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The acting director wants Congress to take over from the Federal Reserve the full oversight and budget authority for CFPB.
In today's Federal Newscast, while Congress has adjusted spending caps to allow increases in spending, the Congressional Budget Office warns agencies will have to make cuts again if the caps aren't adjusted beyond 2019.
The vice president of eSecurity Federal at Thales shared his company's annual survey of cybersecurity.
With only half the fiscal year left to go, the president of Allen Federal Business Partners discussed whether feds have enough time to launch the initiatives planned for 2018.
The director of the Office of Government Information Services at the National Archives and Records Administration shares her tips for filing a successful information request in an era of backlogs and appeals.
In today's Federal Newscast, a new inspector general report finds a chief counsel in Veterans Affairs' Office of General Counsel hatched a scheme to get his wife a job in one of the teams he managed.
With the 2020 people count nearing, the Census Bureau may have found a new way to encourage more response to its surveys.
With another change at the top at Veterans Affairs, the national veterans service organization Amvets is concerned what the instability in leadership will mean for veterans.
In today's Federal Newscast, President Trump signs the EGO Act into law, banning federal funds from being used for oil paintings of federal officials.
NASA has a historic launch coming this July. And where it's going is hotter than any summer day. The agency will send the Parker Solar Probe on a trip that's closer to the sun than any spacecraft in history.
Since 2011, approximately 13,000 Afghan and Iraqi nationals have resettled in the U.S. under special immigration visas.
AMVETS is taking matters into its own hands and has commissioned a licensed clinical team to help its members with mental health problems.
A new contracting clause from the General Service Administration has potentially big implications for anyone buying from the schedule vendors.
Ronny Jackson, or whomever becomes the next Veterans Affairs secretary, might only succeed by clearing out the infighting senior staff.