There’s a new performance management training program for federal supervisors
All supervisors are required to complete OPM’s new training by Feb. 9, 2026.
Michele Sandiford
December 4, 2025 2:42 pm
< a min read
- The Office of Personnel Management is requiring all federal supervisors to enroll in a new training program on performance management. A new memo said the mandatory training will cover how to both reward and discipline employees, as well as how to create effective performance plans. All supervisors are required to complete OPM’s new training by Feb. 9, 2026.
- The Missile Defense Agency has tapped more than 1,000 companies to support the Golden Dome initiative. The first round of awards under the agency’s Scalable Homeland Innovative Enterprise Layered Defense, or SHIELD, contracting vehicle went to 1,014 “qualifying offerors.” Vendors that receive task orders will draw funds from a pool worth up to $151 billion. Officials say those order competitions won’t begin until all companies in the competitive range get the chance to “engage in meaningful discussions” with the agency.
- The top Democrat on the Senate Subcommittee on Aviation, Space and Innovation is pressing Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to give a majority of the FAA workers a bonus. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) said it was unfair to limit who received the $10,000 bonus when all 20,000 air traffic controllers and technicians worked during the 43-day shutdown. The FAA is giving a $10,000 award to approximately 2.4% of the air traffic controller workforce and to roughly 6% of the technician workforce. Duckworth said this creates a “perverse and dangerous incentive” that threatens to weaken national airspace system safety during future shutdowns.
- Senate Democrats are ringing the alarm bells about the new deputy general counsel at the General Services Administration. Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and five other members of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee are calling for the White House to reverse its appointment of Paul Ingrassia to be the GSA deputy general counsel. The lawmakers say Ingrassia is unqualified for the position because of his very limited legal experience and because of his lengthy and public record of offensive statements. The Trump administration withdrew Ingrassia’s nomination to lead the Office of Special Counsel after statements he made became public about him having a “Nazi streak from time to time” and on other questionable topics. The Senators want a briefing from GSA and the White House Office of Presidential Personnel by Dec. 9.
- The Pentagon inspector general said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the messaging app Signal to discuss operational details of airstrikes in Yemen created a risk of exposing U.S. tactics and endangering service members. Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell pushed back on the finding, and pointed to the “flawless execution and success” of Operation Rough Rider. Parnell also noted that the inspector general determined that no classified information was shared. “Case closed,” he said on social media platform X. CNN first reported the watchdog’s findings.
- Former EPA employees are challenging the Trump administration, saying they were fired illegally. After being fired for signing a letter criticizing the Trump administration, six former EPA employees argue the agency’s actions violated the First Amendment. The employees were some of the 140 workers who signed the “declaration of dissent,” which resulted in around 20 employees being fired, and dozens more facing two-week suspensions. The fired feds are appealing their case to the Merit Systems Protection Board.
- A recent survey shows most Americans agree agencies should make secure data-handling a top priority for the services they provide. But only 41% of those surveyed say they trust the government’s handling of their personal data. In a survey of more than 1,500 people conducted by Gartner, more than half say more transparency in how their data is used would improve their level of trust with the federal government’s online services.
- The State Department’s diplomatic workforce is feeling overburdened, under-resourced and more likely to leave in the next few years. In a survey of more than 2,100 active-duty Foreign Service employees, the American Foreign Service Association found 98% of respondents reported reduced morale this year. About 86% of respondents said workplace changes since January have affected their ability to advance U.S. diplomatic priorities. Before the Trump administration, about 17,000 active-duty Foreign Service officers worked for the State Department. AFSA estimates that nearly a quarter of them left this year when counting layoffs, retirements and those who accepted deferred resignation offers.
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