The Pentagon's inspector general says the Army intentionally misrepresented how much money it would need to pay civilian salaries in order to dodge other headquarters cuts
In today's Federal Newscast, the Government Accountability Office polled nine acting inspectors general and their staffs to find out how operations are effected by not having a permanent IG in place.
In its 2019 budget, the Air Force plans to fully stand up its new Chief Data Office, with funds to establish a new shared data environment and a trusted database of authoritative data sources.
The Homeland Security Department and the Department of Defense are transforming this Pensacola, Florida, into a cyber powerhouse.
The Professional Services Council plans to submit comment to the Defense Department on how they can shorten their procurement and acquisition lead time.
The Navy is giving sailors leaving the force a golden ticket to return to active duty.
The Air Force rolled out two personnel initiatives last week. The service announced the creation of an information operations technical training school, which is expected to open in 2019.
Gen. Glenn Walters, the Marine Corps assistant commandant, said less than 0.5 percent of the Marine total force is “truly non-deployable.”
Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have signed off on a proposal that would give active-duty military families federal funds to put their children through private school or other alternatives to public school.
Defense Department announced a single-award IDIQ approach to execute a contract lasting up to 10-years, for potentially billions of dollars in IT infrastructure services.
Defense officials acknowledge early challenges in EHR deployment, but have no plans to delay further implementation
DoD releases a draft solicitation and holds an industry day to talk about its new initiative to move to commercial cloud services.
The Defense Department's new chief management officer is looking for "immediate wins" in cutting bureucratic inefficiency, starting with more reliance on shared services.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Office of Special Counsel updates its its guidance regarding when federal employees' use of social media violates the Hatch Act.
Stakeholders working in the security clearance community say they're seeking clear, consistent leadership to drive major changes to the governmentwide process.