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Anyone who has had a career that switches from government to industry, or vice versa, has probably lived through more than one lapse in funding.
In today's Federal Newscast, federal courts will be able to continue operating until Jan. 18 with their limited funds during the partial government shutdown.
For some federal contractors, the prolonged shutdown has turned them from doubt and uncertainty to real losses.
Among those stuck at home are people who were about to retire or had already filed their retirement papers. Federal retirement expert Tammy Flanagan had some answers on the potential delay for benefits.
Agriculture Sonny Perdue has famously proposed moving the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) out of Washington. A former NIFA director is skeptical of the merits.
A bill in Congress would make sure federal employees who work in security, food service, and janitorial services, get reimbursed after the government shutdown ends.
The Office of Personnel Management has told agencies not to give political appointees a $8,000-to-10,000 pay raise originally set to go into effect Saturday. But a prior executive order provided the raise unless Congress acts, which it has not.
Both the reporting entities at the state level and the agency itself are taking in more measurements of the environment using devices that sense and then send in what they sniff.
Contractors join federal employees and their families as the so-called collateral damage in the latest political game of chicken.
Back in October, the Coast Guard unveiled a new Maritime Commerce Strategic Outlook to lay it out. For details, Federal News Network's Eric White spoke with Vice Adm. Daniel Abel.
In today's Federal Newscast, an alliance of 30 federal employee organizations are urging the president to end the partial government shutdown.
The EPA exempted more than 98 percent of its workforce for a partial government shutdown. But due to a funding lapse the agency closed most of its operations in late December.
The federal acquisition regulation council never got around to updating the FAR, so its rules have differed from those of the Small Business Administration. Finally that situation is rectified, almost.
Amid the partial government shutdown, one group sometimes gets overlooked. Political appointees must stay on the job.