is amended by striking the item relating to 
     section 520a.

     Enhanced access to criminal history record information for 
         national security and other purposes (sec. 1076)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 1057) that 
     would amend section 9101 of title 5, United States Code, to 
     provide expanded access to criminal history information by 
     the Department of Defense and certain other executive 
     departments and agencies. The provision would expand the 
     authority to cover acceptance or retention in the armed 
     forces, and appointment, retention, or assignment to a 
     position of public trust or a critical employee. It would 
     also authorize the Federal Government to obtain the 
     information through the use of common identifiers, such as 
     names, and would prohibit states and localities from 
     conditioning the provision of such information on 
     indemnification agreements.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes with an amendment that would strike the 
     authorization of the use of common identifiers and the 
     prohibition on the requirement of indemnification agreements, 
     and would repeal a superseded provision of law.



     SEC. 1077. TWO-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO ENGAGE IN 
                   COMMERCIAL ACTIVITIES AS SECURITY FOR 
                   INTELLIGENCE COLLECTION ACTIVITIES.

       Section 431(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
     in the second sentence by striking "December 31, 2000'' and 
     inserting "December 31, 2002''.

    Two-year extension of authority to engage in commercial 
         activities as security for intelligence collection 
         activities (sec. 1077)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 1071) that 
     would extend the authority provided by section 431(a) of 
     Title 10, United States Code, by two years.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes.



     SEC. 1078. COORDINATION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS SECRECY POLICIES 
                   AND CONSIDERATION OF HEALTH OF WORKERS AT 
                   FORMER DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE NUCLEAR 
                   FACILITIES.

       (a) Review of Secrecy Policies.--(1) The Secretary of 
     Defense shall review classification and security policies of 
     the Department of Defense in order to ensure that, within 
     appropriate national security constraints, those policies do 
     not prevent or discourage former defense nuclear weapons 
     facility employees who may have been exposed to radioactive 
     or other hazardous substances associated with nuclear weapons 
     from discussing such exposures with appropriate health care 
     providers and with other appropriate officials.
       (2) The policies reviewed under paragraph (1) shall include 
     the policy to neither confirm nor deny the presence of 
     nuclear weapons as that

[[Page H9134]]

     policy is applied to former defense nuclear weapons 
     facilities.
       (b) Definitions.--For purposes of this section:
       (1) The term "former defense nuclear weapons facility 
     employees'' means employees and former employees of the 
     Department of Defense who are or were employed at a site 
     that, as of the date of the enactment of this Act, is a 
     former defense nuclear weapons facility.
       (2) The term "former defense nuclear weapons facility'' 
     means a current or former Department of Defense site in the 
     United States which at one time was a defense nuclear weapons 
     facility but which no longer contains nuclear weapons or 
     materials and otherwise is no longer used for such purpose.
       (3) The term "defense nuclear weapons facility'' means a 
     Department of Defense site in the United States at which 
     nuclear weapons or materials are stored, assembled, 
     disassembled, or maintained.
       (c) Notification of Affected Employees.--(1) The Secretary 
     of Defense shall seek to identify individuals--
       (A) who are former defense nuclear weapons facility 
     employees; and
       (B) who, while employed at a defense nuclear weapons 
     facility, may have been exposed to radioactive or hazardous 
     substances associated with nuclear weapons.
       (2) Upon identification of any individual under paragraph 
     (1), the Secretary of Defense shall notify that individual, 
     by mail or other individual means, of any such exposure to 
     radioactive or hazardous substances associated with nuclear 
     weapons that has been identified by the Secretary. The 
     notification shall include an explanation of how (or the 
     degree to which) that individual can discuss any such 
     exposure with a health care provider who does not hold a 
     security clearance without violating security or 
     classification procedures and, if necessary, provide guidance 
     to facilitate the ability of that individual to contact a 
     health care provider with appropriate security clearances or 
     otherwise to discuss such exposures with other officials who 
     are determined by the Secretary of Defense to be appropriate.
       (d) Report.--Not later than May 1, 2001, the Secretary of 
     Defense shall submit to the Committee on Armed Services of 
     the Senate and the Committee on Armed Services of the House 
     of Representatives a report setting forth--
       (1) the results of the review conducted under subsection 
     (a), including any changes made or recommendations for 
     legislation; and
       (2) the status of the notifications required by subsection 
     (b) and an anticipated date by which the identification and 
     notification of individuals under that subsection will be 
     completed.
       (e) Consultation with Secretary of Energy.--The Secretary 
     of Defense shall carry out the review under subsection (a) 
     and the identification of individuals under subsection (b), 
     and shall prepare the report under subsection (c), in 
     consultation with the Secretary of Energy.

