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Setting performance priorities
Tom Shoop is the editor and chief of Government Executive Magazine.
Tags: Dorobek Insider , Government Executive , best practices
Should the federal workforce spread out?
Would the country be better off if different federal agencies were based in different parts of the country?
Tags: pay and benefits , GovExec , DorobekInsider , Alec MacGillis
Challenges to open government start with definition
Learn more about obstacles to transparency
Tags: DorobekInsider , open government , transparency , Government Executive
How will OPM & OMB actually change the hiring process?
We get analysis from GovExec's Tom Shoop.
Tags: pay and benefits , Government Executive , hiring , hiring reform
Debt ceiling stalemate could lead to 'uncharted territory'
The White House has said it will keep calling meetings until there's a deal.
Tags: budget , debt reduction , Congress , Mike Lee , Government Executive , Jonathan Allen , Politico , In Depth , Jory Heckman
Analysis: How can USPS get out of its financial hole?
The United States Post Office has been making a lot of changes and shakeups, as it tries to climb out of a multi-billion dollar hole.
Tags: USPS , budget , Government Executive , In Depth
Bracing for the pay freeze
Tom Shoop is the Editor in Chief for Government Executive Magazine. He joins In Depth with information on how feds are preparing for a pay freeze
Tags: In Depth , pay and benefits , pay freeze , Government Executive magazine
Why Obama appointees got low marks from senior execs
Gov Exec's Tom Shoop offers analysis on why many senior executives are giving low or failing reviews of political appointees.
Tags: appointees , Government Executive , management , Barack Obama , In Depth
Tips for reforming agency IT
Maxing out technology at your agency - make sure you're using all the tools you've got. Learn more from Tom Shoop, Editor in Chief at Government Executive Magazine.
Tags: In Depth , technology , IT ,
Federal pensions next on budget chopping block?
The amount of money you must pay to your retirement fund could be going up. The 2012 budget proposal from House Republicans would require you to contribute 6 percent of your salaries. That's a jump of more than 5 percent.
Tags: pay and benefits , budget , Pensions , contributions , FERS , Congress , In Depth , Government Executive




