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Congress wants two reports on enterprise email: one from the Army that is due by Jan. 31 and another from DoD CIO Teri Takai by June. Army deputy CIO Mike Krieger said the requirement for a report caused the service to delay the program for 30 days and would push back the final migration date to at least mid-May.
Federal employees had mixed reactions to the administration\'s proposed 0.5 percent pay raise for feds starting in 2013.
President Obama recently signed the 2012 intelligence authorization bill, which requires status reports on released Guantanamo Bay detainees.
On this program, we survey the intersection where leadership, complex challenges, and the need for transformation meet. Our guests are Dr. Paul Anastas, Linda Gibbs, Robert Hale, David Lebryk, David Matsuda, Beth McGrath, Dr. Kathleen Merrigan, Dr. Nick Nayak, and Jonathan Woodson, M.D. Hear their insights, lessons learned, and recommendations.
NIST says it wants to head off a threat that could lead to more sophisticated attacks on organizations.
The Morning Federal Newscast is a daily compilation of the stories you hear Federal Drive host Tom Temin discuss throughout the show each day. The Newscast is designed to give FederalNewsRadio.com users more information about the stories you hear on the air.
Pentagon Press Secretary George Little says the United States will still be able to conduct more than a single war at one time.
Chris Basso of CarFax discusses VIN numbers, air bag fraud, cloning of vehicles, and water-damaged cars.
Avue Technologies Co-CEO Linda Rix talks federal hiring with host Derrick Dortch. January 6, 2012
Last year the Defense Department spent almost $4 million looking for Agent Orange in South Korea. However, the department didn\'t find anything. The investigation began after former soldier Steve House claimed he buried Agent Orange there more than 30 years ago.
Many agencies are now allowing employees to use their own smartphone devices. But the results of a survey by the National Cyber Security Alliance and McAfee found almost three-quarters of Americans do not have any security software or data protection applications installed on their smartphones.