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According to the latest data from the Office of Personnel Management, about 1.4% fewer retirement claims were filed in May compared to April.
In today's Federal Newscast, AFGE wants to add a provision in the 2021 defense authorization bill that will protect DoD workers’ bargaining rights.
The coronavirus made in-person internships a risky proposition, but the Virtual Student Federal Service might see a higher-than-average level of interest when the application for students goes live July 1.
Some agencies are preparing to provide masks for their employees when they return. Others aren't requiring them. At some organizations, telework will be "encouraged" as they gradually reopen. For others, telework is still mandatory.
Two long serving appointees notch their next positions.
The pandemic has changed when and how federal employees work, creating new challenges and opportunities for managers, leaders at several agencies say.
COVID-19 exposed the fragility of the nation’s food supply chain and the limitations of how America’s producers have always done things.
However well intentioned, the Payroll Protection Program has issues. Federal Drive discussed them with Akin Gump attorney, Samantha Block.
Social Security requires signed paperwork, now several plaintiffs and the National Federation of the Blind are suing to get that changed.
Joe Paiva, a retired Army officer and former CIO at the Commerce Department’s International Trade Administration, offers federal and industry executives some ideas for making hiring more equitable and less unintentionally biased.
In today's Federal Newscast, Senate Whistleblower Protection Caucus Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA) is putting a hold on two Trump administration nominations until the White House sheds more light on the recent firing of two inspectors general.
This marks agency's third announced recall of employees during the coronavirus pandemic, at a time when only a handful of agencies have sent their staff back to the office under “phase one” of their plan to resume full operations.
American University professor Bob Tobias joined the Federal Drive with Tom Temin to share his thoughts on how the federal government should reopen its physical offices to employees.
If the government starts pushing employees to show up in offices without mandating masks and social distancing, we could see an uptick in retirement rates.