News

Sequestration cuts hurt DoD ability to provide budgetary readiness statement, survey says

Across-the-board sequestration cuts have hurt Defense Department's ability to provide congressionally required audit-readiness of the agency's budgetary resources for fiscal 2014, a June survey (.pdf) conducted by American Society of Military Comptrollers and Grant Thornton says.

Spotlight: AARP names NIH best place to work for people over 50

The National Institutes of Health has been selected as the best employer for workers over 50 by the AARP, the organization announced June 17.

Feds should have more discretion but be accountable for results, panelists tell House Oversight

Government employees should have more discretion to solve problems and not just perform set actions, Stephen Goldsmith, a professor of government at Harvard University, told the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee June 18.

VA appeals judge calls for review of disability claim appeals process

Congress should establish a commission to evaluate the multi-step process for appealing a disability claim against the time it takes the system to reach a verdict, Chief Judge U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims Bruce Kasold told the House Veterans' Affairs subcommittee on disability assistance and memorial affairs in a June 18 hearing.

Senate subcommittee marks up $158.8 billion VA and military construction spending bill

The Senate Appropriations Military Construction and Veterans Affairs subcommittee marked up a $158.8 billion fiscal 2014 military construction and VA bill June 18 that provides $74.4 billion in discretionary funding and $84.5 billion in mandatory funding. Discretionary funding in the bill is $2.5 billion more than fiscal 2013 enacted levels.

New energy secretary offers vision for national labs

The national laboratories should emulate the Energy Department's innovation hubs, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said June 18 during a hearing of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee. "This is the way the national labs, in my view, should do more of their business--with significant teams focused for an extended time on an important problem," Moniz said.

BLM may have lost $60 million in undervalued coal land leases, IG says

The Bureau of Land Management may have lost $60 million in undervalued leases of public lands to coal mining companies because it used its own land value assessors rather than the ones ordered by an Interior Department regulation, a June 11 Interior Department inspector general report (.pdf) says.

The political appointee impulse for reorganizing

Political appointees tend easily to see their new agencies as nests of inefficiency only they can fix through reorganization. The fact of a new political appointee believing that only his or her...

Tangherlini has easy confirmation hearing

Dan Tangherlini encountered no apparent opposition to his nomination to head the General Services Administration during his Senate confirmation hearing June 18. Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), the ranking member of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said he would vote to confirm Tangherlini, whom President Obama nominated for GSA administrator in May.

Violence against federal park employees rising, PEER says

Violance against federal employees who work in national parks and wildlife refuges rose dramatically in 2012 over 2011 levels, a statement by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility says.

USPS halfway to greenhouse gas emissions goal

Greenhouse gas emissions by the Postal Service declined by 9.9 percent from fiscal 2008 to 2012, the letter annual sustainability report says. Transportation accounted for more than half of the agency's emissions in 2012. Facility energy consumed about a quarter, and the agency attributed another 17 percent to its employees' commutes.

Supreme Court says states can't require voters to provide proof of citizenship

The Supreme Court ruled June 17 that states cannot require voters to provide proof of citizenship when registering to vote, but there could be a loophole that allows states to continue the fight. The 7 to 2 ruling (.pdf) rejected a 2004 Arizona law, known as Proposition 200.

Spotlight: Army supports career development with hiring-freeze exception

Despite a hiring freeze, the Army can backfill positions for employees who want to apply for the Senior Enterprise Talent Management program, Senior Service Colleges or the Defense Senior Leader...

Forest Service employees abused travel cards, IG says

Four Forest Service employees were able to rack up $13,700 in improper travel card charges without notice amid what auditors say is a manual tracking process that overwhelms travel management personnel's ability to monitor card usage.

House committee approves agriculture appropriations

The House Appropriations Committee approved the fiscal 2014 agriculture appropriations bill June 13 by a voice vote. The bill (.pdf) includes $19.5 billion in discretionary funding for programs related to food safety, nutrition, rural development and more. The committee said its funding was approximately equal to the current level after the sequestration cuts.

Moniz calls for more oversight and reorganization at DOE

Newly confirmed Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz told Congress he wants to reorganize the Energy Department including more departmental oversight and better management of the National Labs. In a June 13 House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on the Energy Department's fiscal 2014 budget, Moniz laid out ways to make the DOE more efficient.

Government programs lost significantly more money than private sector per billion dollars spent, survey says

Federal agencies lost over the past year $148 million for every billion dollars they spent due to ineffective program management, a Project Management Institute survey says.

House passes $638 billion defense authorization bill

The $638 billion National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2014 passed the House June 14 in a 315 to 108 vote. The House authorized $552.1 billion in overall spending for base national defense and an additional $85.8 billion in overseas contingency operations. The fiscal 2014 NDAA (H.R. 1960) is consistent with the House passed budget which took money from non-defense budget to allow more money for defense while keeping overall spending below the Budget Control Act cap, according to an NDAA committee fact sheet.

Issa calls for 5 day delivery and modified benefits payment in USPS reform bill

House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) took up his ongoing cause again this year: reforming the Postal Service.

EEOC awards back pay and retroactive promotions to female DEA agents

The Drug Enforcement Administration must identify barriers to female agents moving up in the agency and lay out plans to eliminate them, an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission decision (.pdf) says in a decision for a class action complaint filed in 1993.