Nand Mulchandani, chief technology officer for the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, joined Aileen Black on Leaders and Legends to discuss how the adoption next-generation AI and software technologies is helping to transform the Defense Department.
Linda Moore, the new president and CEO TechNet, joined Aileen Black on Leaders and Legends to talk about leadership and to discuss TechNet’s role as the voice of innovation.
As agencies finalize their workforce reentry plans in the coming weeks, an affinity group that represents employees at the Justice Department is urging agency leadership to keep certain pandemic workplace flexibilities in place.
Facilities management contracts sound like mundane things. But they're expensive, and they require no less oversight than any other type of contract.
Newly confirmed OPM director inherits an agency that you might call a fixer-upper.
DoD's review of the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification is ongoing, but officials want to address small business concerns about compliance costs.
President Joe Biden has nominated Raymond Limon, chief human capital officer at the Interior Department, and federal employment attorney Cathy Harris to fill vacant seats at the Merit Systems Protection Board.
The Postal Service and the General Services Administration are making seven post offices in the Washington, D.C. metro area permanent locations for federal employees and contractors to obtain or update their Personal Identity Verification (PIV) cards.
The House Appropriations Committee is planning to give the IRS a topline budget next year in line with the Biden administration’s multi-year plan.
House members are silent on federal pay in their 2022 draft appropriations bill, meaning they'll defer to the president's recommendation for a 2.7% raise for employees next year.
Data shows the Presidential Management Fellows program is struggling to attract a diverse pool of candidates and select finalists that are representative of the broader federal workforce, let alone the rest of the country.
When the pandemic shut down worldwide travel, some 100,000 Americans were stranded in nations across the globe. Then the State Department's best stepped in.
The Department of Homeland Security set out in 2016 to replace its facial and fingerprint recognition system. But little has gone right for the Homeland Advanced Recognition Technology program.
A change in parent organizations is coming to the National Intelligence University. With what this means NIU president, J. Scott Cameron spoke to Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
Attorneys general are telling regulators that the Postal Service should abandon plans that would slow the delivery of nearly 40% of first-class mail.