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In today's Federal Newscast, the U.S. Agency for International Development is ramping up efforts to make COVID-19 vaccines available worldwide.
The continuing resolution for funding the government runs until February 18.
The task force looked at how American manufacturing can improve its workforce and semiconductor development
Keeping the electrical grid top notch will take more than wires. It'll take algorithms.
In today's Federal Newscast, the military has some big blind spots when it comes to figuring out how big a problem it has with extremism in the ranks.
USAID awarded $36 million grant to the University of California, Davis, and a $25 million grant to Tufts University.
With weeks to go before an ostensible deadline, contractors are still vexed by the nuances of the White House mandate.
The law, enacted in 1939, prevents political activity by appointed and career federal employees while on the job.
In today's Federal Newscast, agencies have new contracting goals for awards to small disadvantaged businesses.
You can't personally change perceptions of federal employee ... or can't you?
Ruth Ann Dorrill, Regional IG for Evaluation and Inspections at the Department of Health and Human Services, is this year's recipient of the June Gibbs Brown Career Achievement Award.
New IRS Deputy Chief Procurement Officer Guy Torres has long federal and private sector experience.
The ransomware threat has spooked nearly everyone. A big unknown is how vulnerable your organization actually is to ransomware attacks.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Defense Department is starting to gather data on whether the vaccination mandate for federal contractors is chasing away potential vendors