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 Veterans Affairs Department's smoking ban at medical facilities now extends to its employees, something their union is not happy about.
With professional services growing as a percentage of federal contract dollars, agencies pay close attention to whom its bidders are offering.
In today's Federal Newscast, news that the USDA will not be paying as much to employees who chose not to move to Kansas City next month has sparked Congressional outrage.
AFGE officials representing the affected employees have concerns about their lack of access to air quality records at their new workplace: the EPA’s vehicle emission testing facility in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Edward O'Brien explained how his research into cellular protein structures could impact the biotech and pharmaceutical fields.
AT&T uses 20 megahertz of old television spectrum and will operate FirstNet for at least 25 years.
The National Archives and Records Administration has a plan in place to retrain the records management workforce and make it easier for agencies to buy the tools they'll need to make the transition to fully electronic records.
The federal government's first responders and disaster recovery agencies also need the nationwide network.
Proposed rules are still open for comments. For details, the director of ecosystem management coordination at the Forest Service, Christine Dawe, joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
For an update, Federal News Network's Jared Serbu spoke with Jennifer Wong, program director of OPM's Eastern Management Development Center.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission will host free online training on the agency's new online filing system for federal sector complaints and appeals.
The agency's IG report on two Trump administration appointees reads like a politicals' manual for what not to do.
The American Federation of Government Employees has sued the Federal Service Impasses Panel over its decision to rewrite major portions of the unions' contract with the Social Security Administration. If AFGE is successful, the case could have significant implications for other federal employee unions engaged in agency negotiations.
Also in today's Federal Newscast, for the first time in 12 years, federal civilian agencies suffered no major cyber incidents in fiscal 2018.