American University's Bob Tobias says the government is all about the people it employs and the appropriations it has to work with.
Federal Aviation Administration has a team together researching how drones and airplanes can exist within the national airspace.
Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) has cataloged some of the federal government's spending on usual or duplicative programs through the annual release of "Federal Fumbles," and says he'd like to see more oversight from Congress and agencies themselves.
Although the Saturday-Sunday-Monday mini-shutdown is history, it's impact may be around a long, long time, says Senior Correspondent Mike Causey.
Federal grants managers see an opportunity for better data standards and fewer grants management systems to help alleviate compliance burdens.
Naval War College professors tells Federal News Radio that the military needs to drop strict rules on appearance in order to attract more talent
On this episode of Women of Washington, host Gigi Schumm welcomed Donna Dodson, chief cybersecurity officer at the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Bloomberg Government's Loren Duggan outlines for Federal Drive with Tom Temin what may happen in Congress under the CR in the next three weeks.
GAO said Veterans Affairs' policies and risk management has not kept up with the evolution of security for many federal buildings.
National Weather Service launches three new satellites to use more supercomputing power to update tracking and predictions
One year into his role, CIA Director Mike Pompeo says about 40 percent of the decisions previously made at the director level are no longer made by him.
Federal Drive Host Tom Temin and Executive Editor Jason Miller discuss the recent government shutdown and the chances of it happening again in a few weeks.
What led to the this week's government shutdown and what needs to happen in the next three weeks to avoid another one? Find out when Greg Stanford, director of Government Affairs at the Federal Managers Association, joins host Mike Causey on this week's Your Turn. January 24, 2018
Monday was a crazy day for hundreds of thousands of federal workers, military personnel, government contractors and those who cover, feed and house them.
The Merit Systems Protection Board says workforce reductions under the Trump administration's government reorganization effort could add to its workload — at time when the agency still lacks a quorum.