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In today's Federal Newscast, 11 industry associations are calling on the Trump administration to rescind the executive order on diversity and training.
The annual conference of the National Contract Management Association occurs not just during a continuing resolution, but also when lots of new and complicated rules have taken hold.
The chairs of three House committees are looking into allegations that the Defense Department misspent about $1 billion in coronavirus relief funding.
Many agencies have turned to commercial multifactor authentication solutions as an alternative to PIV cards with a huge chunk of the federal workforce still working remotely. But some of those solutions are more secure than others.
The Department of Veterans Affairs is operating on several fronts to keep its services to veterans up to date. One channel for that is the Veterans Health Administration program called the Innovation Ecosystem.
In today's Federal Newscast, a cabinet secretary gets a bill and a slap on the wrist for a recent alleged Hatch Act violation.
The EPA has been developing an online decision support system to help cities and towns around the bay figure out the best sites for restoration or conservation.
NASA has signed its newest mentor-protégé agreement. The latest arrangement is between Boeing and Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
One particular White House memorandum issued a month ago didn't get a lot of notice. But some think it should have.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Marines Corps' number two officer has tested positive for COVID-19.
You can't play shrink, but you should listen, monitor, and do what you can to ensure a healthy environment.
Work at the CIA has always carried political and moral ambiguities. The groundwork can be gritty and difficult. A new book tells the stories of four early Cold War-era American spies.
The Air Force has a well-known problem of keeping its pilots around. Maybe the crash of the airline industry will help? But it also has the challenge of retaining its best civilians.
The State Department has been working to establish a new cybersecurity bureau to work with other agencies. Only it hasn't exactly told them what it's up to and that could lead to all sorts of problems.