Air Combat Command chief Gen. James Holmes says personnel readiness is much better at the Air Force.
The Air Force Personnel Center commander says civilian hiring is one of the biggest struggles the service is going through right now.
Seventeen years after the Defense Department first started development on the F-35 fighter jet, officials are ready to move the system into full-rate production.
Maj. Gen. Brian Kelly said the service's human resources division wants to be more transparent, interactive and collaborative within the personnel center.
The Air Force trying new tactics to recapitalize its facilities despite a huge backlog.
Amid "battle for talent" in the military's maintenance facilities, officials press for a relaxation of restrictions on hiring civilians
In today's Federal Newscast, the Veterans Affairs Department publishes the ratings of its 130 community living centers.
The Army is nixing training it feels isn't helping readiness as a means of unburdening soldiers so they can spend more time with their families.
The Air Force follows in the Navy's footsteps and expands leave for secondary caregivers.
The National Taxpayer Advocate said low-income Americans are still being targeted by IRS debt collectors in 4,100 cases, despite the group's year-old recommendation to stop the practice.
The Defense Department says it could cost a quarter of a billion dollars to make facilities secure and that's a conservative estimate.
The Air Force is expanding its STEP program to 180 enlisted airmen with high potential.
The Air Force is now willing to pay bonuses of tens of thousands of dollars to retain airmen in 92 separate high-demand fields.
Pointing to continued budget constraints, Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson says the future of the service will rely more on a global partnership of allied services to continue to meet its mission.
Mark Bacon, acquisition program manager for the Center’s Managed Service Office (MSO) at Hanscom Air Force Base,, said seven applications have migrated to the cloud so far, and many more are to come.