Directives from Washington, D.C., are adding to an already confused employment situation for the federal workers at Mann-Grandstaff VA Medical Center in Spokane.
With looming threats of federal job cuts, could the impact be felt here on the Department of Veterans Affairs and the services it provides?
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has announced a mandatory return to in-person work for employees, following President Donald
President Donald Trump’s federal hiring freeze is forcing terminations at the US Department of Veterans Affairs research office, jeopardizing projects that advance treatments for cancer, drug withdrawal and more.
Several veterans have lost their jobs as a result of President Donald Trump's push to downsize the federal government and there are questions about how it could impact VA services.
The nation’s leading veterans advocacy groups condemned the purge of workers at the Department of Veterans Affairs and called on President Donald Trump’s administration to reinstate an estimated 6,000 veterans fired across the federal government.
U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel said the Trump administration is carelessly firing government employees. The fear is that layoffs will delay care for veterans and seniors.
Michael Missal served as the VA's top watchdog for eight years, during which he identified $45 billion in potential savings and questionable expenditures.
Leadership at the U.S. Agency for International Development has sent an email to laid-off agency staffers instructing them that they will have 15 minutes to enter their former offices at the Ronald Reagan Building in downtown Washington, D.C., to retrieve their personal belongings.
Luke Graziani, a longtime Army veteran abruptly fired from his job at the Bronx VA on Feb. 13 due to federal staffing cuts under President Donald Trump, will
On Tuesday night, President Trump will give the first joint address to Congress since his reelection. “TOMORROW NIGHT WILL BE BIG. I WILL TELL IT LIKE IT IS!,” he said on Truth Social Monday morning.