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Smithsonian Institution staff told lawmakers Thursday of the need to account for extreme weather events in building maintenance and future capital projects.
Federal employees may not all be in the office for the second holiday season in a row. But their generosity is undeterred by the pandemic.
In today's Federal Newscast, three senior Republican Senators are calling on the Government Accountability Office to look into whether federal contractors are using the E-Verify tool for employees.
U.S. officials say all of the military services have now begun disciplinary actions and discharges for troops who have refused to get the mandated coronavirus vaccine, with as many as 20,000 unvaccinated forces at risk of being removed from service
The U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, part of the Transportation Department, has suspended a program that puts students at sea for a year. That followed reports of sexual assault of students aboard commercial vessels.
Public comments on the Federal Mobility Group's draft International Travel Guidance for Government Mobile Devices are open now through Dec. 28.
In today's Federal Newscast, the 2022 NDAA is on its way to becoming law, we've got some details on what it contains.
The Biden administration is moving at a snail's pace to staff itself — slower, in fact, than the last three administrations.
The Chief Human Capital Officers Council has a new operational mandate, and it's been discussing "future of work" policies and challenges on an almost weekly basis with the Office of Personnel Management.
As more employers add artificial intelligence to their technology stacks, AI has the potential for misuse, or even for introducing unlawful bias all by itself.
In today's Federal Newscast, continuous evaluation is a new reality for most security clearance holders, but an audit say agencies need some way to measure its success.
The Omicron variant is showing some vaccine resistant properties that the booster could help resolve.
The 174-page bill, which the House passed earlier this week along party lines, expands federal employee whistleblower protections and updates the 80-year-old Hatch Act. It will likely face a tough path forward in an equally divided Senate.
The Biden administration isn't waiting for Congress to pass the Build Back Better Act to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from federal buildings.