Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Roughly one in five federal employees had worked remotely in 2018, according to newly released data from the Office of Personnel Management. Now telework is the new normal. Will it last?
If a virus can kill Americans and wreck the economy more easily than a foreign enemy, is the United States approaching the idea of national defense the right way in the first place?
The ruling gives the Postal Service and its regulator more to consider about its future business model, as USPS warns Congress that the coronavirus pandemic has triggered a steep decline in mail the agency “may never fully recover” from.
Eligibility in federal telework programs dipped slightly in 2018, while participation experienced a small bump. The latest data from the Office of Personnel Management sheds light on the state of telework across government -- before agencies were forced to quickly "maximize" it during the current pandemic.
The Air Force is worried about its aerospace and space business partners.
The Trump administration's recent dismissal of two department level inspectors general isn't sitting well with everyone.
The Government Accountability Office found that agencies with improper payment mitigation programs in place don't actually measure how effective they are.
The USPS Office of Inspector General surveyed the postal services of six nations to see how they deal with rural networks.
How one federal manager moved his co-workers to telework, shifted his hours and supervises his team of eight remotely during the pandemic.
To a certain cadre of thinkers, the coronavirus crisis is no surprise. For example, the National Intelligence Council accurately predicted it back in 2004.
CDC, FDA, even the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have all trimmed, relaxed or altered regulations.
In today's Federal Newscast, the longer tax-filing season means more fake tax returns for the IRS.
The Trump administration amid the coronavirus pandemic has urged Congress to extend the timeline for the decennial count.
House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) and Government Operations Subcommittee Chairman Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) have a long list of legislative proposals they want to see included in the next coronavirus rescue package for federal employees and contractors.