Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
In today's Federal Newscast, House lawmakers continue the prohibition of using any funding to pay for competitions using Office of Management and Budget Circular A-76.
The Uniformed Services University of the Health Services and West Virginia University are teaming up to take on opioid addiction.
The federal flood insurance program was already billions of dollars in the red before Hurricanes Harvey and Irma arrived.
A half dozen Interior Department appointees were negotiating private sector jobs toward the end of the Obama administration.
In today's Federal Newscast, as the Navy continues to investigate the deadly crashes involving two of its ships this summer, two commanders in the 7th Fleet where the crashes occurred have been relieved of duty.
General Services Administration Administrator-nominee Emily Murphy has a strong background in acquisition and GSA's Federal Acquisition Service.
Navy historians plan to survey the wreck of the USS San Diego, which sank in 1918. They hope to resolve the question of whether it was torpedoed by a German submarine.
Customs and Border Protection is testing a program to let anglers use a mobile app to communicate with the agency, saving everyone time and travel.
DHS needs to be more forthcoming with what it knows about the company.
The National Nuclear Security Administration has plans to build a new uranium processing facility and refurbish the existing ones, but the plans have missing pieces, according to the Government Accountability Office.
Coordinating all of the moving parts at the EPA's Urban Waters program can be difficult, but it has a long list of successes.
Military planners are hard at work on what they say are badly needed upgrades to the nation's aging nuclear arsenal.
The CIO Council and OPM are hosting an IT workforce jobs fair in November focusing on filling critical IT and cyber jobs for more than 20 federal agencies.
To be a small company for federal contracting purposes, you can't get most of your revenue from a single large contractor, according to a recent court ruling.