A NASA astronaut is back on Earth after a yearlong, record-setting spaceflight
About 30,000 active duty service members in the last 20 years have died by suicide. Now DARPA seeks to prevent this by working upstream from conscious thoughts.
You might not think of farm and urban in the same sentence. But the Agriculture Department does. In fact there's a new federal advisory committee designed to help the department better understand the needs of urban farmers.
A crucial part of the State Department has a new head of crucial function at a time of high world tension.
NASA's Office of Strategic Infrastructure said yes to a new master plan for Goddard Space Flight Center that cuts building square footage by 25%.
The House of Representatives is taking what amounts to a spring break, but the Senate is in town working on legislation to deal with China and closing in on the Supreme Court nomination.
Janet Vogel, the former acting CIO and chief information security officer at the Department of Health and Human Services, recently retired after 40 years of federal service.
After two years of total vacancy, the Merit Systems Protection Board now has two of its three members, enough to make decisions that stick.
This week, Michael Binder spoke with Eric Soskin, inspector general for the Transportation Department.
Social Security is an agency in some crisis as labor relations are strained with ongoing uncertainty over their contracts.
Dawn Meyerriecks, former CTO for DISA, joined Aileen Black on this week's Leaders and Legends to talk about leading teams through big technology changes and the importance of caring for your people.
Kelly Fletcher is the new principal deputy CIO for the Defense Department while Okie Mek, the chief AI officer at HHS, is leaving after 20 years of federal service.
Love it or hate it, but more federal employees are coming back into the office next month.
Forbes Magazine's list of the 500 best mid-sized employers in the United States included a couple of federal agencies, among them the Government Publishing Office.
Federal employees looking to appeal an adverse personnel action might not have to wait on the Merit Systems Protection Board much longer. The Senate ends a five-year streak in which the board lacked a quorum.