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Chief information officers at the Government Publishing Office and NASA have learned quite a bit this year about their agencies’ telework capabilities, and how well their employees can adapt. New policies and technology have kept business moving and made leaders rethink some moves going forward.
A recent documentary tells the story of the black women who streamed into the factories and federal offices in the early 1940s.
FAA's David Gray was instrumental for a revolution that occurred in how the agency tracks airplanes.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Government Accountability Office says not all agencies have been tracking time and attendance fraud consistently.
Mike Causey asked long-time fed and financial coach Abraham Grungold to check out the 2020 situation, who listed some things which workers under the Federal Employees Retirement System retiring in 2020 should seriously consider.
The Interior Department's inspector general said agency officials gave mostly accurate statements to Congress about its reasons for relocating employees at the Bureau of Land Management. But Interior officials did mislead Congress about lease costs being the primary reason for the move.
Stimson Center co-founder says budget would go further if it were geared for quickly sending forces to trouble spots rather than keeping them in one place.
Some old pieces of the nation's critical infrastructure are too difficult or expensive to replace, but they can be preserved and improved.
And during times like this, when a pandemic is still running wild, your estate, which you may not have known you had, probably needs a little work because the old rules no longer apply.
The Army is telling its leaders to take a more holistic interest in its soldiers to understand racial issues.
All federal providers are working to implement the payroll tax deferral policy President Donald Trump announced earlier this month in an executive order, the administration said Monday. The policy should be in place for federal employees by the second pay period in September.
Organizations of all sizes including federal agencies have been rethinking their approaches to ensuring all employees have equal chances for advancement.
Not much got done in Congress over the last two weeks, and tomorrow is the first day of the last month of the fiscal year.
Violating the Hatch Act can cost federal employees their jobs, but the law leaves enough room for top officials in White House -- regardless of the administration -- not to enforce it among its own.