      Coordination of nuclear weapons secrecy policies and 
         consideration of health of workers at former Department 
         of Defense nuclear facilities (sec. 1078)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 1077) that 
     would: (1) Require the Secretary of Defense, in consultation 
     with the Secretary of Energy, to ensure that secrecy policies 
     do not prevent or discourage employees at former nuclear 
     weapons facilities who may have been exposed to radioactive 
     or other hazardous substances from discussing such exposures 
     with appropriate health care providers; and (2) seek to 
     identify individuals who are or were employed at sites that 
     no longer store, assemble, disassemble, or maintain nuclear 
     weapons, and, upon determination that such individuals may 
     have been exposed to radioactive or hazardous substances, 
     notify such individuals about any such exposure, including an 
     explanation of how employees can discuss exposures with 
     health care providers.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes with a clarifying amendment.
       The conferees note that the Department of Defense operates 
     a number of sites not engaged in the manufacture or storage 
     of nuclear weapons that may nonetheless have exposed workers 
     to hazardous substances. The conferees agree that the 
     Secretary of Defense shall address in the review and 
     notifications described in this provision workers exposed to 
     radioactive or other hazardous materials at all such 
     facilities where secrecy policies may otherwise pose an 
     obstacle to seeking medical advice and treatment.



[...]

      TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS

[...]

   Subtitle C--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations

[...]

     SEC. 3135. MODIFICATION OF COUNTERINTELLIGENCE POLYGRAPH 
                   PROGRAM.

       (a) Covered Persons.--Subsection (b) of section 3154 of the 
     Department of Energy Facilities Safeguards, Security, and 
     Counterintelligence Enhancement Act of 1999 (subtitle D of 
     title XXXI of Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 941; 42 U.S.C. 
     7383h) is amended to read as follows:
       "(b) Covered Persons.--(1) Subject to paragraph (2), for 
     purposes of this section, a covered person is one of the 
     following:
       "(A) An officer or employee of the Department.
       "(B) An expert or consultant under contract to the 
     Department.
       "(C) An officer or employee of a contractor of the 
     Department.
       "(D) An individual assigned or detailed to the Department.
       "(E) An applicant for a position in the Department.
       "(2) A person described in paragraph (1) is a covered 
     person for purposes of this section only if the position of 
     the person, or for which the person is applying, under that 
     paragraph is a position in one of the categories of positions 
     listed in section 709.4(a) of title 10, Code of Federal 
     Regulations.''.
       (b) High-Risk Programs.--Subsection (c) of that section is 
     amended to read as follows:
       "(c) High-Risk Programs.--For purposes of this section, 
     high-risk programs are the following:
       "(1) Programs using information known as Sensitive 
     Compartmented Information.
       "(2) The programs known as Special Access Programs and 
     Personnel Security and Assurance Programs.
       "(3) Any other program or position category specified in 
     section 709.4(a) of title 10, Code of Federal Regulations.''.
       (c) Authority To Waive Examination Requirement.--Subsection 
     (d) of that section is amended--
       (1) by inserting "(1)'' before "The Secretary''; and
       (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
       "(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the Secretary may, after 
     consultation with appropriate security personnel, waive the 
     applicability of paragraph (1) to a covered person--
       "(A) if--
       "(i) the Secretary determines that the waiver is important 
     to the national security interests of the United States;
       "(ii) the covered person has an active security clearance; 
     and
       "(iii) the covered person acknowledges in a signed writing 
     that the capacity of the covered person to perform duties 
     under a high-risk program after the expiration of the waiver 
     is conditional upon meeting the requirements of paragraph (1) 
     within the effective period of the waiver;
       "(B) if another Federal agency certifies to the Secretary 
     that the covered person has completed successfully a full-
     scope or counterintelligence-scope polygraph examination 
     during the 5-year period ending on the date of the 
     certification; or
       "(C) if the Secretary determines, after consultation with 
     the covered person and appropriate medical personnel, that 
     the treatment of a medical or psychological condition of the 
     covered person should preclude the administration of the 
     examination.
       "(3)(A) The Secretary may not commence the exercise of the 
     authority under paragraph (2) to waive the applicability of 
     paragraph (1) to any covered persons until 15 days after the 
     date on which the Secretary submits to the appropriate 
     committees of Congress a report setting forth the criteria to 
     be used by the Secretary for determining when a waiver under 
     paragraph (2)(A) is important to the national security 
     interests of the United States. The criteria shall not 
     include the need to maintain the scientific vitality of the 
     laboratory. The criteria shall include an assessment of 
     counterintelligence risks and programmatic impacts.
       "(B) Any waiver under paragraph (2)(A) shall be effective 
     for not more than 120 days, and a person who is subject to a 
     waiver under paragraph (2)(A) may not ever be subject to 
     another waiver under paragraph (2)(A).
       "(C) Any waiver under paragraph (2)(C) shall be effective 
     for the duration of the treatment on which such waiver is 
     based.
       "(4) The Secretary shall submit to the appropriate 
     committees of Congress on a semi-annual basis a report on any 
     determinations made under paragraph (2)(A) during the 6-month 
     period ending on the date of such report. The report shall 
     include a national security justification for each waiver 
     resulting from such determinations.
       "(5) In this subsection, the term 'appropriate committees 
     of Congress' means the following:
       "(A) The Committee on Armed Services and the Select 
     Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.
       "(B) The Committee on Armed Services and the Permanent 
     Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
     Representatives.
       "(6) It is the sense of Congress that the waiver authority 
     in paragraph (2) not be used by the Secretary to exempt from 
     the applicability of paragraph (1) any covered persons in the 
     highest risk categories, such as persons who have access to 
     the most sensitive weapons design information and other 
     highly sensitive programs, including special access programs.
       "(7) The authority under paragraph (2) to waive the 
     applicability of paragraph (1) to a covered person shall 
     expire on September 30, 2002.''.
       (d) Scope of Counterintelligence Polygraph Examination.--
     Subsection (f) of that section is amended--
       (1) by inserting "terrorism,'' after "sabotage,''; and
       (2) by inserting "deliberate damage to or malicious misuse 
     of a United States Government information or defense 
     system,'' before "and''.

