The Veterans Affairs Department is planning to lay off tens of thousands of employees throughout its organization later this year, according to an internal memorandum distributed to top staff on ...
Veterans who have served in the military and are now looking to further their education or training have a valuable resource ...
A visitor leaves the Sacramento Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Rancho Cordova, Calif., on April 2, 2015. (Rich Pedroncelli/AP) Veterans Affairs leaders dismissed more than 1,400 additional ...
Department of Veterans Affairs employees and veterans fired from other agencies as part of the Trump administration's slashing of federal jobs would be reinstated with full back pay and benefits under ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs said the federal government shutdown has forced nearly 37,000 employees to be furloughed or work without pay. The department’s medical centers, outpatient clinics ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs has initiated a plan to lay off at least 76,000 employees to comply with President Donald Trump's order last week calling for broader cuts to the federal workforce, ...
U.S. Sen. Maggie Hassan led the state’s all-Democratic congressional delegation calling upon Secretary of Veterans Affairs Doug Collins to publicly release the agency’s action plan to create a full-se ...
Veterans would be able to retain their full Department of Veterans Affairs benefit to be buried at a national cemetery even if they previously chose to get a plaque or urn for their remains under a ...
Get the latest federal technology news delivered to your inbox. A top Republican on the House committee overseeing the Department of Veterans Affairs is spearheading bipartisan legislation that would ...