Defense

20 years of clearance reform: From intelligence reform to Trusted Workforce

COMMENTARY | It’s time to finish what the 2004 Intelligence Reform And Terrorism Prevention Act started, argues one clearance expert.

Management

Will civil service protections hold up against RFK Jr.’s threats to the federal public health workforce?

Kennedy, Trump’s pick to lead HHS, has talked openly about removing swaths of civil servants at FDA and NIH.

Management

USPS privatization again under consideration, Trump says

The president-elect suggested he could bring back an idea from his first term that proved unpopular with both parties in Congress.

Workforce

OPM finally issues regulations implementing 2016 administrative leave reforms

An environmental advocacy group sued the federal government’s HR agency earlier this year in an effort to prod the federal government’s HR agency to implement a law aimed at ending lengthy periods of paid administrative leave.

Management

What does the head of the Education Department do?

The secretary of education helps set national priorities in a system primarily funded and guided by local governments.

Tech

Intelligence CIO moves to helm IT at the National Institutes of Health

Adele Merritt, who served as CIO for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence since January 2022, took over as the NIH CIO on Dec. 16.

Workforce

Immigration judges seek renewed union recognition

In a controversial November 2020 decision, the Federal Labor Relations Authority overruled its regional director and decertified the National Association of Immigration Judges.

Workforce

Federal employees could be more easily removed under new House bill 

Rep. Barry Loudermilk’s, R-Ga., MERIT Act proposes radical civil service reforms, including repealing statutes governing unacceptable performance actions, ending union grievances based on adverse personnel actions and prohibiting furlough appeals. 

Transition

What does the director of the FBI do?

The role of both the FBI and its leader have dramatically shifted over time.

Oversight

Legislation to promote better federal building security set to be signed into law

Multiple watchdogs have recently criticized the effectiveness of security at government facilities.

Oversight

3 key findings on the Trump assassination attempt in Butler, Pa.

The congressional panel investigating assassination attempts on Donald Trump issued its final report this week.

Management

Could Biden’s recent strategy to streamline government hiring be scuttled under Trump?

One of the purposes of the administration’s federal hiring improvement plan is to make agencies aware of hiring tools they already have access to.

Management

DHS’s plans to fix problems with its hiring and training for the acquisition workforce might not work

The department knows its acquisition staff are overwhelmed with work and slowed down by long hiring processes, but the Government Accountability Office says DHS hasn’t reviewed whether its solutions are actually helping.

Pay & Benefits

What difference does 2.5% make?

Here's what a Dec. 31, 2025 retirement might look like with a 4.5% increase in pay for 2025 compared with only a 2% increase.

Pay & Benefits

Schumer tells feds he’ll call a vote on windfall elimination provision repeal

The Social Security Fairness Act, which would repeal to controversial tax provisions affecting some federal workers and retirees, has 63 sponsors in the Senate, more than the 60 votes needed to force a vote on the measure.

Tech

Republican lawmakers ask Trump to kill IRS Direct File

The new program intended to enable free, online tax filing directly with the government has garnered controversy and praise since its inception.

Pay & Benefits

Federal firefighter pay raises could vanish without action by Congress within days

The 2021 infrastructure law included $600 million to boost salaries for the nearly 11,200 wildland firefighters for two years.

Transition

An open letter to the public administration and public management communities

COMMENTARY | “We must reexamine the fundamental values that drive our work…[and] we need a vigorous debate about the basic principles of the field,” argues one expert.