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Lawmakers cringed at the price expansion and lack of tangible goals associated with the Veterans Benefits Management System.
The Defense Department can be surprisingly vague in how it expresses the cost of flight, and how to interpret it.
The Senate IT working group is circulating a discussion draft of a cloud bill to improve FedRAMP and create a new fund at GSA to help pay for cloud transitions.
The annual IT budget guidance doesn't include any new initiatives, but several agency CIOs said they were pleased with OMB's support of their IT budget requests.
Beginning on Dec. 8, the Defense Security Service all but ceased its processing of personnel security investigation requests for government contractors, and by the time things were up and running again on Jan. 5, a new backlog of approximately 10,000 cases had built up.
Navy officials told lawmakers facilities sustainment cuts have hurt personnel services and building modernization efforts.
The budget deal cuts $250 million in civilian headquarters and mandates a report from the inspector general.
Pundits say every action that comes out of Capitol Hill this year — bills, nominations or hearings — has ties to the 2016 elections.
With a new year, there will be developments that every federal worker should follow as they play out. Jeff Neal, senior vice president of ICF International, lists seven things feds need to keep an eye on in 2016.
Federal News Radio counts down the 10 most read stories of 2015. Find out what topics were most on the minds of our readers last year.
Roll Call Senior Editor David Hawkings joins Federal Drive with Tom Temin for a look at some of the most significant Congressional actions in 2015 that impacted the government itself.
Pentagon budget officials say they got 95 percent what they wanted for 2016. In passing its omnibus appropriations bill, Congress boosted the Defense Department by about $30 billion. What will it buy? Bloomberg Government Senior Defense Analyst Rob Levinson offers some answers on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
In Tuesday's federal headlines, a new report from the Government Accountability Office says the Department of Defense is falling behind on the plan to shrink its civilian workforce
Congress is giving more money to the Department of Veterans Affairs, while also requiring the beleaguered agency to report more frequently to the House and Senate appropriations committees.