Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday — 5 December 2025Main stream

More moves to reorganize Army take effect today

 

  • More moves to reorganize the Army take effect today. The new Army Western Hemisphere Command will officially come into being with its headquarters at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The new organization combines the existing U.S. Army North, U.S. Army South and Army Forces Command under one umbrella before those organizations are formally disestablished next October. The new command will also absorb the Army’s 18th Airborne Corps, Air Traffic Services Command and the 1st Army.
  • Workforce reductions have become a top challenge at the Office of Personnel Management, according to an agency watchdog. OPM’s inspector general said the agency’s rapid staffing losses this year have created gaps in its ability to operate effectively. According to OPM, the reductions are meant to enhance efficiency. But a new IG report warns that the staffing losses could lead to significant challenges and disruptions in the agency’s work. OPM is on track to lose more than one-third of its entire workforce by the end of the year.
    (Top management challenges for fiscal year 2026 - Office of Personnel Management, Office of Inspector General)
  • Close to two-thirds of Americans believe management of the federal government has been heading in the wrong direction. A majority also says the government is operating worse now than it was a year ago. The new findings from the Partnership for Public Service indicate that much of the public is pessimistic about the impacts of the Trump administration’s federal workforce cuts. In a recent survey from the Partnership, one-quarter of respondents said they believe the government is moving in the right direction.
  • Professional services contractors get ready: OASIS+ Phase 2 is here. The General Services Administration is adding five new domains to the existing multiple award contract and opening all new and existing functional areas for bids from new companies in January. GSA said the five new domains under OASIS+ Phase 2 will include business administration, financial services, human capital, marketing and public relations, and social services. Vendors should be on the look out for a pre-amendment notice on SAM.gov around December 16, which will detail the draft scorecards for all domains.
    (OASIS+ phase 2 is here - General Services Administration)
  • The Department of Health and Human Services is setting new restrictions on telework as a reasonable accommodation for employees with disabilities. A new HHS-wide reasonable accommodation policy says all requests for telework, remote work or reassignment must be reviewed and approved by an assistant secretary or a higher-level official. Frontline supervisors no longer have the authority to make those decisions. A memo from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says all telework related to reasonable accommodations will be repealed.
  • Unions are asking a federal court to reverse more layoffs than agencies have allowed so far. An amendment to an ongoing lawsuit asks a federal judge in San Francisco to reverse more reductions in force under a spending deal that ended the recent government shutdown. The continuing resolution states agencies can’t use federal funds to carry out RIFs between mid-November and the end of January. But agencies have only reinstated federal employees who received RIF notices between October 1 and November 12. The amended lawsuit seeks to force the departments of State, Education and Defense, as well as the Small Business Administration and the General Services Administration to rescind more RIFs.
  • The Pentagon inspector general’s long-awaited report on Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the Signal app to discuss operational details concluded that Hegseth “sent sensitive, nonpublic, operational information” from his personal cell phone, which violates Defense Department rules that prohibit the use of personal devices and nonapproved apps for official business. The IG also determined that Hegseth’s use of a personal device for official work “risks potential compromise of sensitive DoD information, which could cause harm to DoD personnel and mission objectives.” The Pentagon only provided a partial copy of messages from Hegseth’s personal cell phone. The IG relied on the transcript of the public chat posted by The Atlantic for this investigation. The IG said Hegseth declined to be interviewed for this evaluation. Meanwhile, the Pentagon said the report is a “total exoneration” of Hegseth and that “the case is closed.”
  • The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is urging agencies and industry to take action against a new cyber threat from China. At least eight organizations, including federal agencies, IT companies and critical infrastructure providers, have fallen victim to a new and sophisticated malware attack. CISA is telling all organizations to take action to protect their systems from BRICKSTORM. Nick Andersen, the executive assistant director for cybersecurity at CISA, said the malware could enable long term access, disruption and potential sabotage. "BRICKSTORM is a sophisticated malware," he said. "It has advanced functionality to conceal communications, move laterally and tunnel into victim networks. It can also automatically reinstall or restart the malware if disrupted." CISA issued a new analysis and recommendations yesterday for how organizations can protect themselves from BRICKSTORM.

The post More moves to reorganize Army take effect today first appeared on Federal News Network.

© The Associated Press

FILE - In this Jan. 4, 2020, file photo a sign for Fort Bragg, N.C., is shown. (AP Photo/Chris Seward, File)
Before yesterdayMain stream

There’s a new performance management training program for federal supervisors

  • The Office of Personnel Management is requiring all federal supervisors to enroll in a new training program on performance management. A new memo said the mandatory training will cover how to both reward and discipline employees, as well as how to create effective performance plans. All supervisors are required to complete OPM's new training by Feb. 9, 2026.
    (New governmentwide supervisory training - Office of Personnel Management)
  • The Missile Defense Agency has tapped more than 1,000 companies to support the Golden Dome initiative. The first round of awards under the agency’s Scalable Homeland Innovative Enterprise Layered Defense, or SHIELD, contracting vehicle went to 1,014 “qualifying offerors.” Vendors that receive task orders will draw funds from a pool worth up to $151 billion. Officials say those order competitions won’t begin until all companies in the competitive range get the chance to "engage in meaningful discussions” with the agency.
  • The top Democrat on the Senate Subcommittee on Aviation, Space and Innovation is pressing Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to give a majority of the FAA workers a bonus. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) said it was unfair to limit who received the $10,000 bonus when all 20,000 air traffic controllers and technicians worked during the 43-day shutdown. The FAA is giving a $10,000 award to approximately 2.4% of the air traffic controller workforce and to roughly 6% of the technician workforce. Duckworth said this creates a "perverse and dangerous incentive" that threatens to weaken national airspace system safety during future shutdowns.
  • Senate Democrats are ringing the alarm bells about the new deputy general counsel at the General Services Administration. Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and five other members of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee are calling for the White House to reverse its appointment of Paul Ingrassia to be the GSA deputy general counsel. The lawmakers say Ingrassia is unqualified for the position because of his very limited legal experience and because of his lengthy and public record of offensive statements. The Trump administration withdrew Ingrassia's nomination to lead the Office of Special Counsel after statements he made became public about him having a "Nazi streak from time to time" and on other questionable topics. The Senators want a briefing from GSA and the White House Office of Presidential Personnel by Dec. 9.
    (Democrat Senators ring alarm bells over GSA deputy counsel - Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee)
  • The Pentagon inspector general said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the messaging app Signal to discuss operational details of airstrikes in Yemen created a risk of exposing U.S. tactics and endangering service members. Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell pushed back on the finding, and pointed to the “flawless execution and success” of Operation Rough Rider. Parnell also noted that the inspector general determined that no classified information was shared. “Case closed,” he said on social media platform X. CNN first reported the watchdog’s findings.
  • Former EPA employees are challenging the Trump administration, saying they were fired illegally. After being fired for signing a letter criticizing the Trump administration, six former EPA employees argue the agency’s actions violated the First Amendment. The employees were some of the 140 workers who signed the “declaration of dissent,” which resulted in around 20 employees being fired, and dozens more facing two-week suspensions. The fired feds are appealing their case to the Merit Systems Protection Board.
  • A recent survey shows most Americans agree agencies should make secure data-handling a top priority for the services they provide. But only 41% of those surveyed say they trust the government’s handling of their personal data. In a survey of more than 1,500 people conducted by Gartner, more than half say more transparency in how their data is used would improve their level of trust with the federal government’s online services.
  • The State Department’s diplomatic workforce is feeling overburdened, under-resourced and more likely to leave in the next few years. In a survey of more than 2,100 active-duty Foreign Service employees, the American Foreign Service Association found 98% of respondents reported reduced morale this year. About 86% of respondents said workplace changes since January have affected their ability to advance U.S. diplomatic priorities. Before the Trump administration, about 17,000 active-duty Foreign Service officers worked for the State Department. AFSA estimates that nearly a quarter of them left this year when counting layoffs, retirements and those who accepted deferred resignation offers.

The post There’s a new performance management training program for federal supervisors first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AFP via Getty Images/MANDEL NGAN

