Anonymous wrote:As PP's have said, it's debt more than credit score. If you objectively have an acute for cash, you are more easily blackmail-able (and it has nothing to do with your trustworthiness).
For drugs, if you are not actively using and you are honest and open about your history you are probably okay. Maybe having been a homeless junkie would not be surmountable, but several joints in college is fine...as long as you are honest. If you are not honest and they find out, once again it's an indication that you could be blackmailed.
Other financial stuff is less of an issue. When I was sworn in for my Fed job, I was actually under IRS audit for what was actually an underpayment (inadvertent) on my part. While it was not fully active, my job required a higher than TS level background check. I was really concerned the audit would derail my job, but it was a total non-issue.
Anonymous wrote:In this day and age, there is no excuse for late payments. Why haven't you just scheduled them, OP? I learned that lesson when I was in college!
Anonymous wrote:I know many people who get pubic trust denied. At the agency I work at they are really strict WRT drug uses and finances. One person had a top secret - went through a nasty divorce and had to declare bankruptcy as their spouse did not make payments on the house. Since they had financial issues, had public trust denied - and lost top secret.
For the most part, having a crappy credit score is one thing - you are capable of paying just lazy and don't. It is the people who have a large amount of debt and can't pay OR who they can not figure out how the paid it off.
Anonymous wrote:I have a few fed job applications in and am worried about a couple of things regarding my background check (hoping that I get an offer) - (a) I have a lot of speeding camera tickets, and (b) my credit score isn't great. Tickets are paid and I can improve my credit score over the next couple of months, but has anyone had a problem with these issues in a background check?