Not yet in effect, the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification program rule is now at the White House for review.
In today's Federal Newscast, the FDIC is taking several steps in light of recent findings of a hostile work environment.
Congress is out of D.C. this week for the 4th of July holiday. But it has a lot of spinning plates. Including three big appropriations bills.
The Supreme Court last week overturned a 40 year precedent. In a case brought by New England fisherman, the court reversed the Chevron deference.
Service members are often part of two-income families. But spouses face continued difficulty of establishing themselves when the service member gets relocated.
CBP has taken steps to better balance transparency and privacy when it comes to what are known as Enforce and Protect Act administrative proceedings.
Social Security taxes start automatically the day you start working. But when the time comes you have got to file an application to get your benefits.
Agencies need multiyear funding to get big modernization projects done. Otherwise it is piecemeal, depending on the year-to-year whims of Congress.
Guidehouse paid $7.6 million and Nan McKay & Associates paid $3.7 million to resovled claims that they violated the False Claims Act.
Lots of promising and low-cost drugs get down people's gullets thanks to decades of reform at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Federal employees thinking about retirement --and if you're not, you should be -- tend to concentrate on what they can save.
Among its priorities, the Biden administration wants to help clean up the oceans and make the use of them more sustainable.
It is a significant improvement since a tumultuous launch of a new TSP online platform back in 2022.
A vendor of computer vision software protested a National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency award to systems integrator CACI.
The IRS recently installed a new chief of its Criminal Investigation branch. He is a 29-year IRS veteran.