OPM encourages agencies to consider reassigning SES members

  • Federal executives may soon see even more changes coming from the Trump administration. The Office of Personnel Management is now encouraging agencies to consider possible reassignments of Senior Executive Service members. In a new memo, OPM argued that the SES has not served as a “mobile corps” of managers, and members are instead being “entrenched” at agencies. The new memo comes after OPM also advised agencies to consider lowering their staffing allocations for senior-level positions.
    (Guidance on Senior Executive Service reassignments - Office of Personnel Management)
  • More than 118,000 Defense Department employees under the Federal Wage System are finally getting their long-delayed 2024 pay raise. The Pentagon’s Wage Committee met last week for the first time this year and approved updates to roughly 1,600 wage schedules across 250 wage areas. The panel had been unable to meet since March, when Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth paused all advisory committees for a broader review. Wage grade employees haven’t received a pay increase since 2023. The approved pay raises will be retroactive, and may not show up in paychecks until January 2026.
  • The Pentagon said it’s ready to launch a new plan to spend about $1 billion on small, inexpensive drones over the next two years. A request for information the Defense Department issued to industry this week ask for input on the possibility of building 300,000 small drones for one-way attack missions. DoD wants to start testing potential systems by February as part of a series of “gauntlets.” Up to 12 vendors could get awards after the first gauntlet.
  • A bill to overhaul the federal probationary period has cleared a hurdle in the House. The Oversight and Government Reform Committee advanced the so-called EQUALS Act along party lines on Tuesday. If enacted, the bill would double the length of the probationary period from one year to two years for most new federal hires. Committee Democrats criticized the legislation, saying it could open the door to more terminations of probationary workers. The EQUALS Act was one of about a dozen federal workforce bills the Oversight committee approved for further consideration in the House.
  • Thousands of post offices across the country have closed over the past few decades, according to a recent data analysis. The startup Use Postal estimates that 8,000 post offices have closed since the 1960s. It also estimates that out of the nearly 40,000 to have existed, about 67% of them are still operational to this day. Post office closures have disproportionately impacted states like Kentucky, West Virginia and Virginia.
  • The State Department is telling employees targeted by mass layoffs this summer that their official separation date is imminent. The department’s human resources office told laid off Foreign Service employees that they will be officially separated from the agency this Friday. State Department attorneys determined that a recent stopgap spending bill passed by Congress does not require the agency to rescind any RIF notices that were sent before the government shutdown. These Foreign Service employees were originally on track to be separated from the agency on Nov. 10. But the department said it’s extending their administrative leave to address “administrative errors."
  • The General Services Administration made its 14th deal under its OneGov initiative. Through a new contract with SAP, agencies would receive up to an 80% discount off of Schedule prices for the company's database, integration, analytics and cloud software titles. GSA said this could save the government $165 million dollars over the agreement's 18-month duration, calculated against current government rates. GSA said this agreement is available to existing SAP customers for renewals, expansions or modernization projects.
    (GSA adds SAP to its OneGov program - General Services Administration)
  • The federal offices are back open and hundreds of thousands of federal workers have returned to work after the longest shutdown in history. But nothing is back to normal. Federal workers say morale and trust in leadership are at an all-time low, tensions are high between furloughed staff and those who worked through the shutdown, schedules are slipping and projects are being pushed back. More people are accelerating their retirement plans or leaving federal service altogether. But the recent shutdown has exacerbated the existing problems, and added to what federal workers described as an already extremely trying year for the federal workforce. “As if morale wasn’t already non-existent, it sure is now,” one government worker said.

The post OPM encourages agencies to consider reassigning SES members first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

U.S. and agency flags fly outside the Theodore Roosevelt Building, location of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, on Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2024, in Washington. Former President Donald Trump has plans to radically reshape the federal government if he returns to the White House, from promising to deport millions of immigrants in the U.S. illegally to firing tens of thousands of government workers. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

Thrift Savings Plan returns mostly positive in November

  • Most funds in the Thrift Savings Plan saw minimal growth in November, with 15 of 16 coming in higher than where they finished in October. But no fund saw an increase greater than 0.64% for the past 30 days. And only the S fund saw a month over month decline, dropping 0.45%. The I Fund remains the biggest winner for the year with a total increase of 28.54%, while four L Funds also produced returns of greater than 20% in 2025.
  • The Postal Service’s new delivery vehicles are rolling out on routes across the country. USPS said more than 35,000 of those vehicles are out on the road. That’s about a third of its new fleet. More than 100,000 vehicles will be deployed by 2028 and nearly half of them will be electric vehicles. Congress gave USPS $3 billion in 2022 to buy more electric vehicles than it could afford to buy on its own.
  • The Trump administration is taking down yet another government program tailored toward early-career employees and talent development in the federal workforce. The Office of Personnel Management will soon sunset the Federal Academic Alliance. This is a governmentwide program that let federal employees access advanced degree opportunities at reduced tuition costs. The agency attributed its cancellation decision to a low participation rate, as well as more internal training options becoming available to employees over time. Employees currently in the program have until Jan. 19 to enroll into programs using the benefits through the end of their current academic term. OPM will shut the program website and other assets down by Jan. 30.
    (OPM sunsets ‘Academic Alliance’ - Office of Personnel Management)
  • The Department of Health and Human Services faces a months-long backlog of reasonable accommodation requests from its employees. HHS said it will centralize the processing of reasonable accommodation requests on behalf of its component agencies. HHS said it’s taking on a backlog of more than 3,000 requests from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It’s not clear how long it will take HHS to review each individual request. But the department said it will need about six to eight months to clear the backlog. A CDC memo said telework “should not be given as an interim accommodation,” while a reasonable accommodation request is under review.
  • The Coast Guard is at risk of more cost overruns on one of its newest class of ships. That new warning comes from the Government Accountability Office, which said the service is pressing ahead with plans for its Offshore Patrol Cutter without a stable design. GAO said moving ahead with the second stage of the acquisition program too quickly could mean a repeat of some of the missteps the service suffered during the program’s first phase. In stage one, starting construction before designs were stabilized wound up leading to expensive rework.
    (Coast Guard risking cost overruns for Offshore Cutter - Government Accountability Office)
  • The Defense Department is putting more than $400 million toward immediate barracks repairs. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the department is also launching more than $800 million in critical barracks renovations. Hegseth recently stood up a “barracks task force,” which he said has completed wall-to-wall assessments of facilities across the Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space Force and the 18th Airborne Corps, with Reserve and National Guard inspections expected to wrap up by the end of January. “In our first 30 days, we've purchased new furnishings and mattresses for 81 barracks, reaching more than 15,000 service members, and we've executed $101 million of quality of life improvements since October 27 that includes new door locks in 10 barracks, affecting over 6,000 war fighters, new security systems in 13 barracks, which is peace of mind for another 1,500 plus service members. I'm getting monthly reports to confirm the work is actually getting accomplished.”
    (DoD to invest $400 million in immediate barracks repairs - Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on X)
  • The Marine Corps is encouraging qualified Marines to move into counterintelligence and human intelligence roles. The Corps’ Manpower and Reserve Affairs has identified these positions as a critical specialty. The service said the demand for Marines in counterintelligence and human intelligence roles will remain high for the foreseeable future. Officials say Marines selected for these roles will receive extensive training and have opportunities to support Joint Forces and interagency partners. Marines who make the switch could earn over $100,000 in bonuses.
  • The Defense Department wants to shake up how it works with value-added resellers. The Pentagon is considering placing a 5% cap on most fees charged by resellers starting with a specific special item number, or SIN, for IT products. A draft memo obtained by Federal News Network said this cap would only apply to IT products bought through GSA's schedule contract. The initial focus of this reseller cap would focus on SIN 33411, which is for the purchasing of new electronic equipment, including desktops, laptops and servers. DoD said it spent about $2 billion in fiscal 2024 through the GSA schedule on these technology products.

 

The post Thrift Savings Plan returns mostly positive in November first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Getty Images/iStockphoto/Nuthawut Somsuk

IG reports that USPS is slow to identify underutilized spaces

 

  • Federal agencies are trying to eliminate underutilized space in their buildings. But a watchdog report found the Postal Service generally isn’t asking those same questions. The USPS inspector general’s office found the agency hasn’t collected space utilization data for more than 60% of its properties. USPS operates more than 34,000 properties across the country. The IG’s office said that by not collecting this data, the agency missed out on an opportunity to save nearly $15 million.
    (Excess and underutilized space - US Postal Service)
  • The Trump administration is trying to ease concerns from federal managers who are worried about pushback against new employee performance standards. The Office of Personnel Management said there is an “extremely limited scope” for which managers would be personally liable when disciplining poor-performing employees. Most of the time, agencies themselves are held accountable for any performance-based actions. OPM’s clarification comes as the administration seeks to limit how many feds can be rated top performers and quickly discipline those deemed poor performers.
  • As digital surveillance of federal employees becomes more widespread, the Government Accountability Office is alerting agencies to both positive and negative impacts. GAO said, for example, that monitoring employees remotely may help improve agency operations. But at the same time, there are potential consequences of watching employees’ work that closely. Increasing digital surveillance can negatively impact employees’ mental health, as well as lead to inaccurate assessments of employee performance.
  • A federal court has indefinitely blocked the Trump executive order eliminating four small agencies. A federal judge in Rhode Island issued a permanent injunction barring the administration from taking any further action to eliminate the Institute of Museum and Library Services, the Minority Business and Development Agency, the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, and the Interagency Council on Homelessness. President Donald Trump signed an executive order in March, eliminating these agencies “to the maximum extent” possible. The judge found the decision to conduct widespread layoffs and cuts at these agencies “undermined their ability” to perform functions required by law.
  • In fiscal 2025, 317,000 employees left federal services. At the same time, agencies hired about 68,000 new employees. The Office of Personnel Management said the government exceeded the White House's goal of four reductions for every one new hire. There are now about 2.1 million federal employees. For 2026, agencies will submit annual headcount plans to OPM and OMB in the coming weeks. OPM said these plans should focus on the agency's critical mission objectives only and should be built from the bottom up to determine how many people are needed to meet their priorities.
  • The Senate breathed some life into the Technology Modernization Fund for 2026. After receiving no new funding for the last two years, the TMF could be getting a small influx of new money. The Senate is allocating $5 million for the governmentwide IT modernization account in its version of the Financial Services and General Government appropriations bill. The House version of the FSGG bill didn't include any new money for the TMF, meaning the final version would have to find a compromise between the two chambers of Congress. So far in 2025, the TMF Board has made only one new award for an agency modernization project.
    (Senate to give TMF $5M for 2026 - Senate Appropriations Committee)
  • More than two weeks after the record-long government shutdown ended, some Defense Department civilian employees say they have yet to receive the back pay they are owed. At Laughlin Air Force Base in Texas, more than 150 people in a unit of more than 400 civilians are still waiting for as much as four weeks of back pay. The Defense Department said all civilians whose updated time and attendance records have been received have been paid, and that anyone still experiencing issues should contact their Agency Customer Service Representative or supervisor. But several civilian workers told Federal News Network that going to a supervisor has not worked.
  • As the Defense Department moves to implement Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s sweeping acquisition reforms, Space Force leaders warn that the depth of workforce cuts is threatening to cripple the service’s ability to execute them. Maj. Gen. Stephen Purdy, acting assistant secretary for space acquisition at the Air Force, said that the service is “in a situation where it barely has enough acquirers to do all of the work that they have now.” The Trump administration push to reduce the size of the federal workforce has had an “outsized impact” on the Space Force. The service has lost nearly 14% of its civilian workforce, much of it coming from Space Systems Command, the Space Force’s acquisition hub.

