Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Over the past few years, the Pentagon has spent $8 billion on contractors to supply planes and pilots to play enemy. Now those contracts are under review.
Operators of pipelines, freight railroads and passenger transit systems face a parade of cybersecurity deadlines this year.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Postal Service is asking for a temporary exemption from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s vaccine-and-testing mandate for large employers.
Artificial intelligence is growing fast as a technology to help companies hire the people they need faster. But it also has the potential to introduce bias on a record scale.
The Federal Aviation Administration worries strong signals near airports will interfere with certain aircraft systems essential to safe landings.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection changed a solicitation after receiving bids. And it gave bidders very little time to make revisions.
In today's Federal Newscast, while COVID-19 drove a majority of federal workers out of the office in 2020, new data from the Office of Personnel Management shows the increase in teleworking wasn't as dramatic as expected.
For a federal contractor, the best motivation for a new year's resolution is a better shot at more work.
In today's Federal Newscast, activist group asks the Senate Rules Committee and House Administration Committee to force the Capitol Police to publish inspector general reports online.
People in the IRS' Enterprise Digitalization Project have been exploring quite a few projects that go far beyond simply digitizing forms, to modernizing business processes and case management.
The Electromagnetic Spectrum Enterprise Policy and Program Office in the DoD’s office of the chief information officer launched a new program to improve communication with industry about spectrum sharing.
From its embassy buildings to how it conducts diplomacy, the State Department has been on a modernization drive.
Congress is contemplating a bill that would require companies to report successful cyber attacks to the federal government.
Nearly 80% of the trillion dollar infrastructure bill is slated for grants. Only a sliver is destined for federal contracts.