Only 8 out of 44 systems for the 2020 Census' practice run in Rhode Island have been tested to date, the Government Accountability Office told lawmakers Wednesday.
Reading the inspector general's meta-report, you'd think there's nothing the government can do right. History says otherwise.
From buildings that collapse in the rain to crooked contractors, the special inspector general for Afghanistan Reconstruction has seen it all.
Members of the federal oversight community told House lawmakers Wednesday that would-be whistleblowers need to feel comfortable about reporting wrongdoing at their agencies without fear of retaliation.
House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry wants to cut the Fourth Estate by 25 percent. But lawmakers and former DoD officials are not sure it can happen.
The Office of Personnel Management's inspector general says the agency needs a contingency plan to address risks in the long-term care insurance market.
Law enforcement says a woman who drove to the entrance of the CIA headquarters in Virginia had a loaded gun, a passport and $100,000 in cash.
The General Services Administration says it wants to move away from leases in favor of federally-owned property.
Sean Brune, chief program officer for IT modernization, said the Social Security Administration's modernization efforts aim to update software's programming language and improve systems already used by the public.
House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) wants the Defense Department to cut its Fourth Estate spending.
The departure of Scott Blackburn as acting chief information officer creates another gaping hole among top leaders at the Veterans Affairs Department.
A GAO report found holes in CMS' systems for protecting private health data between entities.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Defense Department will be sending up to 4,000 troops to U.S.-Mexico border to assist the Homeland Security Department.
The reforms touch on perishable goods, asset forfeiture and modernizing the agency.
In the absence of congressional permission for base closures, the Defense Department has decided to invest heavily in demolishing structures on existing bases that are no longer worth saving.