The post IG reports that USPS is slow to identify underutilized spaces first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

Customer satisfaction with federal benefits and services sees a two-decade high

  • Customer satisfaction with benefits and services provided by the federal government is higher than it’s been in nearly two decades. That’s despite a tumultuous year where agencies have seen a major downsizing of the federal workforce. Scores are higher on average, but the latest scorecard from the American Customer Satisfaction Index does show a few agencies are seeing lower scores. The Office of Personnel Management and the Department of Homeland Security are among the agencies with lower customer experience scores.
  • More information may soon come to light on how agencies are implementing some of President Donald Trump’s executive orders. OPM said it will conduct studies to find out the latest on the administration’s return-to-office policy. It’s also going to look into agencies’ removal of diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility programs. OPM is asking all agencies to respond by the end of today with a point of contact who can provide further information for the studies.
  • A new audit found that the Defense Department is falling short in catching potential fraud, misuse and abuse of its government travel charge card program. The Pentagon’s office of inspector general said the department is not effectively using Citi’s Electronic Access System, the main tool to flag suspicious activity. Officials often could not or did not use the mandatory reports as required by regulations for oversight of the travel program due to unclear policies and inadequate training. As a result, thousands of travel card accounts were not closed or transferred when personnel left or changed units. The inspector general warned that until the Defense Travel Management Office improves the travel program controls, oversight officials will continue to miss opportunities to identify misuse or abuse within the program.
  • Operation Homefront distributed holiday meals to D.C. Guard members and their families as food-related assistance requests surge. As part of their Holiday Meals for Military program, the organization provided families with all the fixings for a traditional Thanksgiving dinner, as well as Harris Teeter gift cards so families could purchase their protein of choice. With grocery prices rising and many service members still feeling the financial strain of the recent shutdown, the organization said demand for assistance has surged. Food requests alone are up 57% this year. “Our case work is up quadruple what it was 30 days ago," Operation Homefront said.
  • A Postal Service contractor has agreed to pay more than $1 million to settle allegations that it violated the False Claims Act. The Justice Department said Sky Lease falsely reported how quickly it was moving mail from domestic, Defense and State Department facilities to other locations around the world. Half the settlement amount is for restitution to the Postal Service.
  • After reports that it was wrapping things up early, the Department of Government Efficiency said that's not the case. A DOGE spokesperson told Federal News Network that DOGE and its longer-term, tech-aligned counterpart, the U.S. DOGE Service, both remain and that the latter organization is moving ahead with a full slate of modernization projects. The spokesman also confirmed that Amy Gleason remains the acting administrator of USDS. Reuters published a story on Monday claiming that DOGE no longer exists. That’s about eight months ahead of the schedule set by President Trump.
  • OPM said about 317,000 employees have left federal service so far in 2025, going beyond the Trump administration’s workforce reduction goals. Those departures compare to just 68,000 new hires during the same timeframe. OPM Director Scott Kupor also shared insight on newly required governmentwide headcount plans, which President Trump ordered as part of an initiative to make sure four employees leave federal service for every one that joins.
  • The Trump administration is telling agencies to rethink how many senior executives they really need. Agencies have until Dec. 19 to tell the Office of Personnel Management if they want to lower, or raise, how many staffing spots they’ll allocate for senior-level positions. A new memo from OPM said this headcount review is especially important, considering the major reductions to the federal workforce that have occurred this year. That may result in a corresponding need to reduce agency spots for senior executives, according to OPM.
    (Call for agency review of executive allocations - Office of Personnel Management)

The post Customer satisfaction with federal benefits and services sees a two-decade high first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

FILE - In this Feb. 25, 2015 file photo, the Homeland Security Department headquarters in northwest Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

Trump administration finalizes updating federal employee records

  • The Trump administration said it’s finished updating federal employee records to remove some of the negative consequences of this year’s mass firing of probationary employees. Federal agencies say the personnel records have all been updated to reflect the fact that those workers were not fired for performance reasons. That step was ordered by a federal judge, who found agencies wrongly asserted that employees’ terminations were connected to their performance.
  • The Postal Service is starting fiscal 2026 with more red ink. USPS said it ended October with a $545 million net loss. That’s more than double the net loss it projected for the month. USPS ended fiscal 2025 with a $9 billion net loss. The agency is heading into its busy peak season, which is also when it brings in the most revenue.
  • Recent reporting stating that the Department of Government Efficiency is dead has sparked some pushback from the Trump administration. Rather than DOGE being fully non-existent, Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor said DOGE has simply taken on a new form. President Donald Trump’s initiative to cut the government’s size and spending may no longer have centralized leadership, but Kupor said the emphasis on efficiency remains “alive and well.”
    (Update on DOGE - Office of Personnel Management)
  • Democratic lawmakers say agencies aren’t reinstating as many federal employees as they should be. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) is leading the push for more RIF rescissions, along with several of his Democratic colleagues. They say employees who received reduction in force (RIF) notices before the government shutdown, but were on track to be officially separated from their agencies during the shutdown, should get their jobs back. This would all happen under layoff protection language in the spending bill Congress passed to end the funding lapse. Kaine was one of eight Democratic senators who broke ranks to pass the stopgap spending bill, only after Republicans agreed to include language that would protect federal employees from layoffs at least through Jan. 30, 2026.
  • A major update to one of the government’s largest data assets is on the horizon. The exact launch date for a new version of the Office of Personnel Management’s FedScope is unclear. But the agency said testing and development of the new website is underway, and a launch is “imminent.” Generally, the agency estimated that a new website for federal workforce data to replace FedScope would be published sometime “shortly after the new year.”
    (FedScope update “imminent” - Office of Personnel Management)
  • A new audit found that the Defense Department failed to properly manage its financial reporting system after retiring 10 finance and accounting systems. The Pentagon’s office of inspector general said the reporting system continued using data from 57 obsolete files which contained $4.2 trillion in balances that were not required for Treasury reporting and served no financial purpose. This happened because the Defense Finance and Accounting Service did not archive balances from retired financial management systems and did not fully migrate required information into active systems. Auditors warn that this unnecessary and unsupported data is complicating an already difficult reporting process and could hinder the Pentagon’s ability to achieve a clean audit by 2028. The inspector general issued six recommendations, including archiving unused balances and ensuring required data is properly transferred and documented.
  • President Trump is pushing a new initiative to use AI to solve engineering, energy and national security problems. An executive order the president signed yesterday launches what the White House is calling the “Genesis Mission.” The EO outlines a framework for collaboration between federal agencies, research institutions and private sector companies. The order tells the Energy Department and national labs to build a digital platform to concentrate the nation’s scientific data in one place.
  • Navy Secretary John Phelan is inviting venture capital firms and private investors to participate in an industry event introducing the Department of the Navy’s newly established Rapid Capabilities Office. The two-day event will cover the service’s most urgent operational challenges and how the new office plans to work with industry to solve those pressing issues. The first industry day, which will take place on Dec. 9, will be open to venture capital firms and technology companies. The second, classified session on Dec. 10 will welcome the investment community. The service is encouraging both existing and new industry partners to participate.

 

The post Trump administration finalizes updating federal employee records first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

776 Air Traffic controllers and technicians to get $10,000 shutdown bonuses

  • The Federal Aviation Administration is giving 776 air traffic controllers and technicians a $10,000 bonus for working during the 44-day partial government shutdown. The bonuses will be sent to those employees who maintained perfect attendance during the shutdown. Recipients will receive an automated notification this week and receive their payment no later than December 9. The FAA's decision to offer bonuses to employees follows a similar effort by the Transportation Security Administration to reward transportation security officers who also worked during the government shutdown.
  • The Agriculture Department is detailing how employees can express religion in the workplace. USDA leaders said employees are allowed to display religious items or form prayer groups at the office. Employees can also request different work schedules for religious observances, daily prayers or fasting periods. USDA will draw the line if employees start pushing unwelcome advances of discussing religion with coworkers. The new memo comes after President Trump ordered agencies to protect “religious expression” in the workplace.
  • A bipartisan group of lawmakers wants the Defense Department to overhaul how it screens service members transitioning out of the military for mental health conditions. A new bill titled the Medical Integrity in Necessary Diagnostics (MIND) for Our Veterans Act of 2025, would require DoD and the Department of Veterans Affairs to only use validated, evidence-based tools for screening PTSD, alcohol misuse and violence risk during the separation process. Lawmakers said the current health assessments lack standardized and validated mental health screening, which undermines early identification and intervention efforts. The bill also pushes the department to consider adding a substance-use screening, citing its close link to mental health challenges.
  • Two lawmakers want to fully exempt military pay from federal income tax. The Service Members Tax Relief Act seeks to eliminate federal income tax on all active-duty and reserve pay, as well as enlistment, retention, education bonuses and all special and incentive pays. The new bill goes well beyond previous tax-exemption proposals, which largely focus on exempting different types of bonuses from federal income tax. The lawmakers also introduced the Tax Cuts for Veterans Act of 2025, which would exclude all military retirement pay and veterans’ benefits from federal income taxes.
  • The Federal Communications Commission reversed cybersecurity rules for telecommunications providers that were put forward following the sweeping “Salt Typhoon” hacks. In a 2-to-1 decision, the FCC rescinded a ruling and proposed rules last January that would've required telecom operators to secure their networks under Section 105 of the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act. The commission said its previous ruling and proposed rule was based on flawed legal analysis and they proposed ineffective cybersecurity requirements. The FCC said its ruling comes after months of discussions with telecommunications providers about steps they have taken to harden their cyber defenses. Additionally, the FCC said it has taken other steps including creating a Council on National Security to improve communication with critical infrastructure sectors.
  • The Trump administration said it’s finished the process of rescinding the reductions-in-force agencies issued during the government shutdown. That’s thanks to a provision in the continuing resolution that reopened the government last month. Language in the measure required agencies to treat those RIF notices as null and void, and notify the affected employees within five days. Court filings show agencies issued RIF notices to more than 3,600 people during the shutdown.
  • The Merit Systems Protection Board is moving to a different location for its office in the national capital region. The former MSPB office in Arlington, Virginia, will be relocated to a building in downtown Washington, D.C. The move took place in mid-November for D.C.-based agency employees. MSPB said any feds with pending cases before the board don’t need to take action in response to the office move.
    (MSPB Washington Regional Office has moved - Merit Systems Protection Board)
  • The chief information officer at the IRS appears to be taking the next steps in a reorganization after losing more than 25% of its staff earlier this year. In an email sent last week, the agency directed its IT workforce to complete a “technical skills assessment.” The agency’s CIO said the assessment is “not a performance rating,” and that individual results will not affect employees’ pay or grade.

