The lawsuit indicates some employees at the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and USFWS were wrongly fired ...
Following an order from a federal judge, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management walked back its order to agencies to fire probationary employees.
The Office of Personnel Management has revised a Jan. 20 memo asking federal agencies to identify probationary employees ...
President Donald Trump's administration appeared to walk back an order on Tuesday that called for the mass firing of ...
The Trump administration told federal agencies that firings of probationary workers are up to the agencies ‒ not the Office ...
President Donald Trump will use his remarks before a joint session of Congress to spell out his vision for the next four years.
A federal judge last week ordered the Office of Personnel Management to retract instructions to other agencies on dismissing recently hired or promoted employees.
The Trump administration must halt its firings of thousands of government employees who have been hired in the past two years ...
A federal judge in San Francisco ordered the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to rescind its instructions directing ...
A federal judge has ruled that the Trump administration's recent wave of probationary government employee firings was likely illegal.
U.S. District Judge William Alsup instructed the Office of Personnel Management to inform certain federal agencies it had no ...
Judge William Alsup said no “statute in the history of the universe” authorized OPM to take personnel action against ...