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In today's Federal Newscast, a new survey by ClearanceJobs.com and the DHI Group found the average salary among people with security clearances increase.
A year ago today, the Office of Management and Budget told agencies to implement "maximum telework" policies as the pandemic kicked into full gear. Today, agencies are asking what's next.
The National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence is warning that the federal government, at all levels, doesn't have the workforce it needs to stay on top of this emerging technology.
One agency warned retirees could wait as long as six months for an initial interim payment and up to a year for a full annuity. The National Finance Center said it plans to return to its goal of processing retirements cases within 30 days by the end of the month.
For federal contractors, the pandemic has shown just how far off course normal procedures and government relations can get pushed.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Veterans Affairs Department's Inspector General lays out some issues with the agency's COVID-19 response.
Robert Burton and Craig Barrett, partners with Crowell & Moring, explain why the possible elimination of the AbilityOne Program sends the wrong message.
What's a glassy-eyed carp in a dirty pond got to do with pandemic life?
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy says the Postal Service is still in the early stages of figuring out the percentage of electric vehicles it will buy in the first round of its next-generation delivery vehicle contract with Oshkosh Defense.
The congressionally-chartered National Commission on Military, National and Public Service made 124 recommendations last year, right at the start of the pandemic. Congress never seriously considered those recommendations, but at least a few senators hope that changes.
The man spent five hours freely wandering the base where the president’s plane is kept.
The Office of Personnel Management will reopen the Combined Federal Campaign for a special 30-day window. The agency said it give federal employees time to donate to the charities supporting victims of the winter storms in Texas last month.
No matter how you look at it, the process for investigating people and granting them security clearance has been a hairball for decades.
Exceptional family members are full of love, but they also can bring challenges, such as when the family has to relocate or find an accommodating school. For military members, that's where the Exceptional Family Members Program comes in.