Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
While many would be celebrating a slugger shot for military families, a fledgling housing advocacy group is seeing the end of the lawsuit as just the beginning.
President Joe Biden has signed the National Defense Authorization Act into law, authorizing $768.2 billion in military spending, including a 2.7% pay raise for service members, for 2022
The program will keep a continual eye on service member families and bring together best practices.
DoD's newest policy prohibits liking or reposting extremist material online.
This is the second year that Congress is requesting information on the augmented reality goggles.
Even Democrats on Capitol Hill are saying the gigantic so called Build Back Better legislation won't happen in 2021. They'll be back with it next year.
Smithsonian Institution staff told lawmakers Thursday of the need to account for extreme weather events in building maintenance and future capital projects.
The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee introduced new legislation that would require regular reports from the Department of Veterans Affairs on the cost, schedule and performance of its massive electronic health records modernization project.
In today's Federal Newscast, the 2022 NDAA is on its way to becoming law, we've got some details on what it contains.
The Pentagon says the mean increase of basic allowance for housing (BAH) will go up by 5.1%, a wide jump from the past two years, which have averaged just below 3%. DoD will spend $25.6 billion on BAH for 2022.
The Biden administration is moving at a snail's pace to staff itself — slower, in fact, than the last three administrations.
Why is the Government Accountability Office testifying on the need for a national cyber strategy aimed at protecting critical infrastructure?
Like a pile of pick-up sticks, the Biden administration's contractor vaccine mandate has collapsed in a heap. But that doesn't end the matter necessarily.
By all indications, Congress this week will have managed to keep a streak going. It will get the National Defense Authorization Act to the president's desk before the end of the calendar year.