One year after President Biden directed agencies to strengthen the national security workforce, details on progress are scarce.
The White House Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment's report builds on goals from the President's Management Agenda to reinforce unions as a way to strengthen the federal workforce, marking a polar opposite approach from the previous administration.
A Biden administration task force has issued a set of recommendations that could make it easier for federal workers and contractors to unionize
If agencies only measure diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility through hiring numbers they risk overlooking other, equally important gaps in their systems and policies.
In the annual passback document, Federal News Network has learned the Biden administration wants to give federal employees their biggest raise in 15 years.
The Biden administration is in the market for greener sources of electricity for the federal government, a significant step in a decades-long plan set into motion by a recent executive order.
For what nominee will face should they be confirmed, Federal Drive with Tom Temin turned to the last MSPB member, attorney Mark Robins.
The Biden administration has a lot of labor itches to scratch, but they're not totally in control.
The Office of Personnel Management and Commerce Department will host a roundtable to discuss the best ways to implement diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility into hiring and recruitment.
The Social Security Administration came out last or nearly last in nearly every measure in the recent pulse survey that came out from the Office of Management and Budget.
The new Federal Sustainability Plan released in December charges agencies to harness procurement authority to reach 100% carbon pollution-free energy at federal facilities by 2030.
Appeals to MSPB have fallen to the wayside as the board has operated without the appointees needed to run its quorum.
The Federal Drive with Tom Temin spoke with Debra Roth, a partner at Shaw Bransford & Roth.
The Biden administration ended the last calendar year with a whisper. It added only 1,400 pages to the Federal Register.
In a 2-1 decision, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals worried there'd be no limit to a president's authority over contractor employees if the government were allowed to impose a vaccine mandate.