The Division of Developmental Disabilities, which serves 60,000 people, is facing a $122 million shortfall in the coming months.
President Donald Trump’s Feb. 11 executive order gave DOGE more control over federal hiring, but unions are seeking to stop DOGE from rummaging through DOL data.
How will Trump's Department of Government Efficiency affect employees with disabilities who've benefited from work-from-home ...
Georgia lawmakers filed a bill in January to make it illegal to pay persons with disabilities less than their non-disabled ...
Eliminating or scaling back DEI will jeopardize programs that have helped many underserved groups receive a fair shot at ...
President Donald Trump can’t unilaterally dismantle the department through executive order. But the Wall Street Journal ...
Some teleworking patent examiners at the US Patent and Trademark Office have less than a week to return to agency offices in ...
"In this article, we provide an overview of the federal regulatory guidance and the state and local rules in place so far. We ...
Two government labor unions and an advocacy group are suing the Department of Treasury and the Bureau of the Fiscal Service ...
Frozen out of much of the labor force, disabled individuals frequently aim to work for themselves. Uplifting their ingenuity requires reform at the federal level.
WASHINGTON — Maryland Democratic U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, alongside advocates and labor union leaders, on Tuesday ...
Getting rid of thousands of public servants in Canberra sounds like a vote winner, until the voters realise that the services ...