Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Defense Department is seeing troubling new figures in military suicide rates.
Thousands and thousands of words in two important executive orders fail to add up to clarity.
Jay Bonci took his first government leadership position in August, following a career as a technology executive at Akamai.
Congress is considering different approaches to remediate PFAS, including one which passed the House and uses the Environmental Protection Agency's existing Superfund program to regulate the contaminants and order cleanups.
The Office of Federal Procurement Policy is putting a new emphasis on helping agencies reduce their Procurement Administrative Lead Time -- or “PALT.”
In today's Federal Newscast, federal agencies are looking for private sector ideas on collecting vaccine information for their employees.
Dr. Reem Ghandour has done some significant research into compiling that data, research that helped officials at all levels of government develop policy.
In today's Federal Newscast, a review by the National Academy of Public Administration says Secret Service employees are doing more than ever with less.
For how the case turned out, Federal Drive with Tom Temin talked with Smith Pachter McWhorter procurement attorney Joe Petrillo.
The maintenance backlog stands at about $3 billion and the number of facilities is growing faster than the budget.
At the Justice Department, assistant U.S. attorneys and trial attorneys are both, well, lawyers that do litigation. But they work under different pay systems.
The Department of Health and Human Services has an office dedicated to building data capacity necessary for doing what it calls patient-centered outcomes research.
The federal contracting community will feel relieved if Congress proceeds with a continuing resolution, and avoids a lapse in appropriations. Fondly known as a government shutdown.
In today's Federal Newscast, House Democrats have new documents that show the extent to which three associates of former President Trump developed their own agenda to transform the Department of Veterans Affairs.