Financial literacy, parental leave and contracting issues are all being addressed by amendments to the 2018 defense authorization bill.
Contractors are acting as the connective tissue for federal, state and local government employees as they help relief efforts.
Few have seen cybersecurity efforts from as many angles as retired Brig. Gen. Greg Touhill, president of Cyxtera Federal Group.
Navy knew it was "accepting risks" at least two years ago when it decided to press ahead with more demanding forward deployments in the Asia-Pacific, despite downward slide of routine maintenance and training.
Leaders in the intelligence community are still performing a balancing act between employee freedom and security issues.
In retrospect, it's a wonder the Navy hasn't had more accidents.
The National Background Investigations Bureau plans 'human testing' this fall to improve the federal security clearance process.
Due to current events Congress might try to increase some of DoD's spending in a CR at the end of the month.
The Defense Department is trying a new tactic on its plea for base realignment and closure.
The House and Senate return from their August recess and face a long agenda, including Harvey assistance, the debt ceiling and the 2018 budget.
Some federal employees are stuck in the office today. Didn't they hear it's a holiday? Senior Correspondent Mike Causey has the answer.
The Air Force is trying to think differently about how it handles it's most important investment.
Putting CYBERCOM on an even playing field with the rest of the Defense Department's combatant commands has serious implications.
GAO says the average Military Sealift Command ship is 40-years old, and the Navy has no long-term plan to replace them.
Secretary James Mattis' look into the transgender policy is mandated by White House guidance, it's not freezing the ban.