Federal retirement numbers continue to rise
- Federal retirement numbers at the Office of Personnel Management are continuing to skyrocket. In November, OPM took in another 23,000 applications from retiring employees. That’s on top of more than 20,000 that entered OPM’s systems in October. Together, those numbers mean retirement applications are triple the volume they were at this time last year. In total, OPM’s retirement inventory is now closing in on 50,000 applications that are still awaiting finalization. (November 2025 retirement processing report - Office of Personnel Management)
- A group of lawmakers found the Pentagon has diverted at least $2 billion intended for barracks repairs, school upgrades and training programs to support the southern border mission. The department shifted approximately $1.3 billion to pay for the deployment of troops to the border. About $420 million was moved to assist with immigration detention operations and over $40 million was used to pay for military deportation flights. The diverted funds were meant to support projects including elementary schools at Fort Knox, an ambulatory care center and dental clinic, a jet-training facility in Mississippi and Marine barracks in Japan. DoD also sent the 10th Mountain Division, which was trained to conduct large-scale combat operations, to the border. (DoD diverts over $2 billion to fund border mission, lawmakers say - Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.))
- Next week marks the busiest week of the year for the Postal Service. USPS said it’s prepared to handle millions packages and pieces of mail during its peak season. But it’s also setting deadlines to ensure delivery before Christmas. USPS generally recommends sending first-class mail and Ground Advantage packages no later than Dec. 17 to ensure delivery by Dec. 25. USPS said customers should also allow addition time for shipping to or from Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and U.S Territories. (The Postal Service Is ready for the busiest week of 2025 - U.S. Postal Service)
- The Defense Department is accelerating its preparation for post-quantum cryptography. The Pentagon's CIO is preparing a new requirement for all military services and defense agencies to identify, inventory and report all cryptography used in any type of system. But before the CIO releases that policy, Katie Arrington, who is performing the duties of the DoD CIO, said in a new memo that each component must identify key personnel who will be responsible for migration to PQC and associated coordination. These leads will oversee the creation and maintenance of the system inventory, as well as several other responsibilities including PQC acquisition requirements within the component, quantum-attack risk management plans and the tracking of all tests, evaluation and PQC readiness efforts relevant to the component's systems.(DoD CIO tells services, agencies how to get ready for post-quantum cryptography - Defense Department)
- Tenable became the third contractor to sign a OneGov agreement with the General Services Administration this month. Under the deal announced yesterday, Tenable will offer its cloud security enterprise solution to agencies at a 65% discount off its list price on the GSA schedule. The prices are good through March 2027, but agencies would see 3% annual increase in their prices on multiple-year task orders. GSA also signed OneGov deals with Palo Alto Networks and SAP in December. In all, 17 vendors now have OneGov deals. (Tenable becomes third vendor to sign OneGov deal this month - General Services Administration)
- A bill to restore collective bargaining for federal employees has cleared the House. All House Democrats, along with 20 Republicans, voted in favor of the Protect America’s Workforce Act, resulting in a vote of 231-195 to pass the legislation. If enacted, the bill would nullify President Donald Trump’s executive orders to cancel collective bargaining agreements at most agencies. Federal unions are now urging the Senate to take up the companion bill.(House passes bill to restore collective bargaining for federal employees - Federal News Network)
- Service members will see a 4.2% average increase in their basic allowance for housing in 2026. But the actual increases military households will receive will vary depending on where they are stationed and their pay grades. The calculation of the allowance is built to cover approximately 95% of average costs for off-base housing and utilities, leaving a roughly 5% out-of-pocket expense for service members. In 2026, these amounts range from $93 to $212. The new housing allowance rates will take effect Jan. 1, 2026. The department estimates it will pay $29.9 billion in housing allowances to approximately one million service members.(Service members will receive a 4.2% boost in housing allowance in 2026 - Federal News Network)
- Hundreds of federal office space leases were terminated this year, but still far from targets set by the Department of Government Efficiency. GSA carried out 260 lease terminations, saving about $112 million in annual costs. That’s about 30% of the approximately 900 lease terminations it sent to landlords earlier this year. GSA began its mass termination of governmentwide leases in the early days of the Trump administration. But by March, the agency began walking back hundreds of them. Former DOGE leader Elon Musk said in a recent interview that DOGE’s cost-cutting efforts were “somewhat successful.”(GSA terminated hundreds of federal office space leases, but far less than DOGE targets - Federal News Network)
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