In today's Federal Newscast, the Veterans Affairs Department's Inspector General lays out some issues with the agency's COVID-19 response.
What's a glassy-eyed carp in a dirty pond got to do with pandemic life?
No matter how you look at it, the process for investigating people and granting them security clearance has been a hairball for decades.
A year into the COVID-19 pandemic, the Government Accountability Office still faces a higher demand for its oversight work.
The $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package gives federal employees access to a new bank of paid leave, which will allow them to recover from COVID-19 and care for sick family members, or children who are learning virtually from home. President Joe Biden signed the relief bill into law Thursday afternoon.
Distribution of the crucial shots is improving, both because of supply and of governmental adaptibility.
What was the mergers and acquisition climate in 2020 and what's the outlook for 2021? Find out wen Kevin DeSanto, managing director and co-founder of KippsDeSanto joins host Mark Amtower on this week's Amtower Off Center.
It's been around a year now that the nation has been living under COVID lockdown. Life may never be the same again. How have you been managing?
The number of federal employees that retired in 2020 was the lowest in nearly 10 years. The results of an anonymous survey shows the pandemic and telework have played a role in delaying retirement for some. For others, it's changed their views of their jobs.
In today's Federal Newscast, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is reminding servicemembers and DoD employees about the ethical values of the department.
CIOs at these agencies say there’s no going back to the status quo before the pandemic, and are looking at accelerating their IT investments.
As vaccine distribution plays out slowly across the United States, many are pondering what the future of work-life balance will look like for them and their family.
In today's Federal Newscast, the $1.9 trillion COVID relief package that cleared the House Friday night includes a few key provisions for federal employees.
Incomes, employment, economic growth might be on the rise and a variety of vaccines are getting out into the market. But that didn't stop the House from passing a nearly $2 trillion stimulus bill.
Whatever plans federal agencies had to guide a return to offices, well, those seem to have evaporated months ago, Bob Tobias said.