WASHINGTON — After President Donald Trump announced incentives for federal employees to resign Tuesday, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) sent another email Thursday answering questions. The ...
Some unknown rogue exploited a vulnerability in the federal government’s broadcast system to e a crude message to all 13,000 employees of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric […] ...
The Trump administration's Office of Personnel Management sent a memo of frequently asked questions encouraging civil servants to go on vacation and even take a second job, which in some instances is ...
At least two offices in the Department of Homeland Security were told Thursday that they are not allowed to take a deferred ...
Reply All Turns out that putting a bunch of teenagers in charge of the federal government's HR agency wasn't the smartest ...
More and more questions are being raised about the legality of the Trump administration's offer to nearly all federal workers to resign now and keep their pay through Sept. 30.
It doesn’t get clearer than this: return to the office or be fired. Trump gave federal workers a stark warning Wednesday.
When federal workers received a memo from the U.S. government’s human resources agency this week offering the chance to resign with eight months’ pay, some thought it might be spam. “Once you ...
The agency says it will offer “relocation packages” to remote OPM employees located more than 50 miles from their assigned duty station.
Most survey respondents who say they'll take OPM's deal already had plans to retire from federal service soon, or leave for a job outside government.
The top lawyer at the Office of Personnel Management is a self-described “raging misogynist” who for years has talked up a ...
An interdepartmental memo from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) instructs agency heads to immediately comply with the ...