In today's Federal Newscast, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee wants Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to explain why he decided to nix an idea to have the Postal Service work with the Census Bureau.
When it comes to adopting new technology and revamping online services to the public, federal agencies don't always need to reinvent the wheel.
At the same time, Chris Lowe, the chief information security officer at USDA, is being reassigned to a bureau level role as part of a continued house cleaning of IT officials.
USDA, working with GSA and the Office of American Innovation, will soon take another step towards standing up a major part of the Trump administration's IT modernization strategy.
In today's Federal Newscast, a new policy from the National Science Foundation will require grant recipients to report the findings of any sexual harassment investigation against a researcher.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture plans to rename one of its IT service providers to reflect a doubling down on customer service.
In today's Federal Newscast, Democratic lawmakers are worried the President's desired military parade would cost too much money.
Agriculture Department CIO Gary Washington provides more details on its plans across the five Centers of Excellence areas.
The Agriculture Department’s decision to reduce how often employees can telework has been more difficult to implement for certain offices.
Is there too much power concentrated in Washington? Here's what feds think about downsizing D.C.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Office of Personnel Management produced a series of templates to help agencies make requests for recruitment, retention and relocation incentives more easily.
In today's Federal Newscast, the changes Congress ordered at the Internal Revenue Service seem to be helping the agency better identify fraudulent claims.
Federal agencies and leadership take to apps such as Facebook and Twitter to remind public and employees that they're open for business
Senior Correspondent Mike Causey says Defense has been offering $40,000 buyouts since last year, but finding anybody who actually got the bigger bucks is tough.
One Agriculture Department employee describes how changes to the workforce degrades the agency’s ability to meet its mission.