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In today's Federal Newscast, the union representing USCIS employees is disappointed Congress left town for August recess before passing emergency funding for the agency.
Congress left town without a plan to tackle a growing list of priorities that must get done, in some cases, by Sept. 30. They include a coronavirus relief package, bailout money for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and the Postal Service, and oh yeah, a plan to avoid a government shutdown.
Some agencies' new routines might be here to stay, according to IT security officials who say the feasibility of long-term telework has opened the door to a reimagining of the civil service.
Companies filing for reimbursements under $2 million may get streamlined service.
Federal employees on official business next fiscal year will see few changes to their daily travel allowances, the General Services Administration said Friday.
Under a new collective bargaining agreement, eligible employees at the EPA can telework up to two days a week. But the agency suggested employees could have had a more generous policy if its union had made its own concessions.
Defense and national security tech leaders are trying to balance implications of mass telework with pre-existing cyber priorities, and fend off an unending onslaught of bad actors trying to exploit the – in some cases – woefully unprepared remote federal workforce.
Naval leadership wants to find bias or systemic racism in the ranks of the Navy and root it out.
Best listening experience is on Chrome, Firefox or Safari. Subscribe to Federal Drive’s daily audio interviews on Apple Podcasts or PodcastOne. Much of the controversy surrounding a possible November election by mail centers on the Post Office. Does…
Can we all agree, mass telework and virtual meetings and the rest of it, are getting old?
Planning to use the new paid parental leave program later this fall? What you need to know about requesting leave and signing your service agreement.
The 1,600 employees of the National Science Foundation started working from home in March - a familiar story to so many across the country. But NSF might have been a little more prepared to make the switch.
Like so many people with new jobs, this year's crop of summer government interns can't go work in the regular sense.
The Census Bureau's big show has been beset with politics, the vicissitudes of technological innovation, and now the pandemic.