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The Veterans Affairs Department employs more than 4,300 police officers, physical security specialists and investigators.
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VA security personnel aren’t detecting knives or booze, according to a watchdog report assessing medical facility security
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Waiting to retire could be worth thousands of dollars
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Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said last year the National Park Service alone would hire 7,700 seasonal staff, but internal data show the agency peaked at around 5,150 temporary workers, or 33% short of its target. 
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'Going to be a s***show': Parks, Interior struggle to hire temporary staff ahead of busy season
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins speaks at a manufacturing facility on May 5, 2026, in Des Moines, Iowa. For Easter, she sent a message to the department's workforce that said, “Today we celebrate the greatest story ever told."
Workforce
‘Sermonizing’ Easter email prompts USDA employees to sue agency
House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., argued that extensive use of settlements could serve to mask systemic issues of favoritism or other management malfeasance in cases where employees’ appeals were justified.
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House GOP probes agency settlements with federal workers
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The Veterans Affairs Department employs more than 4,300 police officers, physical security specialists and investigators.
Oversight
VA security personnel aren’t detecting knives or booze, according to a watchdog report assessing medical facility security
Pay & Benefits
Waiting to retire could be worth thousands of dollars
Exclusive
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said last year the National Park Service alone would hire 7,700 seasonal staff, but internal data show the agency peaked at around 5,150 temporary workers, or 33% short of its target. 
Workforce
'Going to be a s***show': Parks, Interior struggle to hire temporary staff ahead of busy season
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins speaks at a manufacturing facility on May 5, 2026, in Des Moines, Iowa. For Easter, she sent a message to the department's workforce that said, “Today we celebrate the greatest story ever told."
Workforce
‘Sermonizing’ Easter email prompts USDA employees to sue agency
House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., argued that extensive use of settlements could serve to mask systemic issues of favoritism or other management malfeasance in cases where employees’ appeals were justified.
Workforce
House GOP probes agency settlements with federal workers
sponsor content
Maximus Podcast Episode 1: Data Readiness for Mission Resilience
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VA security personnel aren’t detecting knives or booze, according to a watchdog report assessing medical facility security

Waiting to retire could be worth thousands of dollars

'Going to be a s***show': Parks, Interior struggle to hire temporary staff ahead of busy season

‘Sermonizing’ Easter email prompts USDA employees to sue agency

House GOP probes agency settlements with federal workers

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News

Paid Ads on the Fiscal Cliff

Will these expensive pleas have impact?

Charles S. Clark

|
November 8, 2012
  • Fedblog
Charles S. Clark
Charles S. Clark
Senior Correspondent

Though fewer news consumers are subscribing to print publications, the venerable tactic of buying a full-page newspaper ad to promote one’s policy cause is alive and well and supplying journalism operations with badly needed revenue.

In today’s Washington Post, two such broadsheet ads addressing the looming talks over avoiding the “fiscal cliff” appeared opposite one another.

One full-page ad is an open letter to the president and Congress from 30 individuals affiliated with unions, liberal think tanks, and community activist organizations declaring that the message this week from voters was “for strengthening the middle class and putting people back to work -- not for job-killing budget cuts and attacks on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.” It calls on leaders to raise taxes on the wealthy, invest in infrastructure, preserve entitlements and safety-net programs and stop the looming sequester.

A separate half-page ad comes from a roster of 50 public policy heavyweights assembled by the Bipartisan Policy Center. It calls on Congress and the president to “quickly shift from campaigning to governing” because the tone and substantive achievements of the upcoming weeks will impact market confidence and the economic recovery. Signers include AOL co-founder Steve Case, former defense contractor executive Norman Augustine, and former Sens. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., and George Mitchell, D-Maine.

Will these expensive pleas have impact? Perhaps we must wait until Jan. 1 to find out.

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NEXT STORY: The Second Obama Term: What Are Your Thoughts?

Workforce
Hegseth orders termination of union contracts
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Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins speaks at a manufacturing facility on May 5, 2026, in Des Moines, Iowa. For Easter, she sent a message to the department's workforce that said, “Today we celebrate the greatest story ever told."
Workforce
‘Sermonizing’ Easter email prompts USDA employees to sue agency
Exclusive
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said last year the National Park Service alone would hire 7,700 seasonal staff, but internal data show the agency peaked at around 5,150 temporary workers, or 33% short of its target. 
Workforce
'Going to be a s***show': Parks, Interior struggle to hire temporary staff ahead of busy season
sponsor content
Beyond black box AI: A better approach to legal data intelligence
Workforce
Hegseth orders termination of union contracts
But Rep. David Joyce, R-Ohio, chairman of the panel’s financial services and general government subcommittee, said his caucus would not step on the president’s toes in his efforts to reshape the federal workforce, including on issues of compensation.
Pay & Benefits
House GOP on Trump’s 2027 pay freeze: ‘That’s politics’
The Food and Nutrition Service oversees 16 nutrition programs, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
Management
Workers predict significant disruptions to food assistance programs as USDA announces more relocations
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins speaks at a manufacturing facility on May 5, 2026, in Des Moines, Iowa. For Easter, she sent a message to the department's workforce that said, “Today we celebrate the greatest story ever told."
Workforce
‘Sermonizing’ Easter email prompts USDA employees to sue agency
Exclusive
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said last year the National Park Service alone would hire 7,700 seasonal staff, but internal data show the agency peaked at around 5,150 temporary workers, or 33% short of its target. 
Workforce
'Going to be a s***show': Parks, Interior struggle to hire temporary staff ahead of busy season
sponsor content
Beyond black box AI: A better approach to legal data intelligence
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