Another public service department votes to accept pay deal
Prime Minister and Cabinet public servants finally agree to new workplace deal.
Prime Minister and Cabinet public servants finally agree to new workplace deal.
Another public service agency lays down its arms.
March of public service casualisation reversed. In one department at least.
Popularity of myGov sent department scrambling for extra $57 million as 11 million users send internet bills soaring.
More pay, less super would be a better deal for bureaucrats and soldiers, expert warns.
Blast resistant doors, bullet-proof panels and anti-intruder fences will be installed at embassies.
Traditional public service life will be consigned to history, Public Service Commissioner warns.
Labor and the CPSU say an audit report shows the government has undermined the beleaguered agency.
CSIRO staff say trust in their management and morale among the workforce remain major issues for them.as they vote to accept a new pay deal
Nation's top public servant now earning nearly $880,000.
An audit report on the pesticides authority says it's unprepared to manage the risk of staff losses.
Payment software a 'shambles' a 'shit show' and a 'cock-up', say public servants.
Another crash and burn of Tax Office's internet systems
Michael Cranston captured in phone intercepts allegedly suggesting that his son lie to a judge.
Defence public servants accept a new workplace deal at the fourth time of asking.
Parliamentary committee says Centrelink's 'robo-debt' effort should stop immediately.
It's a 'sh*t show', say public servants. It's going great, says the department.
Fewer than 11 per cent of Australian federal public servants are now under 30.
A parliamentary committee has called on the Inspector-General of Taxation to conduct a review into the ATO following the alleged abuse of position by one of its highest-ranking officers.
Epic industrial struggle has been "intense, frustrating and emotive" says departmental boss.
Twelve major departments have workforces heavily concentrated in Canberra. Will they be targeted?
Prime Minister and Cabinet public servants finally agree to new workplace deal.
March of public service casualisation reversed. In one department at least.
Another public service agency lays down its arms.
Popularity of myGov sent department scrambling for extra $57 million as 11 million users send internet bills soaring.
Blast resistant doors, bullet-proof panels and anti-intruder fences will be installed at embassies.
More pay, less super would be a better deal for bureaucrats and soldiers, expert warns.
Traditional public service life will be consigned to history, Public Service Commissioner warns.
Labor and the CPSU say an audit report shows the government has undermined the beleaguered agency.
More and more Canberrans are being chased by the tax office.
CSIRO staff say trust in their management and morale among the workforce remain major issues for them.as they vote to accept a new pay deal
Nation's top public servant now earning nearly $880,000.
Payment software a 'shambles' a 'shit show' and a 'cock-up', say public servants.
An audit report on the pesticides authority says it's unprepared to manage the risk of staff losses.
Another crash and burn of Tax Office's internet systems with just nine days until tax time.
Parliamentary committee says Centrelink's 'robo-debt' effort should stop immediately.
It's a 'sh*t show', say public servants. It's going great, says the department.
Fewer than 11 per cent of Australian federal public servants are now under 30.
Epic industrial struggle has been "intense, frustrating and emotive" says departmental boss.
An expert guide on how to decentralise government departments.
Twelve major departments have workforces heavily concentrated in Canberra. Will they be targeted?
Would a "gender lens" help close APS pay gaps?
Consultants' bills mount on giant submarines project.
'Long and difficult' road to workplace settlement at rivers authority.
The public service gender pay gap has been revealed for the first time.
Nationals claim the move to New England was always about hiring more specialist scientists.
Diggers will be offered a 6 per cent pay increase over three years with no loss of conditions.
Labor says public servants are being used for political purposes at events in Coalition electorates.
Plan to get public servants showing up says "engagement" key to a workforce that wants to turn up.
ASIO wants to expand powers compelling people to answer questions, but lawyers oppose the idea.
An unrestrained deep state under a pliant US president is the stuff of nightmare.
Our leaders and institutions are taking us on a bumpy path, heading nowhere useful.
Until we know more about senior bureaucrats' conflicts of interest, we are inviting corruption.
We don't really know to how to use big data and protect personal information at the same time.
The bureaucracy's IR policy is among the most serious problems in public administration today.
South Australia's finest appear to suffer the most from this affliction.
Journalist Phillip Thomson asks whether our work stations are sending us to an early grave.
Can clothes get you promoted?
Forget the yoga mats. Reporter Phillip Thomson finds out how to do yoga at a desk.
Will the office of tomorrow be one of treadmill desks, or are we doomed to a future of cubicle farms? Phillip Thomson investigates.
Flamboyant and fabulously well-paid, but is he the right man?
Even the ability to redirect funds has little effect in battles over 'bias'.
Thousands more govt jobs are likely to be lost in coming years.
Which parts of the bureaucracy are likely to start hiring?
This 'good news' federal budget contains a sting for Canberra.
The Treasury has weakened the entire public service's integrity.
An industrial tribunal will care little for the broadcaster's political woes.
We can't afford to miscalculate the costs of runaway climate change.