Modification of counterintelligence polygraph program (sec. 
         3135)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 3154) that 
     would amend section 3154 of the National Defense 
     Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (Public Law 106-65) by 
     authorizing the Secretary of Energy to waive the requirement 
     that certain Department of Energy (DOE) employees and DOE 
     contractor employees successfully pass a counterintelligence 
     polygraph exam before such employees can be granted access to 
     high-risk programs. The provision would allow the Secretary 
     to waive this requirement for any individual for a period not 
     to exceed 120 days, if the Secretary determines that: (1) 
     such a waiver is in the national security interests of the 
     United States; (2) the covered employee has been granted a 
     security clearance; and (3) the covered employee signs a 
     written acknowledgment that the employment is conditioned 
     upon successfully passing a counterintelligence polygraph 
     exam within 120 days of the date of signing such an 
     acknowledgment. The provision would also allow the Secretary 
     to waive this requirement for any individual who the 
     Secretary determines: (1) has completed successfully a full-
     scope counterintelligence polygraph exam while employed with 
     another federal agency; or (2) should not be examined because 
     of treatment for a medical or psychological condition.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes with an amendment that would authorize 
     the Secretary to waive polygraph requirements on a one-time 
     basis

[[Page H9446]]

     for any individual employee and would prohibit the Secretary 
     from using the need to maintain the scientific viability of a 
     DOE laboratory as a criteria for approving any such waivers. 
     The amendment would further require that employees holding a 
     sensitive compartmented information clearance be subject to 
     these requirements.

[...]

     SEC. 3193. FREQUENCY OF REPORTS ON INADVERTENT RELEASES OF 
                   RESTRICTED DATA AND FORMERLY RESTRICTED DATA.

       (a) Frequency of Reports.--Section 3161(f)(2) of the Strom 
     Thurmond National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
     1999 (Public Law 105-261; 112 Stat. 2261; 50 U.S.C. 435 note) 
     is amended to read as follows:
       "(2) The Secretary of Energy shall, on a quarterly basis, 
     submit a report to the committees and Assistant to the 
     President specified in subsection (d). The report shall state 
     whether any inadvertent releases described in paragraph (1) 
     occurred during the immediately preceding quarter and, if so, 
     shall identify each such release.''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) 
     apply with respect to inadvertent releases of Restricted Data 
     and Formerly Restricted Data that are discovered on or after 
     the date of the enactment of this Act.

     Frequency of reports on inadvertent releases of restricted 
         data and formerly restricted data (sec. 3193)
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 3173) that 
     would amend section 3161 of the Strom Thurmond National 
     Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (Public Law 
     106-65) to require the Secretary of Energy to report 
     inadvertent releases of restricted data and formerly 
     restricted data on a quarterly basis rather than 30 days 
     after any such release.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The House recedes with a clarifying amendment that would 
     make the quarterly report mandatory, regardless of whether 
     there is a reportable incident during the period by the 
     report.

[...]

                   LEGISLATIVE PROVISIONS NOT ADOPTED


   Protection of operational files of the Defense Intelligence 
         Agency
       The Senate amendment contained a provision (sec. 1045) that 
     would authorize the Secretary of Defense to withhold from 
     public disclosure the operational files of the Defense 
     Intelligence Agency (DIA). These files would be protected 
     from disclosure to the same extent as provided for under 
     section 701 of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 
     431). The provision would also make applicable to these files 
     the decennial review of provisions of section 702 of that Act 
     (50 U.S.C. 432), with the Secretary exercising the authority 
     granted to the Director of Central Intelligence under that 
     section.
       The House bill contained no similar provision.
       The Senate recedes.




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