Even as the coronavirus threat widened, the administrative law judges of the Social Security Administration were told they had to work in their offices until the end of this week.
The president has signed the $2 trillion stimulus and emergency supplemental appropriations package into law. It will have implications for federal employees and their agencies, retirees and contractors.
The National Science Foundation has appointed someone to deal with maintaining security of research without spoiling international collaboration.
The congressionally-mandated National Commission on Military, National and Public Service offered up 124 recommendations Wednesday, which address everything from veterans preference rules to adding women to the Selective Service System.
For more, Federal Drive with Tom Temin turned to the director of GAO's Natural Resources and Environment team, Anne-Marie Fennell.
Amid all the confusion and mixed messages. agencies like Voice of America, the Securities and Exchange Commission and NASA are sending regular, reassuring updates to their employees during the coronavirus pandemic.
Federal employees might be teleworking, and they're finding ways to get the job done. Federal health-related agencies are at the forefront of the coronavirus battle.
American Indians and Alaska Natives have disproportionate levels of murder and missing persons so the Justice Department set up a presidential task force.
Social Security Administrator Andrew Saul told employees Saturday he would further expand telework across the agency amid growing concerns over the coronavirus pandemic.
The same night President Donald Trump signed a $100 billion coronavirus aid package into law, four of the largest postal unions requested a similar relief package for the Postal Service, which has already been facing a looming financial crisis.
Barely a week into the rollout of the 2020 Census, the Census Bureau has suspended all decennial hiring and onboarding until at least April 1, as part of its contingency planning amid the coronavirus pandemic.
President Donald Trump signed to supplemental spending bills into law over the last two weeks giving agencies billions of dollars in extra funding to help fight the coronavirus.
The 2020 decennial count started in January on time but with the bulk of the effort still to come, the count remains on GAOs high risk list.
As the federal government embarks on a project to modernize electronic rulemaking, agencies are looking for effective ways to deal with mass comments.
For most of the Postal Service’s 600,000-employee workforce, work continues as usual, but in a heightened state of vigilance.