Cristina Chaplain, director of contracting and national security acquisition issues at the GAO, said a troubling trend has been observed at NASA in the last few years.
The Social Security Administration is planning to close two more field offices this year, despite congressional and oversight guidance that says otherwise.
USPS' rocky start to the first half of the fiscal year comes a month after President Donald Trump signed an executive order setting up a postal task force after claiming the agency is “on an unsustainable path."
Lawmakers are working to continue their efforts to protect the identities of feds endangered by the OPM data breaches, cut spending by $15 billion, and improve the online presence of federal agencies.
With a short, 90-day deadline for production of GSA’s e-Commerce Implementation Plan, it is understandable that there are inevitable gaps in the plan’s information and analysis.
Wildfires affect the atmosphere and that's of concern to weather-watchers at the Naval Research Laboratory.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Government Accountability Office finds 75 percent of the Defense Department's IDIQ type contracts were only open to a single contractor.
Artificial intelligence, a much-hyped trend in federal IT, is getting its own White House office, according to one of President Donald Trump's leading technology advisers.
The Veterans Benefits Administration is reverting to previous performance management guidelines, which the American Federation of Government Employees says it too "chaotic."
Joseph Petrillo is a procurement attorney from the Washington, D.C. firm of Petrillo and Powell PLLC.
In today's Federal Newscast on Federal News Radio, the House Armed Services Committee kills a proposal aimed at exposing more details about government officials’ travel on military aircraft.
Margaret Weichert, OMB deputy director for management, explains how the government must modernize to meet the expectations of the 21st century.
Emily Murphy, the administrator of GSA, explains how her agency continues to live up to its founding principles through shared services.
Recent proposals to change the existing federal retirement system are just the beginning of coming recommendations from the Office of Personnel Management.
How do state social services agencies use technology to meet their missions? How is the State of Florida doing just that? What can other states learn from the work of the Florida Department of Children and Families? Join host Michael Keegan next week as he explores these questions and more with Joe Vastola, chief information officer, at the Florida Department of Children and Families.