Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
A Washington businessman has shelled out 1.8 million bucks for the first U.S. map printed in the new United States of America. It was published in 1784, just six months after the Revolutionary War ended. The Library of Congress\'s John Herbert explains what it is that makes this map extra special.
Is there an adequate culture of safety within U.S. transit systems? The terrible Metro crash that killed nine people a couple of years ago raised that question. The Government Accountability Office finished investigating challenges to…
Research from the Cato Institute says that the new Republicans in Congress are not challenging defense spending.
Two bills aimed at the EPA are in the Senate, but whether they create momentum or reveal a divide aren\'t clear. The Hill\'s Ben Geman explains.
Two years ago a group of Senators asked how effective the Department of Homeland Security was in protecting the border between the U.S. and Canada. The report is in, and the Senators are not happy.
As the Egyptian government has pulled the plug on social media and even the Internet in response to the protests, the United States now has a bill that would arguably give the U.S. president this power as well.
Defense said it would issue new contractor reporting guidance by last August. The GAO says agencies are still waiting.
Seven senators have requested an independent investigation by the Defense Department\'s inspector general into the accidental disclosure of technical data to rival bidders Boeing and EADS in the Air Force\'s refueling tanker competition.
Fred Burton, a former Special Agent with the Department of State\'s Diplomatic Security Service, joins host Derrick Dortch for a discussion on congressional security. January 28, 2011
GAO\'s Alicia Cackley discusses the effects on feds\' financial profiles and security clearances from taking out high-interest Payday loans.
A GAO report reviews DoD\'s financial management.
The first of what should be a slew of bills aimed at safeguarding government IT has been introduced.
The general overseeing the Air Force\'s investigation into a November incident that sent competitors\' data to rival bidders said Thursday that she was pleased with the companies\' handling of the situation. The Pentagon remains convinced that the accidental disclosure will not affect the outcome of the $35 billion acquisition.
Feds have many questions about what Congress and President Barack Obama have in store for them in the years ahead. Federal Times experts Steve Watkins and Sean Reilly, and Carol Bonosaro, Senior Executive Association President, join Mike Causey to discuss these issues.