The post 776 Air Traffic controllers and technicians to get $10,000 shutdown bonuses first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Federal News Network

air-traffic-control-team-working-in-a-modern-airport-tower-at-night

Major problems found in almost all privatized military housing

  • A new survey found that nearly every service member living in privatized military housing has experienced serious problems in their home. Many of those issues go unresolved. The Change the Air Foundation recently found 97% of service members reported at least one significant problem in their military-provided home, with mold, mildew and water damage cited most frequently. Out of 3,401 respondents, three-quarters said their family’s health had been negatively impacted by their housing conditions, and nearly half said a medical provider had confirmed the connection.
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is too often missing out on its final chance to identify improper payments through contracting. A new report from the Department of Health and Human Services inspector general found CMS routinely fell short in properly closing out contracts. Auditors say this puts billions of dollars at risk of waste, fraud and abuse. While CMS concurred with the IG's recommendations, officials say the report overstated the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse during the audit's five-year review period. The IG said contract closeout has long been a challenge for CMS, dating back to reports from 2007.
  • A transgender employee with the National Guard is suing the Trump administration over its bathroom policies in federal buildings. The administration earlier this year banned transgender and intersex federal employees from using the bathroom that aligns with their gender identity. Following the ban, the employee’s supervisors told her she could no longer use the women’s restroom. The employee, who is represented by attorneys with Democracy Forward, alleged that the administration’s policy is employee discrimination in violation of Title VII.
  • More federal employees who received layoff notices are looking to get their jobs back. Recently laid-off employees at the General Services Administration are calling on the agency to rescind their reduction-in-force notices, citing language in the recently passed continuing resolution that directed agencies to rescind the RIFs. Attorneys representing them say their clients received RIF notices before the government shutdown and were officially separated from the agency during the shutdown. Attorneys say lawmakers intended to reverse all RIF actions, not just RIF notices.
  • The Department of Veterans Affairs is pulling the plug on plans to install electric vehicle chargers at its facilities. The Biden administration directed the VA to divert $77 million dollars from its construction and technology budget to build solar-powered EV charging stations. But the department said it will now put those funds toward health care construction projects.
  • Senior Executive Service members have some new training opportunities. The Office of Personnel Management has launched two new training series centered on executive development. The trainings, available governmentwide, focus on topics like constitutional governance, budget, policy and human capital management. Executives who are interested in taking the classes can register on OPM’s website. The costs for the courses range from $1,500 to $8,500. OPM is also asking agencies to announce the availability of the trainings to their employees by Dec. 19.
  • The Defense Information Systems Agency said it needs to extend a legacy contract for software asset management, largely because of staffing issues. The agency is extending the multi-million dollar contract without competition, saying the program office that was supposed to be managing a new award has been hit hard by staff cuts, deferred resignations and hiring challenges. DISA’s justification and approval document adds another year to the contract, extending it for the second time this year. The underlying award has been in place since 2019.
    (DISA extends legacy contract for software asset management - Defense Information Systems Agency)
  • The cloud security program known as FedRAMP is getting back on track after the shutdown. FedRAMP has finalized its requirements for cloud service companies wanting to participate in the phase 20x pilot. The program management office detailed seven key changes in a new blog post. These include limiting the number of pilot participants to 10 cloud servicer providers who want to achieve a moderate authorization in an expedited way. The PMO expects to name the 10 pilot companies by Jan. 9 and have them through the new process by March 31. Additionally, FedRAMP issued a new continuous monitoring playbook, consolidating nine standalone documents and eliminating about 100 pages of redundant or outdated content.
  • The Space Force is finalizing its first “objective force” blueprint, a 15-year plan that will lay out what space systems, infrastructure and manpower the service will need to counter future threats in space. Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman said “the bulk of the work is almost complete,” though stakeholders likely won’t see the final product until 2026. The goal for the document is to clearly and formally communicate the Space Force’s long-term needs to its stakeholders, including Congress, defense contractors, allies and partners.

The post Major problems found in almost all privatized military housing first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Amelia Brust/Federal News Network

VA says it’s helping a record number of homeless veterans find permanent housing

  • The Department of Veterans Affairs said it’s helping a record number of homeless veterans find permanent housing. The VA said it assisted nearly 52,000 formerly homeless veterans with housing in fiscal 2025. That’s more than any previous year tracked by the department. The VA provides subsidies to help some veterans afford rent on houses or apartments. In other cases, it helps reunite homeless veterans with family or friends.
  • A bipartisan push to extend a cybersecurity information sharing law may have a path forward in the Senate. A 10-year extension of the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 could be included in a future spending package. That’s according to Sens. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), the co-sponsors of the bill. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has been blocking their bill. But Peters and Rounds told the audience at the Aspen Institute Cyber Summit on Tuesday that the bill would have plenty of support if it can reach the Senate floor as part of a package. Congress included a short-term extension of the CISA 2015 law in the continuing resolution.
    (Aspen Institute Cyber Summit - Aspen Institute )
  • The Army has selected nine installations as potential sites for microreactor power plants under its next-generation Janus nuclear power program. Meanwhile, the Defense Innovation Unit issued a solicitation for commercial advanced nuclear technologies to support the effort. The nine sites the Army identified through comprehensive analysis include Fort Bragg in North Carolina and Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. The Army said the final number and location for these microreactors will be determined as part of the acquisition process, but the service is committed to maximizing the number of sites.
  • Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll instructed unit leaders to check in on their soldiers daily now through Jan. 15. In a memo to the force, Driscoll mandated every officer and noncommissioned officer to "deliberately" check in on every soldier to see if they need help. “The holidays can be a high-risk period for self-harm. We know it’s a problem, it happens every year, so we’ll address it head-on,” Driscoll said in the memo. The effort is based on initiatives like in the 11th Airborne Division in Alaska, where they “systemically prioritized soldier checks” to combat a high suicide rate.
  • The Office of Personnel Management has kicked off another human resources IT modernization effort. OPM is reviewing responses to an RFI and meeting with vendors for how to modernize the USA Hire platform. Agencies use USA Hire to conduct assessments of applicants for jobs. In fiscal 2024, agencies used the program to assess approximately one million applicants for over 20,000 job opportunity announcements. OPM expects agency use to continue to grow, especially from TSA and ICE as they hire more employees. OPM plans to release a draft solicitation in January and a final request for proposals in October to modernize the USA Hire platform.
  • The Office of Personnel Management is close to finalizing its effort to strip job protections from tens of thousands of federal employees. OPM’s proposed regulations for the so-called “Schedule Policy/Career” classification have been moved into the “final rule stage,” according to the White House’s regulatory agenda. Those regulations are slated for possible finalization by the end of November. OPM’s final rule will impact career employees in “policy-influencing positions,” making them at-will and easier to fire.
  • NASA is moving quickly to consolidate up to a quarter of its suburban Maryland campus. The International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers said the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is embarking on plans to close 13 buildings on its campus. The union said NASA began work closing buildings and labs in late September and that this work continued through the government shutdown. The agency is looking to reduce 25% of the campus’s real estate by 2037.
  • The General Services Administration continues to lower the price for access to AI tools. First it was $1, then it was 50 cents. Now for a quarter, agencies are able to buy artificial intelligence tools through the GSA schedule contract. Under a new deal signed with the GSA, Perplexity is offering its AI research and drafting capabilities for a mere 25 cents for the next 18 months. GSA said it structured the deal to make the software available directly from Perplexity through the GSA schedule. Previously, agencies could only access Perplexity through a reseller. This is the first OneGov agreement GSA signed that is directly with an original equipment manufacturer, or OEM.
  • Agencies are likely to see an uptick in Freedom of Information Act delays and backlogs. That’s because agency FOIA offices were furloughed through the shutdown, but the law requires agencies to count normal working days during the shutdown as part of the FOIA processing time. That’s according to new Justice Department guidance to federal FOIA offices. DOJ said there were 29 days during the shutdown that will count toward FOIA requests and administrative appeals processing.
    (Calculating FOIA response times after 2025 government shutdown - Justice Dept. Office of Information Policy)
  • The Trump administration’s cuts to the federal workforce are becoming more apparent across the country. Close to half of respondents in a nonprofit’s recent survey said they or someone they know have been personally affected by the government cuts. Six months ago, less than a third of respondents said the same. The new survey from the Partnership for Public Service also found that the impacts are disproportionately affecting younger adults.

