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Despite an apparent reversal on mass layoffs, the Department of Veterans Affairs is quietly advancing a large-scale workforce ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs will lose 30,000 employees through resignations and retirements by October 2025, ...
The good news: the projected 76,000 Veterans Affairs layoffs won’t happen. The bad news: the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs confirms it’s cutting nearly 30,000 jobs.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has abandoned plans for mass layoffs but still anticipates the exit of 30,000 ...
No State Department official publicly said when the first notices for the planned layoffs would be sent, but the widespread ...
This past session, both chambers of the General Assembly passed a bill that would create a new state Veterans Affairs Department.
Agency says it is on pace to reduce its total staff by nearly 30,000 employees by the end of this fiscal year through retirements, attrition and deferred resignations after previously saying it would ...
Mr. Farrell is fearful that the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs will realize that the USVI has a “law subsidizing or ...
VA Secretary Doug Collins will visit the Dallas VA Medical Center, marking his first visit to Texas as the agency's leader.
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