Women at Disadvantage for Security Clearances.

We have got it good on Florida's Space Coast where we are surfing a boom in the commercial space industry.

I can glance up from my garden and see rockets launch satellites into geostationary orbits. The museum where I volunteer displays the console that first launched John Glenn into space. We have an entire room dedicated to women astronauts.

But I'm worried because there is a significant gap in how--and more importantly who--is getting security clearances. Will we have enough cleared workers for our ambitious new space industry and defense workforce of tomorrow?

Law-abiding Americans are like pointillist paintings--exponential points of data which coalesce to form an individual.

These data points are scrutinized to get a security clearance that enables holders to access classified information on a "need to know" basis for certain types of employment. Clearances include: Top Secret, Secret, Confidential, etc., among others.

When I obtained my Global Entry card, the government took my digital fingerprints and interviewed me. So did the Brevard County sheriff's department when I obtained a conceal carry weapons permit in Florida.

My airline has a digital log of all the flights I take. My auto insurer knows about my father's stellar military service. Some insurance actuary somewhere knows I vote in midterm elections--a vitality marker for calculating premiums. You get the picture.

We have more data analytic points to capture on individuals, not less, yet the process for getting security clearances remains murky--and disfavors educated women. Most degrees earned at U.S. universities are earned by women. The Wall Street Journal reported recently that women constitute the majority of students in Wharton Business School MBA classes.

Yet, despite making strides, women still eschew military careers, making up less than one-fifth of the U.S. military. That sets educated American women squarely at a disadvantage when it comes to the on-ramp for security clearances.

I'm currently in a job search in Florida in the defense industry. One of the key requirements listed on lucrative export control and other defense jobs is having an active security clearance. Most women's resumes will never make the cut from the initial applicant tracking system screening.

The clearance systems we have today are expensive, cumbersome and hiding behind "complexities" that frankly do not hold water anymore. Our adversaries benefit from the way we hold our country back. New...

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