Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Members of Congress know the budget process, their primary mission in life, is a mess. But some efforts are brewing that at least some members hope will get the 2023 budget process under control.
In today's Federal Newscast, veterans are suing the Army for refusing to give soldiers with alcohol and drug addictions honorable discharges.
Eagle Hill Consulting research found the pandemic and the way it scrambled how people work has sparked what they call a great re-evaluation.
A team of four students at a Virginia university won the challenge competition put on by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
In today's Federal Newscast, Members of Congress are pushing for a higher pay raise than the White House asked for in 2023.
Everyone feels overwhelmed or disconnected from time to time. Burnout happens when these feelings don't abate.
A case now being decided by the Supreme Court, known as Torres versus Texas, has a potential big impact on members of the reserves.
You've still got a couple of days left to sign up for the Feds In Motion 2022 challenge. It's a fundraiser by the Federal Employees Education and Assistance Fund. It only costs $39.
Perhaps on purpose, but the administration has offered only vague guidance on when or if or which federal employees must return to their offices.
In today's Federal Newscast, DHS is ready to expand its cyber bug bounty program after a successful pilot.
The community of inspectors general lost one of its leading lights recently with the death of former Interior Department IG Earl Devaney.
If citizens can't escape death and taxes, the IRS can't seem to avoid yearly processing problems. Even as the this year's filing season ended, the IRS was dealing with millions of returns from last year, to say nothing of slow call centers and poor in-person service.
Solar panels have a life cycle. The billions of panels covering roofs and once-pristine landscapes and maybe even your office building will all need to be disposed of and replaced at some point. Now the Energy Department has issued an action plan for how to safely and economically handle photovoltaic materials that have worn out.
In today's Federal Newscast, Can the government safely and equitably use facial recognition for identity proofing? That's the question the General Services Administration's Technology Transformation Service is asking.