The post VA says it’s helping a record number of homeless veterans find permanent housing first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP Photo/R.J. Rico

This photo shows one of the the Veterans Empowerment Organization apartment buildings that offer permanent housing for 41 veterans, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2023 in Atlanta. Veterans pay a small amount of rent, with funds from the Department of Veterans Affairs making up the difference. (AP Photo/R.J. Rico)

U.S. Cyber Command has a new Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer

  • U.S. Cyber Command has a new chief artificial intelligence officer. Brig. Gen. Reid Novotny, who was tapped to serve in the role, said his priority will be ensuring that AI strengthens the nation’s cyber forces and improves decision-making advantages. Novotny previously served as the National Guard Bureau’s director of intelligence and cyber effects operations and most recently as the Office of the National Cyber Director’s senior military policy adviser. Novotny steps into the role amid leadership turnover and other turmoil at the military’s top cyber enterprise.
  • A Bureau of Prisons union is suing the Trump administration to try to restore collective bargaining rights. The new legal action from the American Federation of Government Employees comes after the Bureau of Prisons director terminated the agency’s labor contract. The agreement covered about 30,000 correctional workers across the country. The lawsuit alleges that the decision to cancel the contract was a form of retaliation, and that it violated employees’ First Amendment rights.
    (Lawsuit over BOP contract cancellation - American Federation of Government Employees)
  • Federal employees who are retiring or separating from government can now access some new investment resources. The Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board has teamed up with the Securities and Exchange Commission to create a new program for retirement advice. The program includes a tutorial covering upcoming changes to the Thrift Savings Plan. It will also explain how to manage a TSP account after leaving government and go over common red flags to look for with potential fraud.
  • The Education Department is taking the next step in the Trump administration’s plan to dismantle the agency. The Education Department has already begun transferring some of its programs and employees to other federal agencies and says more of this work is under way. Education Secretary Linda McMahon says the department has detailed some of its employees to the Labor Department. Education also signed interagency agreements to transfer more of its personnel and programs to departments of State, Health and Human Services and Interior. McMahon says Education is soft-launching this reorganization and that the ultimate goal is to have Congress approve closing the department.
  • The Small Business Administration told laid-off employees they were getting their jobs back, but then walked back that promise. SBA sent reduction-in-force notices to some of its employees just before the government shutdown. The agency’s top HR official told impacted staff Monday that those RIF notices have been rescinded. But a day later, the same official said the layoffs will remain in effect. A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from carrying out layoffs that began during the shutdown. Congress also passed shutdown-ending legislation that would keep these layoffs from coming back at least through January 30.
  • House and Senate negotiators are racing to finalize the fiscal 2026 defense authorization bill. Republican Congressman Rob Wittman said that while disputes between the House and Senate Armed Services Committees have been resolved, there are still issues with other committee jurisdictions. Those committees can either decide to waive jurisdiction or refine the language in ways that ensure the “Big Four” on HASC and SASC will agree to include it in the bill. “I think that those will hopefully be done by the end of the week, and then the bill will be in its final form. It should be on the floor at the beginning of the second week of December.”
  • The Office of Management and Budget has reversed course on a decision to defund the Council on Inspectors General for Integrity and Efficiency. OMB has now released $4.3 million for CIGIE to operate through January 30th. In September, OMB decided not to apportion any new funds for CIGIE. Multiple agency offices of inspector general websites then went dark because they relied on CIGIE services. While CIGIE now has funding through the end of January, OMB is also conducting a programmatic review of the council’s activities.
  • The Trump administration’s new cybersecurity strategy is coming into focus. National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross says the new cyber strategy will have six pillars. Two of them will be focused on imposing costs on adversaries and strengthening partnerships with industry. And during a talk at the Aspen Institute’s cyber summit yesterday, Cairncross said the strategy will not be a thick, 100-page document. “It’s going to be a short statement of intent and policy, and then it will be paired very quickly with action items and deliverables under that,” Cairncross said. Cairncross didn't give a timeline for when the strategy would be out, but said his office is moving as quickly as possible.
    (Aspen Cyber Summit - Aspen Institute )

The post U.S. Cyber Command has a new Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer first appeared on Federal News Network.

© The Associated Press

FILE - The sign outside the National Security Administration (NSA) campus where U.S. Cyber Command is located in Fort Meade, Md., June 6, 2013. Tensions are soaring over Ukraine with Western officials warning about the danger of Russia launching major cyberattacks against its NATO allies. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

IRS increases annual TSP maximum contribution

  • Federal employees will be able to contribute more to their Thrift Savings Plan accounts next year. The IRS increased the maximum annual contribution limit to $24,500, which is a $1,000 increase over 2025. Additionally, employees aged 50 or older can save more money through their catch-up contributions. And if employees are aged 60 to 63, they can save even more with a higher catch up contribution of $11,250.
  • A new bill would put a hold on some 8(a) contract awards. Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) wants to stop all no-bid awards under the 8(a) Small Business Program until the Small Business Administration completes a detailed audit. The chairwoman of the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship's Stop 8(a) Contracting Fraud Act would put any new sole source 8(a) contracts on hold until the report is submitted to the committee in 2026. Ernst said the 8(a) program is broken and needs to be reformed. The bill comes after two high-profile examples of 8(a) contractors allegedly committing fraud. Agencies make more than 5,700 8(a) sole source awards a year.
  • Veterans Affairs said service members forced out of the military for refusing a COVID vaccine are once again eligible for GI Bill education benefits. More than 8,000 service members refused to comply with the Biden-era vaccine mandate and separated from the military. More than half of them received a less-than-honorable discharge. That may have made them ineligible for GI Bill benefits. The VA said nearly 900 veterans are once again eligible for those benefits under the Trump administration, and that thousands more could regain eligibility.
  • A majority of House lawmakers want a vote on a bill to end the Trump administration’s rollback of collective bargaining for federal employees. A bipartisan bloc of 218 House lawmakers signed onto a discharge petition forcing the House to vote on the Protect America’s Workforce Act. The bill would restore collective bargaining rights for tens of thousands of federal employees, if approved by Congress. Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) was the most recent lawmaker to back the bill. President Donald Trump signed an executive order in March that barred unions from bargaining on behalf of federal employees at many agencies, on the grounds that those agencies work primarily in national security.
  • The acting chief of the Federal Emergency Management Agency resigned on Monday. David Richardson stepped down from performing the duties of the FEMA administrator after six months on the job. Richardson’s tenure was marked by major staff departures and program cuts. He also faced criticism over FEMA’s response to deadly floods in Texas over the summer. FEMA Chief of Staff Karen Evans will take on the duties of FEMA administrator starting December 1st.
  • The Federal Communications Commission is moving to reverse some recently issued cybersecurity requirements. The FCC will vote on Thursday to rescind cybersecurity rules for telecommunications providers. Those rules were put in place late in the Biden administration in response to the sweeping Salt Typhoon hacks that infiltrated telecom networks across the world. U.S. officials have attributed that campaign to Chinese government-backed hackers. But the current FCC leaders said the rules were unlawful and ineffective from a cyber standpoint. They point to cyber improvements that telecom providers say they have made on a voluntary basis.
  • The Defense Department is failing to address the security risks created by the massive amount of publicly accessible digital information about its personnel and operations. The Government Accountability Office found that digital activity from personal and government devices, online communications and defense platforms generate traceable data, which puts DoD personnel, their families, operations and national security at risk. GAO said the department needs to conduct a comprehensive review of its security policies and guidance to identify gaps in how it manages risks in the digital environment.
  • The Defense Department has released a new list of critical technology areas. Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Emil Michael has reduced the number of research-and-development priorities to six areas of focus. The list includes artificial intelligence, contested logistics technologies and scaled hypersonics. “When I stepped into this role, our office had identified 14 critical technology areas; while each of these areas holds value, such a broad list dilutes focus and fails to highlight the most urgent needs of the war fighter. Fourteen priorities in truth means no priorities at all,” Emil Michael said.

