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If you want to know the best way to secure the border, why not ask the people who do the securing day-to-day? That's the suggestion from Tom Kochan, a management professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management.
In today's Federal Newscast, a new report from the Defense Department shows there was a slight increase in the amount of sexual assaults reported at military academies.
Ellen Dunagan, founder and president of Traverse Career Solutions, offers three suggestions for how furloughed federal employees can rethink their professional goals.
People expect the government in Washington to panic over ice and snow. For as long as anyone can remember folks at the headquarters office of most federal operations pack the traditional D.C. survival kit: White bread, milk and toilet paper.
A Pentagon report says the total number of sexual assaults at the three U.S. military academies increased slightly last year, but an anonymous survey suggests far more encounters are going unreported
Two weeks out from the threat of another partial government shutdown, impacted federal employees are still trying to recover from the 35-day lapse they just endured.
Public Technology Institute's Executive Director Alan Shark provides interesting perspective on government shutdown, local government IT priorities for 2019, a comparison with NASCIO's state priorities, and discloses merger with CompTIA.
Our survey reveals a sense of resentment of the furloughed by those forced to work.
Cold as it may be in Washington, inside the Capitol the atmosphere is heated. Members are hard at work to get past the three-week continuing resolution now approaching its second week.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Veterans Affairs Department releases its much anticipated community care standards, which lay out what veterans are allowed to get medical treatment from non-VA doctors.
Now that the record 35-day partial shutdown is history, at least for awhile, it is only fitting that 75 percent of the nation is enduring several days of snow, ice and in some cases record-low temperatures.
Nearly 90 percent of excepted employees who took a recent Federal News Network survey about their experiences during the 35-day government shutdown said morale is worse off than before the lapse began.
The Army Reserve is placing itself in strategic locations to get talented people to become soldiers.
If there is another government shutdown on Feb. 15, it may be the earthquake that causes the retirement tsunami to finally strike.