Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
The latest scorecard for the Federal IT Acquisition Reform Act revealed progress and lingering problems for government agencies. Department CIOs say at its heart the law is a good thing, but the scorecard could use some improvement of its own.
The House Freedom Caucus is giving President-elect Donald Trump a list of regulations to repeal in 2017, many focused around defense and clean energy.
The General Services Administration is beginning environmental, transportation and historic preservation studies on three locations for Labor's new building. The move is part of a broader effort by GSA this year to find homes for government agencies
National Guard officials say dozens of people have been punished over a scandal that forced thousands of soldiers to have to repay their enlisted bonuses. But only one has been sent to jail. Congress held its first oversight hearing on the issue yesterday.
President-elect Donald Trump's promises to expand the military are bringing up classic debates that may end with a bigger force structure.
This week on Off the Shelf, Tom Davis, director of Federal Government Affairs for Deloitte and former congressman from Virginia’s the 11th District, analyzes the results of the 2016 Presidential Election. December 13, 2016
The nation's all-volunteer military force is effective, but it's expensive. Yet regardless of how much of the federal budget is devoted to defense, too many members of military families face hunger. Rep. Susan Davis (D-Calif.), sponsor of the Military Hunger Prevention Act, tells Federal Drive with Tom Temin how people can help.
Jeff Neal, former chief human resources officer at the Defense Logistics Agency, says the recently passed NDAA has implications for all federal employees.
Leadership is changing in six congressional committees with jurisdictions that could affect the way feds do business governmentwide.
It's a wrap for the troubled and divided 114th Congress. In the end, it got some things done, even though the government is on a continuing resolution until the end of April. David Hawkings, senior editor at Roll Call, joins Federal Drive with Tom Temin for a summary and a look ahead to the 115th Congressional schedule.
The Senate had a busy weekend, passing five major pieces of legislation that will impact veterans, inspectors general, FBI whistleblowers and others before the close of the 114th Congress.
DoD's top personnel officer says Congress is imposing too many acquisition changes and not leaving enough staff to implement them.
Beyond the federal scorecard, DHS and State provide details on how IT reforms are impacting their respective agencies.
Long speeches and piecemeal civil service reform mark the waning days of the 114th Congress.