What were the top procurement stories in 2017 and what's ahead for contractors in 2018? Find out when Bill Gormley, president of Gormley Group, joins host Roger Waldron on this week's Off the Shelf. January 23, 2018
Should federal workers be worried that there will be another shutdown? And if there is another one, what do feds need to know?
In his first State of the Union, President Donald Trump highlights VA’s success with removing 1,500 employees under the June 2017 law.
The Homeland Security Department's Federal Network Resilience Division is designing the Trusted Internet Connection for the future.
In today's Federal Newscast, Senator Claire McCaskill wants to know more about OMB's plans for the Homeland Security Department, with a potential pay freeze for civilian employees on the table.
The Unified Shared Services Management Office will hold market research days in February to understand what is possible for financial shared services.
Suzette Kent comes to the administration after spending the two-plus years as a principal with Ernst & Young in the financial services office.
Breaking with tradition, the Government Accountability Office added the governmentwide security clearance program to the High-Risk List, one year ahead of the scheduled release of its biennial assessment and status report of federal initiatives.
Federal grants managers see an opportunity for better data standards and fewer grants management systems to help alleviate compliance burdens.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell calls for cloture vote on a bill to reopen the government through Feb. 8.
OMB issued a memo Saturday directing agencies to conduct an orderly shutdown.
The Senate could only muster 50 votes, not 60, to invoke cloture to end debate on the continuing resolution to keep the government open.
Grant Schneider, the acting federal chief information security officer, said shared services for cybersecurity can help address the workforce shortage.
The Office of Management and Budget told agencies to begin sending employees informal notices about their work status by the end of Friday. Formal notices detailing their "excepted" or "furloughed" status should come over the weekend and into Monday.
Though the Office of Management and Budget Friday morning said the president is "actively working to prevent a shutdown," OMB Director Mick Mulvaney said that if it happens, a government shutdown will look much different than the 16-day lapse in 2013 during the Obama administration.