On Feb. 11, tech billionaire Elon Musk and the Department for Government Efficiency, which he leads, made a series of claims about a limestone mine in Pennsylvania where the U.S. government allegedly ...
Federal employee retirements are processed using paper, by hand, in an old limestone mine in Pennsylvania. 700+ mine workers ...
DOGE acknowledged that the work was incomplete but said it was part of an “enormous manual effort consolidating 16,000+ ...
Roughly 75,000 federal employees took the president’s offer to resign. He has more plans in store to pare down staffing.
Is your IT team ready to solve a potentially network-crippling problem? Learn tips and tactics for a successful resiliency strategy in our new ebook, sponsored by PagerDuty.
While attention is on federal government staff who are leaving, my focus is on those who remain. I’d like to offer personal ...
Hundreds of federal workers process thousands of retirement applications every month, by hand in a converted former mine.
According to the National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association’s advocacy department, there are several options ...
In the Oval Office on Tuesday, Elon Musk said the government stores and processes retirement paperwork in an old limestone ...
The federal government still processes retirement applications manually in a Pennsylvania limestone mine, a system Elon Musk criticized as outdated and inefficient.
The converted mine in Pennsylvania used to store and process federal retirement ... by the General Services Administration said the mine, which has been occupied by OPM since 1970, is in Boyers ...
During a briefing in the Oval Office on Feb. 11, Elon Musk highlighted an outdated government system that still processes ...