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The Office of Personnel Management has decided the government in the D.C. area will remain closed one more day.
The Air Force faces a series of lawsuits alleging a questionable directive had officers canned before they could collect their 401Ks.
A new bill from Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Jon Tester (D-Mont.) defines the term "administrative leave" and creates new categories of leave for employees awaiting the results of an agency investigation.
The Defense Department needs to find better ways to attract and retain nuclear forces in addition to funding nuclear modernization, according to U.S. Strategic Command's leader Adm. Cecil Haney.
Karen Terrell, vice president of SAS Federal, argues that adaptive case management could transform the current approach to reviewing federal employees and contractors with security clearances.
With so many federal employees working from home, is the government really shut down? Senior Correspondent Mike Causey talks about Uncle Sam's silent snow warriors.
Federal employees get one more day to dig out from the historic blizzard that hit the District, Maryland and Virginia metro areas.
Federal News Radio speaks with Recreation News Editor Marvin Bond about interesting things to do in and near the nation's capital.
Federal News Radio wants to know how you're staying warm this weekend. Share your snowstorm photos and tell us what you think about OPM's snowstorm response.
The budget request comes as the General Services Administration announces Phase II for the FBI headquarters project.
Tune in to FEDtalk this week as host Jason Briefel talks to the VETS Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy, Teresa W. Gerton, and the U.S. Small Business Administration's Associate Administrator for the Office of Veterans Business Development, Barb Carson. January 22, 2016
The Office of Personnel Management announced early departure guidelines for federal employees late last night, but commuting feds are mad they may have to fight the snow on their way home.
The National Background Investigations Bureau will have its own director, who will report to the Office of Personnel Management. The administration says it doesn't have a specific timeline for implementing the new security clearance program or standing up the new agency, but changes will come in incremental stages.
AFGE President J. David Cox joined Tom Temin on the Federal Drive to talk about the ongoing contract negotiations for TSA employees.