Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Employees worry recent initiatives designed to raise the profile of diversity and inclusion within the Department of Veterans Affairs won't trickle down to local facilities and mid-management.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Defense Department has expanded its program of using external hackers to probe systems for cybersecurity vulnerability.
Official time was sharply curtailed during the Trump administration. Now a Republican-backed bill in the House would eliminate official time.
This time last year, local leaders at the American Federation of Government Employees were scrambling to resolve multiple crises. Now, they’re highlighting staffing shortages at multiple agencies.
In today's Federal Newscast, a prominent veterans group says the Pentagon has decided not to allow it use the building’s parking lots as the staging area for its annual Memorial Day motorcycle ride.
It was already difficult being the child of an active duty military member. Long periods of separation, frequent moves, or a parent injury or loss. The pandemic has magnified those issues.
The Department of Veterans Affairs is considering the next steps for telehealth, after it expanded the program by 1,831% last year.
The Department of Veterans Affairs' digital transformation center has delivered at least 30 COVID-19-related applications and modified another 20 to help meet pandemic needs over the last year, including a few upgrades to its veteran homelessness program.
For David Case, deputy inspector general at the Department of Veterans Affairs, investigations are a mix of sifting through documents and machine-generated data, and talking to individuals.
Democrats and Republicans are united on the need for change at the Office of Accountability and Whistleblower Protection, but they don't yet agree on how best to improve the organization at the Department of Veterans Affairs.
The Government Accountability Office has come out with recommendations on how Veterans Affairs can better staff-up and use its suicide prevention teams.
Now that the federal customers who rely on the system see speed as the new normal, they won’t be satisfied with a return to the status quo ante.
Anthony Principi, who served as secretary of Veterans Affairs from 2001 to 2005 and is a member of the Cerner Government Advisory Board, explains why the strategic pause for VA makes sense to further ensure the future of the new EHRM.
The Marines obsess over something simple like a PT uniform while VA sweats bullets over its electronic health record.