In today's Federal Newscast, there is now an informal deal in place to avoid a potential government shutdown at the end of the month.
Executives in large agencies use surveys to take the pulse of their workforces.
Forfeiture is big business for Homeland Security, but the overwhelming owners were never even accused of committing a crime.
This big department has been working to raise its employee engagement score since the beginning.
In today's Federal Newscast, two million appointments canceled during the initial wave of the coronavirus pandemic still need rescheduling at the Veterans Health Administration.
OMB released the final vulnerability disclosure policy (VDP) and DHS published the related binding operational directive and implementation guidance so agencies can get started with developing these tools by March 2021.
You'd think CBP and ICE would welcome stronger oversight of controversial seizures and forfeitures.
In today's Federal Newscast, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) tells his colleagues what may seem inevitable: a continuing resolution is the likely outcome ahead of the upcoming government funding deadline.
Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs, EPA and GSA procurement leaders shared how they're making frictionless acquisition a reality.
The concept of reskilling is no longer limited to low-value value work, as the new virtual environment has changed the game for federal employees looking for training and development opportunities, agencies say.
Mia Jordan, the CIO at the Agriculture Department’s Rural Development bureau, is leaving after 10 years to become the CIO at the Education Department’s Federal Student Aid Office.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Census Bureau needed to hire 300,000 enumerators but fell well short of that goal.
Brian Harrell, the assistant director for infrastructure security, is leaving the agency after 21 months at CISA. Steve Harris, the deputy assistant director, will take over on an interim basis.
In today's Federal Newscast, American Federation of Government Employees members say they're not ready yet to return to their offices.
While 5G could have major implications for the economy, intelligence and cybersecurity agency officials warn that moving more core functions to the edge of networks could create a larger attack surface for adversaries.