Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
The Department of Health and Human Services expects artificial intelligence will help ensure it's paying the lowest price possible for bulk purchases of everyday items like copy paper and medical examination gloves.
In today's Federal Newscast, federal employee unions are heading back to court to pursue their cases against the Office of Personnel Management over the agency's cyber breaches.
GAO's Orice Williams Brown was at the heart of the financial crisis that gripped the nation exactly 10 years ago, and now she's been inducted into the National Academy of Public Administration.
Ira Shapiro, a former senior Senate staff member and trade negotiator, said the Senate is broken, with party lines having become something of a border wall.
The Homeland Security Department's Science and Technology directorate has reorganized. It aims to work more closely with the department's operating divisions.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Department of the Interior inspector general has referred one of their investigations into Secretary Ryan Zinke's actions to the Department of Justice for it to take over.
DoD Comptroller David Norquist said the audit forced the department to embrace data analytics on a more granular level, and that’s enabling better decision-making.
Common standards across the suitability and security clearances processes may ease long-held frustrations from industry and the intelligence community.
When it went on recess to go campaigning, Congress left the government like a person with one shoe. Some agencies are fully funded for 2019 and some aren't.
You may not have seen him on the rostrum at the big conferences, but Ken Allen has been behind the scenes at ACT-IAC for nearly 14 years.
Three areas of review were identified for more cybersecurity integration including the checklists for approving medical devices.
OTA isn't new, weird or abused. But contractors, federal buyers and Congress need to keep it focused.
In today's Federal Newscast, the U.S. Postal Service's Inspector General revealed the agency only saved $91 million in 2016 and 2017 after consolidating more than 200 facilities, well below it's goal.
Agencies receive more Freedom of Information Act requests now than ever before. But their workforces haven't kept up with the growing demand.