For the hundreds of thousands of cleared federal employees working in Northern Virginia, around Quantico, at the Pentagon, and near Langley, a security clearance is not a credential that sits in the background of an otherwise normal job. It is the job. Lose it, and the position that depends on it disappears with it almost immediately. The clearance revocation process operates largely outside the standard protections of Virginia federal employee law, follows its own adjudicative rules, and offers far more limited judicial review than most employees expect. Understanding what the process actually involves, and what rights still exist within it, is essential for any cleared federal worker in Virginia who receives a clearance action notice.
How Clearance Revocation Proceedings Get Triggered in 2025
In 2025, the pathway to a clearance action has changed meaningfully from how it worked a decade ago. Continuous Evaluation, the automated monitoring system that runs ongoing checks on cleared personnel between formal reinvestigations, has significantly expanded the volume of clearance actions being initiated. Where employees once expected a clearance review primarily at scheduled reinvestigation intervals, typically every five years for Secret and every ten years for Top Secret/SCI, CE now generates alerts based on financial data, public records, credit reports, criminal databases, and certain open-source information in something close to real time.
The practical result is that a federal employee near Quantico or at a Northern Virginia intelligence community facility can receive a clearance action notice based on an event from several months ago with no preceding warning that a review was underway. Common CE triggers include new tax liens, credit defaults, a misdemeanor arrest, foreign contact reports, or travel to certain countries. None of these automatically result in revocation, but all of them can start the formal process.
Clearance reviews can also be initiated through supervisor referrals, self-reports, Inspector General referrals, and information developed during reinvestigation of a different employee. The breadth of potential triggers is one reason the cleared Virginia workforce is managing more clearance concerns simultaneously than at any prior point in recent history.
The Statement of Reasons: The Most Important Document in the Process
When an adjudicating authority determines that a clearance concern warrants a formal proceeding, the cleared employee receives a Statement of Reasons. The SOR identifies the specific adjudicative guidelines at issue, the underlying facts the agency is relying on, and the concerns those facts raise about the employee’s continued eligibility for access.
The response window to the SOR is typically 20 days from receipt for cases processed through the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency, though the exact timeframe varies somewhat by agency. That window is short, and its importance cannot be overstated. The SOR response is the foundation of the employee’s case. It determines whether a hearing is requested, frames the factual and mitigating narrative that the adjudicator will evaluate, and establishes the record on which any subsequent appeal is built.
A well-constructed SOR response addresses each factual allegation specifically, admits what is accurate and disputes what is not, identifies the mitigating factors under the National Security Adjudicative Guidelines that apply to the employee’s situation, and includes supporting documentation. Each of the thirteen adjudicative guidelines, including financial considerations, foreign influence, personal conduct, and criminal conduct, has corresponding mitigating factors built into the guidelines themselves. The response needs to map the employee’s circumstances onto those mitigating factors with supporting evidence, not simply describe the situation in general terms.
For employees dealing with financial concerns, which remain among the most common clearance issues in the cleared Northern Virginia workforce, documentation of payment plans, credit counseling, the circumstances that created the financial hardship, and efforts at remediation are all part of a complete response. Adjudicators are directed to look at the whole person and the full context, but they can only work with what the response provides.
The DOHA Hearing: How the Administrative Process Works
For DoD civilian employees whose clearances are processed through DCSA, the appeal process runs through the Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals. If the initial SOR response does not resolve the matter favorably, the employee may request a formal hearing before a DOHA administrative judge.
At the hearing, the employee can present live testimony, call witnesses, submit documentary evidence, and cross-examine the government’s witnesses. The administrative judge applies the adjudicative guidelines and the whole-person standard, weighing all available information rather than treating any single disqualifying condition as automatically dispositive. The judge issues a written decision, which can then be appealed to a senior DOHA appeal board.
The process from SOR to final appeal board decision typically takes anywhere from six months to well over a year, during which the employee may be placed on administrative leave or reassigned to duties that do not require the clearance. For employees at facilities like Langley, the Pentagon, or Quantico where there is no realistic non-sensitive work available, the employment situation often becomes untenable before the administrative process concludes.
Intelligence Community and Other Agency Employees: Different Processes, Same Stakes
Not every cleared federal employee in Virginia goes through DOHA. Intelligence community agencies, including CIA, NSA, and certain DIA and NGA components, have their own internal appeals boards and procedures that differ from the DOHA process in important ways. The substantive adjudicative guidelines are the same, but the procedural protections available to the employee, the transparency of the process, and the avenues for external review are generally more limited in the intelligence community context. Employees at these agencies often have narrower grounds for challenging an adverse decision and more constrained hearing rights than their counterparts at DoD components going through DOHA.
How Clearance Loss Connects to Job Loss in Virginia Federal Employment Law
When a federal employee’s clearance is revoked, the agency initiates a separate employment action based on the employee’s inability to perform the essential functions of their position. This is a standard adverse action under Chapter 75, meaning the employee receives a proposed removal notice, has the right to respond, and can appeal a final removal to the Merit Systems Protection Board.
The critical limitation is the one established in Department of the Navy v. Egan. The MSPB cannot review the merits of the underlying clearance determination. It can evaluate whether the agency followed proper procedure in the removal process itself, whether the employee was given appropriate notice and the opportunity to respond, and in limited circumstances whether the clearance action was taken as a pretext for retaliation or discrimination. But the MSPB cannot second-guess the adjudicative finding on which the removal is based.
This constraint underscores why the clearance proceeding itself is where the employment outcome is determined. By the time a clearance revocation becomes final, the MSPB’s ability to provide meaningful relief in the subsequent removal action is severely constrained. Virginia federal employees facing clearance proceedings need to understand that the administrative clearance process and the employment proceeding that follows are not two separate opportunities to litigate the same facts. They are one proceeding with a downstream consequence.
The Whistleblower Exception: When Clearance Revocation Is Retaliation
The Egan doctrine’s limitation on MSPB review does not apply to claims that the clearance action itself was taken in retaliation for protected whistleblower activity. An employee who reported fraud, waste, or abuse and subsequently received a clearance action that is closely connected in timing and context to that disclosure may have a viable whistleblower retaliation claim that survives Egan analysis. These cases are fact-intensive and procedurally complex, but the retaliation exception is real and has resulted in meaningful relief for cleared employees in the national security community.
Why Virginia Federal Employee Law Requires Getting Involved Early
The most consistent finding across clearance revocation cases is that outcomes are substantially better when legal counsel is involved before the SOR response is submitted rather than after the DOHA hearing has already produced an unfavorable result. The SOR response shapes the hearing. The hearing record shapes the appeal. By the time a case reaches the appeal board, the narrative and the evidentiary foundation have already been established, for better or for worse.
An attorney who understands both the adjudicative guidelines and the employment law consequences of clearance loss can help build the most complete possible response at the SOR stage, identify the mitigating factors that are most likely to resonate with the specific concerns raised, prepare the employee for hearing testimony, and assess whether any whistleblower retaliation argument is available.
The Mundaca Law Firm represents cleared federal employees across Northern Virginia in security clearance proceedings, from the initial Statement of Reasons through DOHA hearings and the employment removal actions that follow. The firm understands the intersection of Virginia federal employee law with the clearance adjudicative process and brings that combined knowledge to cases where both dimensions are in play simultaneously.
If you have received a Statement of Reasons or have been notified that your clearance is under review, reach out as soon as possible. The 20-day response window moves quickly, and the decisions made in that window will shape every stage of the process that follows.





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