Latest ""
How to find a civilian career after leaving the military
When their service comes to an end, veterans must make an important decision: what they want in a civilian career.
By Dave Lubach
House GOP launches new probe of Jan. 6, tries shifting blame
Five people died in the riot and its immediate aftermath, including a police officer, and other officers died later by suicide.
VA plans to trim 10,000 jobs this year, mostly from medical sites
The White House's budget request for fiscal 2025 calls for a 2% reduction in the size of the Veterans Affairs workforce next year.
Opinion
A robust cybersecurity workforce needs more than degree requirements
There are more than 570,000 open cybersecurity jobs in the U.S. alone – with open positions increasing by 35% in the last year.
By Dan Wilbricht
IRS agent gets trial date in shooting of fellow employee at gun range
A federal grand jury indicted Larry Edward Brown Jr. on one count of involuntary manslaughter of an officer of the United States on Wednesday.
Rollinson becomes first female chief legal counsel at IRS
Rollinson vowed to seek resources for the Office of Chief Counsel to litigate cases of high earning tax cheats.
IRS to go after executives who use business jets for personal travel
Audits will focus on aircraft used by large corporations and high-income taxpayers and whether the tax purpose of the jet use is being properly allocated.
By Fatima Hussein
IRS will start simplifying notices to taxpayers in modernization drive
More than 170 million notices, often long and filled with legal jargon, are sent out annually to taxpayers regarding credits, deductions and taxes owed.
By Fatima Hussein
Federal agencies don’t trust each other’s security clearances
Despite ongoing reforms, some employees may still see their clearances get held up when they switch agencies.
Congress approves Space Force part-timers, but still no Space Guard
A new Space Force structure approved in the 2024 defense policy law may create more flexibility for troops.
IRS says it collected $360M from rich tax cheats as funding threatened
Along with the $122 million from delinquent millionaires in October, nearly half a billion dollars in back taxes from rich tax cheats has been collected.
By Fatima Hussein