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Almost a year into its efforts to transform the way the Agriculture Department does business by standing up five Centers of Excellence (CoEs), the General Services Administration says it's gearing up to start the process up all over again at a second agency.
In the aftermath of last year's hurricane triple-whammy, state government needs to realize they're the first responders, not FEMA.
Bob Tobias, public administration professor at American University's Key Executive Leadership Program, spoke with Eric White on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
It might be the era of cloud computing but the Defense Department still occasionally buys software on discs in a shrink-wrapped box.
In today's Federal Newscast, the General Services Administration signs a 15-year lease for the Drug Enforcement Administration's new headquarters.
With age comes a need for an upgrade, so three major federal workforce groups are coming together to propose changes to the Senior Executive Service.
The Office of Government Ethics has a lofty mission: Establishing standards of ethics for those who are entrusted with operating the federal government.
Each year, the Defense Department spends more than $100 billion to run its 22 defense agencies and field activities. DoD is supposed to conduct reviews every two years to decide whether those “DAFAs” are still needed.
As the Census Bureau rolls out IT infrastructure for online responses to the 2020 population count, current and former cybersecurity officials want to give the American public more peace of mind.
In today's Federal Newscast, Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) wants a joint session to analyze the legality of the Agriculture Department's proposal to move the Economic Research Service and the National Institute for Food and Agriculture out of the nation’s capital by the end of 2019.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency is taking Hurricane Florence seriously, and it’s not ruling out any options in responding. That includes activating the Surge Capacity Force.
Among the ideas on the table are funding federal agencies in two-year cycles, and changing the start of the fiscal year from Oct. 1st to Jan. 1st.
Center for Public Integrity writer Tik Root reported the discrepancies and discussed his findings on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
The 9/11 attacks showed the need for better data and information sharing among federal agencies and between governments.