Due to delays from OPM and The National Initiative for Cybersecurity Education (NICE), many agencies reported insufficient and incomplete cybersecurity assessments, resulting in unreliable data.
A vendor received no help from the district court after it dismissed the case of whether GAO must comply with the Administrative Procedures Act.
In today's Federal Newscast, a whistleblower and the Office of Special Counsel said inspectors with the Federal Aviation Administration cleared planes for take off even though they did not have all of the needed safety information.
One senator is worried Futures Command could harm small business.
As the Senate has a few extra weeks to work, here are several bills worth keeping an eye on this summer.
Cristina Chaplain, director of contracting and national security issues at the Government Accountability Office, said a missile interceptor shown last year in successful test run still needs evaluation under different and more strenuous conditions.
President Donald Trump signed the VA MISSION Act into law, but Senate appropriators say the Veterans Affairs Department will still face funding shortfalls without further action.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Justice Department says a former Defense Intelligence Officer received at least $800,000 to act as an agent of China.
The Government Accountability Office sided with Oracle Corp. in a bid protest that alleged the Pentagon ran afoul of the already-broad rules for other transaction agreements.
Congress has taken an interest in figuring out ways to regulate some of the third-party ticket vendors you may have used to gain admittance to anything from an NFL game to a Broadway show.
Agencies might be paying too much for the identity theft and credit monitoring services they've offered federal employees in the aftermath of data breaches.
The Government Accountability Office's director of contracting and national security acquisition issues said the market has evolved from mostly hardware to service contracts.
In today's Federal Newscast, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee releases the expanded Federal IT Acquisition Reform Act report card today, five agencies saw their grades go up, 11 saw them go down.
The debate over official time may heat up again, as the Trump administration continues to suggest changes to the current civil service system.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Government Accountability Office finds 75 percent of the Defense Department's IDIQ type contracts were only open to a single contractor.