Members of the military who joined before Jan. 1, 2018, only have until the end of the year to join the blended retirement system.
Soldiers can get national accreditation for military occupation specialties if they keep track of their hours.
The Defense Department is putting an emphasis on jointness and addressing injuries in the field in order to ensure military competitiveness.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Integrated Digital Experience Act calls for digitizing government processes and establishing minimum standards for federal websites.
Incomplete, inaccurate provider database remains a major problem, 11 months after new vendors took over TRICARE management.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Department of Veterans Affairs was forced to change how it pays for veterans' education benefits after IT problems.
The Department of Veterans Affairs said it is realigning the health administration to comply with the president's reorganization executive order.
A new report estimates the space force might cost between $300 million and $550 million - less than initially predicted.
Mark Esper, secretary of the Army, said the Office of Personnel Management is not made up of bad people, but that the Army could better handle civilian hiring on its own.
Virginia's senior senator demanded a briefing after a news report prompted more allegations of substandard housing conditions on military bases.
DoD is using new contracting authorities to reach out to video game companies.
Kathleen Miller has been inducted into the National Academy of Public Administration and she joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin to talk more about her civil service career.
Virginia Sen. Mark Warner (D) asked the Defense Department for information on how it will fix derelict homes on bases in his home state, this after a news report detailed serious hazards in military housing nationwide.
Since April, the Army has cut more than 60 training and administrative requirements. Top official say the goal is to redirect time and resources into readiness and modernization.
After interference by Russian during the 2016 presidential race caught federal officials flat-footed, the Department of Homeland Security worked with states to secure election systems from cyber threats.