The post IRS increases annual TSP maximum contribution first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Federal News Network

money

National Treasury Employees Union sues Trump administration

  • A federal union is suing the Trump administration for not handing over a list of employees that agencies might be targeting to remove their job protections. The new lawsuit from the National Treasury Employees Union alleges that the Office of Personnel Management violated the Freedom of Information Act by not providing those details. The union’s legal action comes after the Trump administration earlier this year revived an effort to make large portions of the federal workforce at-will and easier to fire.
    (Lawsuit alleging FOIA violation by OPM - National Treasury Employees Union)
  • The Department of Homeland Security is giving bonuses to Transportation Security Administration employees who worked through the partial shutdown. More than 270 Transportation Security Officers at Logan airport in Boston are among the first TSA employees to receive a bonus from DHS for working without pay during the 43-day shutdown. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem awarded these TSOs a $10,000 bonus on Saturday in appreciation for their dedication and commitment over the last seven weeks. DHS said it is paying for these bonuses using carryover funds from fiscal 2025. Noem announced the administration's plan to give these bonuses on Friday.
  • About 4,000 federal employees who were previously told they were going to be laid off should be receiving a cancellation notice by the end of the day. The spending agreement Congress passed last week gave agencies five days to rescind all reductions-in-force that were announced during the shutdown. OPM said the cancellation notices to employees need to include how much back pay the workers will receive. The employees are owed payments equal to what they would have been paid, had they not been laid off in the first place.
    (RIF actions affected by continuing appropriations - Office of Personnel Management)
  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s acquisition system reforms could meaningfully reshape how the Pentagon does business, only if the department can avoid the mistakes of the past. Acquisition experts say the reforms could help to break down entrenched silos across the department’s acquisition enterprise and drive greater coordination and integration. But the success of Hegseth’s reforms will hinge on whether the department can change its culture and equip the workforce with the skills needed to operate differently. Otherwise, the system can quickly revert to its old ways. And whether the department has the workforce to support such a sweeping overhaul is unclear. DoD has already lost 5% to 8% of its civilian workforce since the start of the Trump administration.
  • SAIC continues its bloodletting, just three weeks after moving on from its CEO. The federal contractor parted ways with three more executives and consolidated business groups. The company said Josh Jackson, its executive vice president for the Army, David Ray, its space and intelligence EVP, and chief innovation officer Lauren Knausenberger will pursue other opportunities outside of the company. Additionally, SAIC will merge its Army and Navy business groups into one and bring its Air Force and Combatant Commands, and the Space and Intelligence business groups together to become the Air Force, Space and Intelligence Business Group.
  • Agencies are being reminded to patch unsecure devices that are being targeted by hackers. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said some federal agencies haven’t fully patched vulnerable Cisco devices. CISA directed agencies to update that software back in a September emergency directive. But in new guidance last week, CISA said it’s aware of multiple organizations that haven’t updated to the minimum software version. The cyber agency warned that the vulnerable Cisco device software poses a significant risk to all organizations.
    (Updated implementation guidance for emergency directive on Cisco - Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency)
  • The Department of Homeland Security is facing calls to release an unclassified report on security flaws in U.S. telecommunications networks. Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) wrote Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, urging them to publish the report from 2022. They say not publishing it undermines the public debate over how to best secure U.S. telecom networks. The lawmakers point to the recent "Salt Typhoon" campaign, in which suspected China-backed hackers successfully broke into American telecom systems and devices.
    (Wyden, Warner telecoms security letter - Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) )
  • The Department of the Navy’s new Innovation Adoption Kit lays out a unified framework for evaluating, implementing and scaling innovative technologies across the naval enterprise. The memo is designed to help commanders and program managers bridge the gap between emerging commercial solutions and mission-ready capabilities. It offers practical methods to accelerate the transition from pilot to program of record and tailor agile approaches to fit within the Navy’s operational and acquisition constraints. Officials say these tactics can be applied across a wide range of missions.

The post National Treasury Employees Union sues Trump administration first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AFP via Getty Images/MANDEL NGAN

Lawmakers working to save Navy Reserve Center system

  • A bipartisan group of lawmakers is trying to save the Navy Reserve Center system. They say a provision in the Senate version of the fiscal 2026 defense policy bill would shutter 107 commands that provide administrative support and serve as home for approximately 48,000 Navy reservists across the country. In a letter to the House and Senate Armed Services committees, the lawmakers said if the Navy has issues with the current force structure, the service should identify those issues, present them to Congress along with their plans to fix them.
  • One of the longest serving federal agency CIOs has found a new home. Former Agriculture Department chief information officer Gary Washington has left government, but is remaining a part of the federal community. Washington, who served as USDA's CIO for more than seven years before leaving at the end of October, is the new chief strategy officer for the industry group ACT-IAC. Washington has been an active member of ACT-IAC as a federal employee, serving as the president of the American Council for Technology and is a 2006 graduate of the Industry Advisory Council Partners Program. Washington spent more than 25 years in government, also working at OMB, the FDA and Treasury during his career.
  • The American Postal Workers Union is under new leadership. Jonathan Smith who previously led union members in the New York metro area has been sworn in as APWU’s new national president. Smith ran on a platform focused on fighting back against privatizing, closing or consolidating Postal Service operations. He’s taking over for Mark Dimondstein who led the union for 12 years.
  • Paychecks for Defense Department civilians who haven’t been paid in over a month are slated to be processed on Sunday, while servicemembers are expected to get paid on time. President Trump signed a bill late Wednesday to fund the government through January 30, clearing the way for tens of thousands of Defense Department civilians to return to work. A senior administration official said that checks are scheduled to go out on Sunday, but DoD civilians are being told to expect payment sometime between Monday and mid-week. Agencies have also been told to “take all necessary steps to ensure offices open in a prompt manner on November 13.”
  • Nine Democratic lawmakers of Maryland are asking acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy about the future of NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center. In a letter to Duffy, the legislators asked for details about NASA's plans to consolidate buildings on Goddard's campus in Greenbelt, Maryland. They also are concerned about NASA moving specific technological capabilities away from Goddard. The House and Senate members say actions taken over the last nine months with thousands of civil servants and contractors no longer working at the center threaten the organization's ability to meet its science and exploration missions. The lawmakers want answers to their questions by November 17.
  • Many federal employees are asking when they’ll receive their paychecks, now that the shutdown is over. Federal HR and payroll offices are working to process back pay as soon as possible, but when those checks actually hit employees’ bank accounts will depend on the agency. Feds from the General Services Administration and the Office of Personnel Management will be among the first to receive their retroactive paychecks on Saturday. Others won’t see their checks until next Wednesday, including feds at departments of Agriculture and Treasury, as well as Homeland Security. Both furloughed and excepted federal employees are guaranteed back pay, according to the spending agreement Congress passed on Wednesday.
  • Two non-profits are joining together to launch a new fellowship program, geared toward enhancing public service. The new opportunity from the National Academy of Public Administration and the Bridge Alliance will focus on public service leadership and civil service reforms. The two organizations have put out a request for proposals from the public this week. The end result of the initiative is expected to be a series of action plans for improvements across government.
    (Fellows for democracy and public service initiative - National Academy of Public Administration, Bridge Alliance)
  • The Trump administration is staffing up immigration enforcement, but not the courts that hear these cases. The One Big, Beautiful Bill Act passed this summer gave the Department of Homeland Security billions of dollars to hire 10,000 new Immigration and Enforcement agents, as well as more Customs and Border Protection staff. The legislation also authorizes the Justice Department to hire about 100 immigration judges. But the Trump administration fired nearly that many earlier this year. Recently terminated immigration judges say the courts are severely understaffed and unable to chip away at a backlog of more than three million cases.

The post Lawmakers working to save Navy Reserve Center system first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Getty Images/iStockphoto/Oleksii Liskonih

United States Navy flag textile cloth fabric waving on the top sunrise mist fog

Federal agencies act fast to reopen the government

  • With the shutdown now officially over, the White House isn't waiting to get things back up and running. The Office of Management and Budget issued a memorandum instructing federal employees who had been furloughed to return to work today, and to take all necessary steps to ensure that offices open in a prompt and orderly manner. The Government Publishing Office even took to X to direct all teammates to report to their duty stations and contact supervisors with questions.
  • There’s a new leader in charge at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. Army Lt. Gen. Michele Bredenkamp is the ninth director to lead NGA. She became director on November 5. Bredenkamp replaces outgoing NGA Director Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth. Bredenkamp has extensive experience as an intelligence officer. She most recently served as the advisor for military affairs for the director of national intelligence. Bredenkamp takes over at NGA as it manages an ever increasing deluge of geospatial intelligence data. The agency in recent years has particularly focused on the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning to make use of that data.
  • A watchdog for the Social Security Administration is warning the public of a new and widespread scam. Recent phishing messages falsely claim to be from SSA’s inspector general office. The messages state that there are “account issues detected” and claim that Social Security numbers will be suspended due to “criminal activities." The IG office said these messages are entirely false. Social Security is warning individuals not to respond if they get this type of message and that the IG office will never send out this type of letter.
    (Social Security Inspector General issues scam alert - Social Security Administration, Office of Inspector General)
  • Furloughed federal employees are coming back to work now that the longest government shutdown is over. At least 670,000 federal employees have been furloughed during the shutdown. The spending deal the House passed Wednesday evening includes back pay for furloughed workers and those who kept working without pay during the shutdown. The deal reverses layoffs for about 4,000 federal employees and prevents further layoffs through the end of January. The IRS is in the process of rescinding layoff notices sent mostly to its human resources and IT staff, according to two agency employees who spoke to Federal News Network.
  • Severance payments to former federal employees can resume now that the shutdown is over. The Office of Personnel Management directed agencies to put these severance payments on hold during the lapse in congressional funds. The severance payment freeze had a major impact on former employees at the Department of Health and Human Services. HHS laid off 10,000 employees in April who officially separated from the agency in July.
  • Over 30,000 feds could end up with much higher health premiums next year, if they choose to do nothing during Open Season. Participants whose plans are discontinued in the Federal Employees Health Benefits program get automatically enrolled into the lowest-cost nationwide plan the following year, usually. But for 2026, the Office of Personnel Management has instead chosen a different, higher-cost health plan as the auto-enrollment selection. Anyone who doesn’t choose a different plan during Open Season and who would otherwise lose coverage will be auto-enrolled into that higher cost plan. OPM’s decision mainly impacts those previously enrolled in health plans from the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC).
  • The founder and executive chairman of Govini, a provider of acquisition data and software to the government, has been arrested and charged with four felonies, including multiple counts of unlawful contact with a minor. Eric Gillespie allegedly used an online chat platform to attempt to solicit sexual contact with a pre-teenage girl. The company said in a statement it had terminated Gillespie from its board of directors. The Pennsylvania’s Attorneys General Office said at arraignment, a magisterial district judge denied Gillespie bail, citing flight risk and public safety concerns. Govini had 26 contracts with the government in fiscal 2025 worth about $52 million, the vast majority of which were with DoD, according to the USASpending.gov platform.
  • The chairwoman of the Senate Small Business Committee wants more answers about the latest scandal involving the 8(a) program. Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) is expecting answers from the Small Business Administration and its inspector general today about alleged fraud by 8(a) firm ATI Government Solutions. Ernst wrote separate letters to SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler and the agency's acting IG Sheldon Shoemaker on October 30th soon after the news broke about an ATI executive admitting that the company acts as a pass-through on its 8(a) contracts. She asked a series of questions about ATI, it's parent company Susanville Indian Rancheria tribe as well as any disciplinary or corrective actions to 8(a) contractors SBA has taken in the last five years.
    (Ernst is waiting on answers from SBA, its IG about 8(a) program concerns - Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurialship Committee)
  • The leader of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s post-quantum cryptography efforts has left for a job in industry. Garfield Jones has stepped down as CISA’s associate chief for strategic technology. Jones is now serving as senior vice president of research and technology strategy at quantum security company QuSecure. Before CISA, Jones served at the Office of Management and Budget, the Office of National Cyber Director, and various other federal agencies. His departure continues is just the latest in a string of senior executives to leave CISA this year amid downsizing at the agency.

