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SBA’s chief human capital officer says the agency is looking at permanent telework as a strategy to recruit from a broader pool of talent.
Kimberly Price, director of policy and systems for the Railroad Retirement Board, is being honored by the Federal Managers Association as Manager of the Year.
VA on Wednesday acknowledged a variety of challenges with the new electronic health record, but it said the Cerner Millennium solution will ultimately be an improvement once employee and congressional concerns are resolved.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Government Accountability Office is looking for service members who were victims of hazing while they served.
The government is operating in the wake of a historic number of executive orders, memoranda and proclamations from the Biden White House. Ohio State law professor Peter Shane offered an assessment.
Like a hot air balloon with a pinhole, the National Labor Relations Board has been steadily losing people and the morale of those remaining.
Jessica Klement, staff vice president for advocacy at NARFE, says that action in NAPA's OPM report is essential if the civil service is to be repaired after four years of attacks from the White House.
According to an analysis from the Merit Systems Protection Board, agencies deny performance-based step increases and salary bumps to one in every 1,000 employees.
A deep dive by the RAND Corporation says it might be time to revise the criteria for granting or withholding security clearances.
Broader conclusions about the role of the Office of Personnel Management have the potential to become yet another case of déjà vu unless the new director takes a number of concrete actions.
In March of 2020, there were 27,212 individuals with $1 million or more in their Thrift Savings Plan accounts. One year later, the TSP millionaires club has grown to 84,808 members.
Through it all, USPS dealt with critical shortages of its employees, mail delays and a slew of federal lawsuits.
The issue of hunger in the military and service member families needing food stamps to get by is starting to grab the attention of high-profile lawmakers.
Recently the American Society of Civil Engineers confirmed that the nation's infrastructure could stand some rebuilding. For more, Federal Drive turned to civil engineer and former ASCE president, Greg DiLoreto.