Agencies should aim for a 30-day deadline to implement Trump’s return-to-office executive order, according to a memo from the Office of Personnel Management.
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.
According to the memo, OPM is requiring all federal agencies to notify their employees by Friday at 5 p.m. of their compliance with the executive order. Agencies are also mandated to update their telework policies with new language emphasizing in-person attendance.
The Office of Personnel Management tells agency and department heads they must close all DEIA offices by the end of Wednesday and put government workers in those offices on paid leave.
Newly released guidelines suggest a wide range of federal employees could lose employment protections under President Trump's new Schedule F. Why it matters: The memo, released Monday by the Office of Personnel and Management (OPM),
President Trump’s Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is ordering every head of departments and agencies to terminate all diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) offices and workers within 60
In an executive order issued last week and guidance from OPM released Monday, the Trump administration outlined a revitalization of Schedule F, now referred to as Schedule Policy/Career, which turns civil servants who are in policy-influencing decisions ...
President Donald Trump has begun his second administration with a series of controversial moves and decisions.
The State Department has already begun to implement the president’s memo cancelling telework agreements as of March 1 and remote work arrangements July 1, with exceptions for military spouses and employees with disabilities.
Good government experts warn that President Trump’s revival of Schedule F, inserting new criteria into the hiring process and demand for a list of all feds who are still on their probationary period portend a mass firing of career workers as the new administration seeks to reshape the federal bureaucracy.
Longtime federal workers say they have become pawns in a battle for political control, that their DEI work is misunderstood and they fear they're under surveillance.
NASA is closing ALL agency DEI offices, efforts and contracts. They warn those trying to hide DEI that there will be consequences for it. Employees have 10 days to report anyone trying to conceal DEI in a new format or name.