If somebody said your federal pension plan needs $152 billion in nip and tuck surgery, would you be alarmed? Maybe you should be, says Senior Correspondent Mike Causey.
Active duty and reserve service members say they are feeling comfortable financially.
How many agencies see how an Office of Personnel Management report can help them improve the way they reward their senior executives.
David Warner explains why paid sick leave for federal contractors may present both a cost and an administrative burden.
More than 81 percent of career members of the Senior Executive Service earned an award in 2016, compared to about 71 percent in fiscal 2015.
Across-the-board pay raises for military personnel might keep low performers in the military while incentivizing motivated troops to leave.
How would President Donald Trump's proposed 2019 budget affect federal workers? Find out when Tony Reardon, national president of the National Treasury Employees Union, joins host Derrick Dorth on this week's Fed Access. February 26, 2018
Senior Correspondent Mike Causey hopes this cheers up active and retired federal workers in sticker shock over the new White House budget.
Acting IRS Commissioner David Kautter called on lawmakers Wednesday to give the agency more flexibility to hire cybersecurity talent from the private sector.
Mike Causey says if Congress approves the 2019 budget, current and future employees under FERS could get smaller starting annuities when they retire.
The White House proposed a number of changes that would dramatically reshape the federal workforce and how federal workers are compensated.
Mike Causey wants to know: Should you make changes in your tax withholding and if so, should you have more or less taken out?
What do presidents Jimmy Carter, George W. Bush and Donald J. Trump have in common? Hint: It has nothing to do with hair.
President Donald Trump's fiscal 2019 budget request includes several other recommendations that would change current retirement, health and other benefits for federal employees.
In today's Federal Newscast, Democratic lawmakers are worried the President's desired military parade would cost too much money.