Author: Barbara Boland|| Date Published: June 30, 2017
The House Appropriations Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee passed its 2018 appropriations bill via voice vote Thursday afternoon.
The bill does not offer an alternative to President Donald Trumps 1.9 percent raise offered in his budget proposal, which means federal employees have cleared a hurdle to receiving a pay boost next year.
The Congressional appropriations process will not address the presidents proposals to restructure federal retirement, because appropriations only addresses each year’s discretionary funding, and not the majority of Federal funding which is on the mandatory side and would be addressed through the Federal budget process. Congress may also include mandatory spending reforms as part of a budget reconciliation spending deal.
When Congress comes back from its July 4th recess, they will return to work marking up appropriations bills.
The Senate has already approved a 2.1 percent raise for the military, while the House Armed Services Committee suggested a 2.4 percent raise.
The General Services Administration has unveiled the first phase of awards under the Alliant 3 governmentwide acquisition contract, a multiple-award vehicle…
The Department of State has awarded spots on a multiple-award indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract with a combined potential value of $10 billion…
Brian Hobbs has been appointed CEO of Clarity Innovations, effective March 2, the company announced Tuesday. He succeeds founder and long-serving CEO Wes…