In today's Federal Newscast, three years after OPM's data breach, members of the House Oversight Committee say the agency still hasn't done much to modernize its IT.
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson sought to reassure House lawmakers Tuesday about the decision-making that led to the purchase of a now-infamous $31,000 dining set at the agency's headquarters in Washington.
News outlets report Johnson Joy was accused of corruption by a former HUD employee.
In today's Federal Newscast, the USAJobs.gov website is among the first citizen facing sites to use the new Login.gov identity management service.
The Office of Management and Budget is ready to start tracking progress on improving performance and accountability. Here's what two departments have done.
Towanda Brooks, chief human capital officer for the Housing and Urban Development Department, says her agency got an early taste of workforce reshaping. The transition and retraining process hasn't always been easy, but Brooks said it's helping HUD employees become more engaged in their work. Her efforts helped her win a prestigious Presidential Rank Award.
The Housing and Urban Development Department has learned how to hire more people more quickly. Now, it's learning how to re-skill its human resources office.
More than two dozen agencies updated their contingency plans, should Congress not pass a bill to keep the government open past Friday.
Johnson Joy, the chief information officer at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, said he wants to move the agency to the cloud, update its code, and replace desktops with laptops, among other things.
What's it like going from CEO of your own information technology consulting firm and jumping into a vast federal bureaucracy?
For the first time in years, the overall score across all agencies reviewed on the Federal Plain Language Report Card dropped, and some agencies received scores below a C-minus.
The reorganization plans of three agencies show a trend of consolidating, centralizing back-office functions.
AFGE and NFFE say they have not had a substantive seat at the table during the drafting of HUD’s reform plans.
Homeland Security Department employees are leaving their desk jobs to serve in the Surge Capacity Force to help with Hurricane Harvey response.
David Eagles, the COO of HUD, said senior leadership is committed to an engaged process to improve the agency.