GCIC compliance for Georgia law enforcement agencies

Georgia agencies accessing CJI answer to the FBI's CJIS Security Policy v6.0 and the Rules of the Georgia Crime Information Center Council, which carry the force of law and run their own certification clocks separate from the federal training cadence. ComplianceLattice tracks the federal foundation both share.

A federal baseline, with role-specific certification clocks

GCIC Council Rules set out certification requirements by role, each on its own timer: terminal operators must be certified within six months of taking on terminal duties and recertified every two years after that, while Terminal Agency Coordinators (TACs) must be certified within 90 days of appointment. A vacant TAC position has to be filled immediately - it isn't a role an agency can leave open.

Underneath those role-specific clocks, the substance is the same work every CJIS-connected agency in the country does - access control, authentication, audit logging, incident response, and the rest of CJIS v6.0's 20 policy areas. ComplianceLattice tracks that full federal baseline today, covering most of the ground before you get to Georgia's certification-cadence requirements.

With three separate clocks running at once - a 6-month initial window, a 90-day TAC appointment window, and a 2-year operator recertification cycle - the risk isn't any single deadline being hard to meet, it's one of the three quietly slipping while attention is on the others. If your agency is working through the GCIC Council Rules requirements now, reach out - alpha tester feedback directly shapes what we build first.

  • All 20 CJIS v6.0 policy areas, the federal baseline GCIC Council Rules build on
  • Recurring task tracking for operator recertification and TAC appointment deadlines
  • Evidence vault with expiration tracking for background checks and training renewals
  • One-click audit export for your GCIC or FBI assessor
← Browse all states

Get ahead of the October 2027 enforcement deadline