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More than 300k VA health jobs exempted from White House hiring freeze
About two-thirds of Veterans Affairs jobs will be excluded from a White House order blocking new hiring.
Defense Health Agency nurses face recruiting freeze, threats to pay
The agency has held town halls informing employees that it’s suspending a regrade of existing GS-13 nursing positions.
Quieting Discord: A new frontier in military leaks and extremism
From secret Pentagon leaks to radicalization in the military community, Discord is continuing to grapple with keeping bad actors off the popular platform.
Military investigators raid contractors near Army’s training HQ
The raid involved multiple facilities of the Orlando-based Cole Engineering Services, that company confirmed.
By Hope Hodge Seck
Next-gen homeland defense interceptor plans are risky, watchdog says
In a report, the Government Accountability Office said there are technical, schedule and cost risks associated with the MDA's next-gen interceptor.
By Jen Judson
Opinion
What feds need to know about ADA and return-to-work policies
Federal government workers can utilize the Americans with Disabilities Act to protect their ability to work from home.
By Dr. Gleb Tsipursky
Social media among many barriers to bringing back a draft, report says
A recent think tank report looks at the unprecedented social and cultural challenges the Defense Department would have to navigate in the event of a draft.
By Hope Hodge Seck
White House takes aim at shipbuilding, other measures in defense bill
The White House noted its concerns with the FY25 defense policy bill's shipbuilding plans, an east coast missile defense site and contractor pricing data.
VA union urges Secretary McDonough to hire more staff
Nurses held a rally outside VA headquarters last week, pleading for the department to address severe understaffing at medical centers.
Trust in government hits fresh lows ahead of US presidential election
Experts worry deepening mistrust could impact voting, ultimately disincentivizing citizens to engaging with the government altogether.
Opinion
How government technology can bridge generational workforce gaps
While millennials and Gen Zers are excited to use advanced technology in the workplace, other generations such as Baby Boomers may have limited experience.
By Robert Edelman