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NASA reaches third round of funding for "tipping-point" technologies and is looking for investors to upgrade its commercial application capability.
People rely more and more on technology, especially when traveling. TSA has developed a more active program to assist the demands.
Civility may be lacking in federal agencies and the EEOC has made a goal to establish more civil workforce training
The Justice Department inspector general has called for "high-level action" to address the way Justice deals with sexual harassment complaints by employees.
The International Revenue Service (IRS) has reported a decline in new tax fraud cases for FY 2017, citing a lack of manpower to handle any more.
In today's Federal Newscast, according to report from the New York Times and ProPublica, a large amount of employees have quit, retired from or accepted buy outs to part ways with the Environmental Protection Agency.
Former DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff worked with the leadership and senior career staff to turn a collection of disparate agencies from different departments into a single, coordinated and cohesive unit.
For 34 years, the White House chandeliers and the windows through which most of us see them were the responsibility of custodian Stewart Stevens.
The more complicated a military weapon platform becomes, the more expensive it is to maintain, and nearly every platform is growing more complicated.
Jared Serbu joins Federal Drive with Tom Temin to talk about some of the key movements in DoD's cloud migration, along with some of the other most-read-about topics for 2017.
Officials at the U.S. Postal Service say the continued rise in e-commerce this year is boosting their parcel business, especially in the busy holiday season.
In today's Federal Newscast, 16 members of Congress want answers about the future of the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development.
Sometimes the source selection authorities choose a different contractor than the one favored by the program people. If they do, they better have a good reason.
The big new tax overhaul law that Congress passed this week touches off a gigantic software do-over job for IRS programmers.