If you like going after companies that cheat their employees on wages, this might be the job for you. The Labor Department wants to hire one hundred investigators in its wage and hour division.
Longtime federal sales and marketing consultant Larry Allen joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin for more.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force has new guidance for masking and COVID testing for federal agencies.
GSA and USPTO DevSecOps leaders reminded IT folks to keep perspective that new technology may not seem as exciting to others.
A federal appeals court finds the Postal Service isn't meeting legal requirements to ensure managers and supervisors are paid close to what they could make in the private sector.
There's a new position at the U.S. Agency for International Development. It's called the Chief Digital Development Officer.
In today's Federal Newscast, the departments of Defense and Labor and the Small Business Administration stopped the federal government from fully understanding the state of their finances.
More illegal weapons, more viruses, the return of crowds, and some new buildings — screening for federal facilities is about to get more complicated.
Last year the government agencies paid whistleblowers $237 million for exposing waste and fraud. It was the lowest yearly total since 2008.
When the pandemic first hit, it had a big effect on the Veterans Health Administration.
In today's Federal Newscast, President Biden designated the Department of Homeland Security as the lead agency for the federal response to the Russia-Ukraine crisis.
The U.S. Treasury Department has concluded that more than 80% of the billions of dollars in federal rental assistance during the pandemic went to low-income tenants
The General Services Administration is moving ahead with a multi-billion-dollar upgrade of its land ports of entry along the country’s northern and southern borders.
The American Federation of Government Employees is at odds with TSA Administrator David Pekoske over what the union says is an unnecessary delay in expanding collective bargaining for the approximately 50,000 airport screeners who work for TSA.
Federal prison employees say they're being bullied and threatened for raising concerns about serious misconduct and claim it's indicative of widespread problems in the Bureau of Prisons