The post Federal agencies act fast to reopen the government first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

The Capitol is seen during rainy weather just days before federal money runs out which could trigger a government shutdown, in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

It’s officially Open Season for Federal Employees Health Benefits enrollees

  • Open Season has officially begun. Enrollees in the Federal Employees Health Benefits program have between now and Dec. 8 to make changes to their health plan options. The open enrollment period also applies for Postal Service employees, as well as those with dental and vision coverage. For plan year 2026, federal employees’ health insurance premiums are rising by an average of 12%.
    (Open Season starts - Office of Personnel Management)
  • The Office of Personnel Management is facing a major flood of employees’ retirement applications. More than 20,000 new retirement cases entered OPM’s system in the month of October alone. That’s on top of the tens of thousands of cases OPM already has in its inventory. The large caseload is slowing down OPM’s processing speed as well. In October, it took an average of 79 days to move a retirement package from start to finish. On top of that, OPM is expecting another big wave of retirements to hit at the end of the calendar year.
    (Retirement statistics for October 2025 - Office of Personnel Management)
  • The Trump administration violated Education Department employees' First Amendment rights when it changed their out of office messages to add partisan or political statements when the partial shutdown began. A U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. ruled Friday in favor of the American Federation of Government Employees' lawsuit. The court provided declaratory and permanent injunctive relief. The court said the White House must immediately remove partisan messaging from the out-of-office messages associated with only AFGE members’ e-mail accounts. If that isn't possible, the court said the department must remove such messaging from all affected employees’ e-mail accounts.
  • The Treasury Department joins a growing set of agencies investigating the 8(a) program. The Treasury Department is joining the Small Business Administration in analyzing contracts under the 8(a) program for possible fraud. Treasury said it kicked off a comprehensive audit of all of its 8(a) contracts and task orders, totaling approximately $9 billion. The agency decided to take a deeper dive into its participation in the 8(a) program after suspending one of its biggest small business contractors, ATI Government Solutions, following allegations of fraud involving more than $253 million in previously issued contract awards. As part of the investigation, acquisition professionals are required to review detailed staffing plans and monthly workforce performance reports for all service contracts.
  • There may finally be an end in sight to the now longest partial government shutdown ever. A group of moderate Democrats have a tentative deal to reopen the government if Republicans promise to hold a vote on expiring health care subsidies by December. The bill would pass three annual spending bills, reverse any federal employee layoffs that happened during the shutdown and extend the rest of government funding until Jan. 30. Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) and Angus King (I-Maine) agreed to a bill that would pass three annual spending bills, reverse any federal employee layoffs that happened during the shutdown and extend the rest of government funding until Jan. 30. Republicans had not yet said whether they support the deal, and it's unclear whether there would be enough Democrats to support it as well.
  • The Congressional Budget Office is putting in place cybersecurity improvements after a recent hack. The CBO confirmed last week it is investigating a security incident. The Washington Post reported that a foreign actor was behind the data breach. CBO didn’t confirm who it believes is behind the hack. But the congressional agency said it has implemented additional monitoring and new security controls to further protect the agency’s systems.
  • The Coast Guard has beat its recruiting goals for the second year in a row. It added more than 5,200 active-duty enlisted service members in fiscal 2025, well above its goal of 4,300. That’s also the highest accession number for the Coast Guard since 1991. The Coast Guard Reserve also beat its annual goal by adding 777 new reservists last year. The latest numbers mark a continued turning point for the Coast Guard, which had been in the midst of a recruiting crisis just a few years ago.
  • The Pentagon is restructuring the chain of command within its acquisition system. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Friday that the Defense Department is replacing the program executive offices that have long formed the backbone of the DoD's procurement system with “portfolio acquisition executives." The PAEs will be more empowered to make decisions and more directly accountable for performance. The changes are part of a wide-ranging overhaul of DoD acquisition rules, regulations and culture. Hegseth said these updates are part of what he framed as a war on Pentagon bureaucracy amid a need to accelerate the procurement system, increase competition, use commercial technology as DoD’s default option and eliminate excessive regulations.

The post It’s officially Open Season for Federal Employees Health Benefits enrollees first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Valeriya Potapova

Health insurance application form with banknote and stethoscope concept for life planning

Treasury Department explores alternatives to suspended Direct File

  • The Treasury Department is officially suspending Direct File, a free, online tax filing platform the IRS launched last year. The department said it’s exploring alternatives. That includes strengthening its partnership with tax preparation companies through its Free File program. Direct File expanded to 25 states during this year’s filing season and saw higher favorability scores. But Treasury said the program cost too much and didn’t see enough usage to keep scaling it up. It said the IRS spent more than $40 million on Direct File this year. That breaks down to nearly $140 for every return submitted using Direct File.
  • Senate Democrats are trying to stop reductions-in-force during the government shutdown once and for all. A new bill called the SAFE Act would undo all RIF-related actions that have happened since the shutdown began. The legislation would also bar additional RIFs from occurring during any future lapse in appropriations. The Democrats’ bill comes after more than 4,000 RIF notices went out to federal employees last month. Almost all of those layoffs are currently on hold due to a court order.
  • More than 35,000 people applied to work at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services since Sept. 30 under its Homeland Defender Campaign. USCIS said it has made hundreds of job offers and will begin onboarding the first Homeland Defenders soon. The agency said among those receiving offers are former law enforcement personnel and veterans with experience serving and protecting communities and the homeland. USCIS Homeland Defenders may be eligible for signing bonuses up to $50,000, student loan repayment, flexible duty locations and remote work options. USCIS is using an expedited hiring process for entry-level positions that do not require a college degree.
    (USCIS receives 50,000 applicants for Homeland Defenders jobs - U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services)
  • Federal employees are experiencing disruptions in the workplace at a rate far higher than the national average. Close to one-third of federal employees say their workplace has been disrupted “to a very large extent.” That’s nearly triple the 10% of U.S. employees who say the same, according to the latest data from Gallup. The frequent disruptions in the workplace are leading to increases in stress and loneliness among federal employees, as well as a decline in employee engagement and satisfaction.
  • Michael Payne, President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Pentagon’s Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation office, told lawmakers he would work to restore the office’s credibility by refocusing on CAPE’s statutory mission as an independent advisory rather than an advocacy organization. The office has faced scrutiny for operating beyond its statutory responsibilities. House lawmakers previously considered shutting down the office altogether. While the 2024 defense policy bill mandated the department to overhaul how the office operates, it has yet to implement those changes. Payne also said the office has been pushing some of its cost-estimation work to the military services due to its strained workforce.
  • Feds anticipate more co-workers will call out sick as the shutdown drags on. A Federal News Network “pulse poll” taken over a 36-hour period earlier this week shows two-thirds of the 730 respondents say they believe more of their co-workers will call out sick more often if the lapse in appropriations continues deeper into November. The concept of a "sick-out" has been used by air traffic controllers and transportation security officers, but it hasn't been widespread among other agencies. More than 43% of the respondents to the survey say they haven't noticed more employees taking sick leave since the shutdown began. A majority of the respondents, however, did say as the shutdown continues, they are very or somewhat concerned about their personal finances.
  • The Marine Corps has rolled out its enlistment bonuses for fiscal 2026, offering the biggest payout to recruits who sign up for specialized roles in cyber and electronics maintenance. The incentives aren't limited to high-demand technical roles; the service is also offering shipping bonuses to recruits in any specialty who agree to leave for boot camp on the service’s schedule. Recruits who enter the electronics maintenance and cyber and cryptologic operations career fields could earn up to $15,000. Recruits across dozens of military specialties can also qualify for a $5,000 or $10,000 shipping bonus. The service is also offering $7,000 or $15,000 “targeted investment” bonuses for applicants willing to extend their enlistment contracts by one or two years.
  • Federal employee unions are suing the Trump administration for including a new essay question on thousands of federal job applications. One of several new essay questions on job applications asks candidates how they would “advance the President’s executive orders and policy priorities,” and to name one or two executive orders significant to them. The unions claim the question allows the administration to weed out applicants who aren’t loyal to President Donald Trump’s policies. Guidance from the Office of Personnel Management states candidates aren’t required to respond to the essay question and that responses can’t be treated as a political litmus test. But candidates are still encouraged to answer the question.

