Learn more about GSA'a Great Lakes Region, which includes six states and nine border crossings.
General Services Administration Region 6 spans Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri and Iowa, and has a real estate portfolio of 23 million square feet of space in 57 federally owned and 335 leased buildings.
Covering more than 1,200 GSA employees in Texas, New Mexico, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkansas, General Services Administration Region 7 supports other federal workers located in approximately 1,350 buildings.
GSA manages a portfolio of more than 711 federally owned and leased buildings in Region 8, which includes Colorado, Utah, Montana, North and South Dakota, and Wyoming.
GSA Region 9, the agency's farthest west region, covers the Pacific Rim states of Hawaii, California, Arizona and Nevada.
GSA Region 10 manages federal buildings across Alaska, Washington, Idaho and Oregon. See what makes the Northwest/Arctic region unique.
The General Services Administration's National Capital Region's real estate portfolio includes Washington, D.C. and adjoining areas of Maryland and Virginia.
In part two of Federal News Networks’ ongoing special report, GSA @ 70: Mission evolved, Administrator Emily Murphy discusses how this third distinct period of GSA history is different from her first stint in the 2000s and how she is setting the agency’s path forward.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Labor Department is looking to reward four contractors who make an effort to hire qualified disabled people.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Veterans Affairs Department is changing its rules regarding religious materials at its facilities.
House Democrats made the probe a top priority request when they took over the chamber's majority in January.
Leadership from DHS and GSA held an opening ceremony Friday for the Center Building, located on the St. Elizabeths campus in Southeast D.C.
The Job Corps restructuring would have closed nine of USDA’s 25 centers and transferred the remaining 16 to Labor.
Current and former federal real property experts have suggested a civilian version of the Defense Department's controversial base realignment and closure (BRAC) process.
To explain how it's charted and how it works, board member and former federal procurement policy chief Angela Styles joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin.