Workforce

Judge blocks Trump’s anti-union executive order for IFPTE-represented workers

U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman said the president “clearly” exceeded his authority when issuing an edict stripping two-thirds of the federal workforce of its collective bargaining rights.

Tech

‘Widespread’ breach let hackers steal employee data from FEMA and CBP

A Citrix vulnerability — suspected to have led to firings of multiple FEMA technology staff — enabled the breach, which let hackers pilfer data from FEMA servers connected to states at the southern border.

Workforce

Trump administration is on track to cut 1 in 3 EPA staffers by the end of 2025

Critics say the staffing cuts hinder the agency’s ability to keep pollution out of air and water.

Management

Disparities emerge in FEMA disaster assistance after Hurricane Helene

An analysis of FEMA housing assistance following Hurricane Helene reveals that higher-income households in North Carolina's rural counties received more aid, raising concerns about equity in disaster relief distribution.

Workforce

Bureau of Prisons the latest federal agency to cancel its union contracts

Labor leaders said the effort to bust their union is particularly ill-timed, given the prospect of a government shutdown that could begin as soon as Wednesday.

Management

Reductions in force could make bad situation worse for federal contractors during government shutdown

Some federal contractors have already reported problems connecting with their contracting officers.

Workforce

Layoff implementation work is exempted from shutdown, Trump admin says

Shutdown layoffs could be undone when funding is restored, according to new guidance.

Management

The ultra risks of a routine shutdown

COMMENTARY | If Democrats risk a government shutdown this week, they may unwittingly play into the most dramatic shift of power to the executive branch in recent history.

Management

A new ‘activist’ OPM is incrementally reforming the civil service, Part 2

COMMENTARY | OPM's new reforms show promise, but the agency should be wary of trying to apply a centralized, uniform standard to agencies varied in mission and expertise.

Oversight

A developing database of constituent complaints to Congress could help agencies find systemic issues in their public services

While Capitol Hill staffers help constituents when they have trouble getting assistance from an agency, there’s currently no way to track that information across congressional offices.

Workforce

Federal appellate decision restores union rights for Defense Department teachers

A three-judge panel on Thursday found that the Trump administration failed to meet its burden in requesting a stay of an injunction blocking the union-busting of the Pentagon’s corps of teachers on military bases.

Workforce

So far, many agency leaders are telling staff not to take shutdown layoff threat seriously

In at least one case, however, leadership has stressed that RIFs are a real possibility: “They want people to feel the impact of the shutdown."

Management

Even a brief government shutdown might hamper morale, raise costs and reduce long-term efficiency in the federal workforce

With the political parties currently wide apart over the terms of even a short-term budget resolution, the government is set to shut down on Oct. 1, 2025, barring an 11th-hour deal that appears far off.

Updated Oversight

Fired watchdogs can’t be reinstated despite Trump’s ‘obvious’ law breaking, court decides

A federal judge determined the removed inspectors general could not show irreparable harm.

Oversight

GAO: Forest Service upgrades to wildfire communications and tracking imperiled by Trump’s workforce downsizing

The U.S. Forest Service neither agreed nor disagreed with a recommendation to develop a strategic plan for upgrading systems to track wildfire fighting resources, instead taking issue with the title of the government watchdog’s report.

Management

The end of the ‘Fork in the Road’

A new online retirement system, coupled with record summer claim volumes, has created delays and confusion for federal employees transitioning to annuitant status, even as OPM works to streamline processing and reduce errors.

Management

Senate report accuses DOGE of risking Americans’ data by operating outside federal law

A report released by Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., said a lack of restrictions on DOGE employees’ collection of sensitive data can result “in serious cybersecurity vulnerabilities, privacy violations, and risk of corruption.”