Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, had some harsh words for the way DOGE was operating, calling the email sent to federal workers ...
Elon Musk's now-viral "What did you do last week?" email to federal employees have since been met with confusion and mockery ...
Elon Musk’s email to federal employees prompted angst, but lots of employers use technology for continuous feedback on worker ...
Musk fumed—and issued another threat—after federal workers were told they didn't have to comply with a demand to justify ...
Hundreds of thousands of federal workers have little more than 48 hours to explain what they accomplished over the last week.
An email reviewed by WUSA9 indicates that the Office of Personnel Management told agency leaders that responding to Elon Musk's email is voluntary.
MT Snyder, a National Labor Relations Board employee and federal union organizer, told CNN that she was "infuriated" to ...
Leadership at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is telling employees not to respond to directions from an ...
Failure to respond will be taken as a resignation,” the DOGE leader wrote on X, sparking confusion among thousands of federal ...
The office that asked federal workers to document five things they accomplished over the past week​ told officials that agencies can decide how to respond.
OPM also instructed multiple HR departments that failure to reply to the email did not mean automatic termination — despite ...
Federal workers began receiving emails Saturday asking them to describe what they did last week — as Elon Musk warned on ...