Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Transportation Security Administration soon will offer early retirements to employees across the agency.
The move to maximum telework across federal agencies hasn’t been a painless one, and Congress wants to know just how it’s going.
Career managers can turn inspectors general into allies, not enemies.
The Justice Department is telling agencies struggling to complete Freedom of Information Act requests during the coronavirus pandemic to finish what’s possible remotely, and keep the public in the loop about delays.
An enterprise approach to risk management is required under the venerable OMB circular A-123. That's helped push ERM down into agency practices.
Could all of this have a chilling effect on the willingness of other agencies to issue unflattering reports?
Karen Evans will replace John Zangardi as the CIO of the Department of Homeland Security.
Agencies, and Congress, are leaving tens of billions of dollars on the table by failing to address fragmentation, overlap and duplication in government programs and functions, the Government Accountability Office said.
Donna Dodson's peers call her a world leader in cybersecurity. Now she's getting recognition for her work.
The Defense Department is moving toward a "conditions-based" approach to reducing the travel restrictions it put in place in response to COVID-19.
HHS IG office must balance its in-depth reviews with the immediate demand for real-time analysis in the “flash reports” requested by the House Oversight and Reform Committee.
Reopening plans for the Interior and Energy Departments describe upcoming changes to their own telework, leave and screening policies. The Environmental Protection Agency is preparing to initiate reopening plans for its facilities in Seattle, Atlanta and Lenexa, Kansas.
Coronavirus' closures of government facilities or enforcement of social distancing hasn't stopped Congress from conducting business.
The Pentagon's No. 2 inspector general has resigned