The post Treasury Department explores alternatives to suspended Direct File first appeared on Federal News Network.

© AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

FILE - A portion of the 1040 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return form is shown July 24, 2018, in New York. The IRS has been tasked with looking into how to create a government-operated electronic free-file tax return system for all. Congress has directed the IRS to report in on how such a system might work. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

A new bill would require agencies to disclose when AI replaces a federal job

  • Agencies would be required to disclose when artificial intelligence replaces a federal job under a bipartisan bill in the Senate. Sens. Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) announced the AI-Related Job Impacts Clarity Act yesterday. The bill would require major companies and agencies to report AI-related job effects, including layoffs and job displacement, to the Labor Department. Labor would also be required to compile data on AI-related job effects and publish a report to Congress and the public. The legislation comes amid rising concerns about AI’s impact on the job market.
  • The Senate Armed Services Committee is pressing Michael Borders, who was tapped to be assistant secretary of the Air Force for energy. Borders pledged to review all contracts with privatized housing companies, ensure they meet high performance standards, and enable better installation and department-level oversight of privatized housing. He said he’ll push to fill vacancies in military installation housing offices under direct-hire authority and integrate housing oversight into base commander evaluations. He called recent reforms under the 2020 defense policy bill a “crucial first step,” but said more data-driven evaluation to assess the effectiveness of these reforms is needed.
  • A federal employee union is challenging the VA's rollback of collective bargaining rights. A new lawsuit from the American Federation of Government Employees’ National VA Council said the VA is selectively eliminating collective bargaining agreements for some unions but not others. President Donald Trump signed an executive order in March to end collective bargaining at agencies involved in national security. Several other lawsuits challenging the executive order, saying the administration’s implementation takes an overly broad view of national security.
  • The shutdown has officially set the record as the longest-ever funding lapse, and some are now turning the conversation to the need for bigger reforms. Missed paychecks, service delays and staffing challenges are being felt across the country right now. But even more harms from the shutdown will happen in the long-haul, according to Partnership for Public Service President and CEO Max Stier. “Our future capacity is going to be diminished substantially,” Stier told reporters during a press briefing. “You’re going to see that across the board, whether you talk about air traffic controllers or VA doctors or food inspectors.” Many “good government” organizations are urging bigger picture reforms, like immediate pay for feds in a shutdown and major updates to the government’s budget process.
  • Federal employees working in grants management, now is your turn to weigh in on the challenges and opportunities impacting you and your agency. The annual Grants Management Survey is open with a focus on everything from the grants lifecycle to systems and data to training. The survey is overseen by the George Washington University’s Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration, the National Grants Management Association and REI Systems. Last year, more than 15,000 people took this survey. Survey results will be presented in February at the Grants Management Breakfast Forum.
  • Many of the Trump administration’s shutdown layoffs are on hold, but agencies say not all of them. Agencies told a federal judge in San Francisco that about 10% of the approximately 4,000 reduction-in-force notices that government employees got last month do not fall under a preliminary injunction she ordered last month. The departments of Commerce and Health and Human Service, as well as the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecurity agency, told the court that some of their layoff notices can proceed. The judge’s order prohibits agencies from issuing any RIF notices “during and because of the federal government shutdown,” to employees in any program, project or activity that includes any bargaining unit or member represented by eight unions who are leading the lawsuit.
  • A list of five German food aid organizations briefly appeared on the “shutdown guidance” webpage of U.S. Army Garrison Bavaria before being taken down Wednesday, shortly after it sparked outrage online. The page, which lists various resources for service members and their families during the government shutdown, drew criticism online that the Army was directing U.S. service members to German food banks. The page, which lists various resources for service members and their families during the government shutdown, included a section titled “Running list of German support organizations for your kit bags.” The list included resources such as an organization that "distributes food to people in poverty" and the Too Good To Go app, which sells food at a reduced price. Several news outlets reported that the list was created weeks earlier to assist German civilian employees and that U.S. personnel have access to their own resources.
  • The Department of Veterans Affairs has set its sights on a new contract writing system. VA is on track to follow in the footsteps of the Army, the Navy, GSA and several other agencies to try to modernize their contract writing systems. In a new request for information, VA is asking for industry feedback on a commercial software-as-a-service offering that will enhance its procurement operations and potentially reduce reliance on legacy platforms. VA outlines 10 requirements it's looking for in a new system, including integration with existing governmentwide acquisition platforms, automated workflows and an assortment of AI-assisted capabilities. Responses to the RFI are due by Nov. 17.
  • Agencies have less than two weeks to set up new strategic hiring committees. Those committees should be composed of political appointees, who will have to approve nearly all new federal hires, the Trump administration said in a new memo. Agencies will then have until Dec. 1 to create annual staffing plans, which must be shared with the Office of Personnel Management and the Office of Management and Budget. The upcoming deadlines stem from President Trump’s executive order last month, which altered the expectations for federal hiring going forward.
    (Guidance on “ensuring continued accountability in federal hiring” - Office of Personnel Management and Office of Management and Budget)

The post A new bill would require agencies to disclose when AI replaces a federal job first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Federal News Network

Republican lawmaker raises concerns about funding FEHB program

  • As Open Season approaches, one Republican is raising concerns about funding for the Federal Employees Health Benefits program. Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) is questioning the Office of Personnel Management on how it plans to avoid exhausting the FEHB’s trust fund. He said it’s a concern, since there aren’t any incoming contributions to the trust fund under the government shutdown. In response to Lankford’s questions, OPM said that if needed, it would be able to let health carriers request additional funding from contingency reserves. But for the time being, OPM said all FEHB plans have sufficient funds to pay claims.
    (Letter to OPM on FEHB program under shutdown - Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.))
  • The Senate has confirmed Lieutenant General Christopher Eubank to lead Army Cyber Command. He will take over the command from Lieutenant General Maria Barrett, who has served in the role since 2022. Eubank is currently serving as special assistant to the commander of Army Space and Missile Defense Command and has previously led the Army’s Network Enterprise Technology Command. The Army has not announced when Eubank will officially assume command.
  • The Senior Executives Association is lowering its membership fees across the board in an effort to attract and retain its federal leaders. SEA said active members, including those in the SES, at the GS15 and 14 levels will pay $20 less next year to renew their status at $159. Retired members of the Senior Executive Service will see a rate of $99, down from $103. Meanwhile rising leaders for those at the GS 12 or 13 levels will pay $99. SEA said this update underscores its dedication to providing exceptional value, accessibility and connectivity for our members.
  • The Office of Personnel Management is hinting at some upcoming tech hiring initiatives. The specific timeline for launching the OPM initiatives is unclear, and many details of the tech hiring efforts are still in the works. But agencies should be focused on tech recruitment, particularly in artificial intelligence, according to OPM Director Scott Kupor. “I think the thing that government has to do is not be the last dinosaur. If we do that, there’s no amount of organizational structure or marketing or anything else that’s going to save us, we have to be willing to embrace these things,” Kupor said at a NAPA conference on Monday.
  • The White House said it’s prepared to hold talks with congressional Democrats over back pay for furloughed federal employees as part of negotiations to end the government shutdown. Furloughed workers received back pay at the end of every shutdown and President Donald Trump signed legislation in his first term guaranteeing back pay. But the Office of Management and Budget has floated the possibility that furloughed workers are not automatically entitled to back pay. A recent OMB memo suggests lawmakers would have to include language in a stopgap spending bill or comprehensive spending deal in order for furloughed federal employees to receive back pay.
  • Pentagon leaders are under fire for overhauling part of the department’s policy office without telling Congress. The Senate Armed Services Committee learned about the changes just two days before Tuesday's confirmation hearing for Austin Dahmer, who was nominated to serve as assistant secretary of defense for strategy, plans and capabilities. Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) said that according to a memo provided to the committee, the changes took effect Oct. 8. “We were informed this weekend that these changes had been made, and they were designed to, quote, realign certain policy activities and rebrand parts of the organization to better reflect the priorities of the Trump administration," Reed said.
  • The Department of Homeland Security is moving up the effective date of new rules for protecting federal property to today, Nov. 5. The rules had been set to go into effect on Jan. 1. They lay out processes for protecting federal property after that mission transferred to DHS from the General Services Administration. DHS said there’s an immediate need to institute the rule due to what it called a substantial increase in civil unrest near federal buildings in recent months.
  • The government shutdown is leading to staffing shortages at some agencies. Two Social Security Administration offices were closed on Monday due to staffing shortages. But an agency spokesperson said one of the offices reopened for normal operations on Tuesday. SSA has more than 1,200 offices across the country. Meanwhile, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warns more flight cancellations and delays are possible if air traffic controllers miss a second full paycheck next week. “You will see mass chaos. You will see mass flight delays. You'll see mass cancelations, and you may see us close certain parts of the airspace because we just cannot manage it because we don't have the air traffic controllers,” he said.
  • A bill to reform the Federal Emergency Management Agency needs support from both the Senate and the White House. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Sam Graves (R-M.O.) is bullish that his Fixing Emergency Management Act will quickly pick up support in the House and Senate. The bipartisan bill passed out of committee in September. And Graves is optimistic President Trump will support it as well. But the FEMA Act would overhaul FEMA processes and move it out from under the Department of Homeland Security. Trump has set up a FEMA Review Council to study the issue, and it’s not clear whether the council’s recommendations will line up with Graves’ bill.

The post Republican lawmaker raises concerns about funding FEHB program first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Alexander Kharchenko

Health Care concept. Sign as crossword blocks on a white background
❌
❌