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David Berteau says contractors need to be more active in helping their federal counterparts fight for program funding in budget talks.
Federal News Radio's Tom Temin says the new, two-year, topline spending ceiling raised eyebrows even as it raised the coming deficits.
In today's Federal Newscast, a bill to make sure Congressional members use their own money to settle with harassment victims passed the House unanimously.
Congress probably won't have enough time to pass a budget before this Thursday's deadline. But what will happen?
Margot Conrad from the Partnership for Public Service shares ideas with excepted employees and managers on how to survive, without pay, during a shutdown.
American University's Bob Tobias says the government is all about the people it employs and the appropriations it has to work with.
The government is still closed and some federal employees are furloughed. Nicole Ogrysko explains what federal employees could expect today.
The answer to the question in the headline is that we should all care, because it is certainly no way to run a business, or a government.
Soon members of Congress will return to the Hill to tackle the great issues of 2018 — besides getting re-elected, that is.
Pay freeze for certain political officials has been extended by legislation, according to OMB memo. Those affected will be barred from pay increases past executive 2013 levels until the end of the calendar year through Jan. 6, 2018.
Based on what’s happened so far in 2017, budget expert Stan Collender said the administration is already behind schedule on budgets and appropriations as far ahead as 2019, and the tactics Republican lawmakers are using make catching up unlikely.
The election may be over, but federal employees still face uncertainty on a number of key issues, not least of which is how the government will be funded.
The White House has threatened to veto a fiscal 2017 spending bill that would further cut the Internal Revenue Service's budget by $236 million.
What federal employees should know about the $1 trillion, 1,603-page spending bill for fiscal 2015.