In today's Federal Newscast, in their annual report to Congress, Social Security Administration trustees said they expect total costs to exceed income next year, and in all the years beyond that.
Air Force undersecretary and chief information officer Matt Donovan signed a memo March 22 detailing the new authority to operate (ATO) process that is about speed and rigor.
The Army Corps of Engineers and Department of Homeland Security's new technology hires have federal backgrounds, for a change.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Labor Department will pilot a faster approach to discretionary suspension and debarment with its Inspector General and its Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management.
In 2020, DISA will assume responsibility for the vast majority of the IT operations in DoD's "fourth estate," leading to major transfers of funding and personnel.
In today's Federal Newscast, TIGTA found the IRS doesn't always follow its own procedures for reviewing and adjudicating cases of missed filings or under-reported income.
The new science and technology strategy dictates how the Air Force will invest in research through 2030.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Office of Government Ethics wants feedback on whether it should set restrictions on donations to legal expense funds for federal employees.
The Navy says dozens of IT systems and websites for pay and personnel functions are about to be killed off in favor of a consolidated system sailors can access from anywhere.
House Armed Services Readiness Subcommittee Chairman John Garamendi says its too costly to keep important activities at climate vulnerable bases.
In today's Federal Newscast, all signs point to federal employees' paychecks looking a little larger by early next week.
The Army Corps of Engineers is asking Congress to sign off on new tools in their fiscal 2020 budget that would help them reduce a $98 billion backlog of civil works construction projects by involving the private sector.
Navy leadership realized they will need new simulation facilities after a 2017 review of collisions that killed 17 sailors.
In today's Federal Newscast, the personal information of hundreds of federal agents and police officers appears to have been stolen from websites affiliated with alumni of the FBI’s National Academy.
The Air Force is far from making up its pilot shortage. A new study shows it will be a long and expensive road ahead to make up the difference.