June 3, 2024 After months of negotiation and four stopgap measures, President Biden signed a second “minibus” package – totaling $1.2 trillion – on March 23, 2024. The measure funded the Defense and Homeland Security departments and increased pay for troops and federal employees by 5.2%. ...
The service will buy another 15 Boeing KC-46 tankers, at a cost of $2.8 billion. It will also restart procurement of the Boeing MH-139 Grey Wolf, which paused in FY22 as the service worked to get the helicopter certified by the Federal Aviation Administration. “There are two certification...
In total, CMS expects the proposed increase in operating and capital IPPS payment rates to generally increase acute care hospital payments by $3.3 billion. Although, the federal agency also projected a $115 million decrease in Medicare disproportionate share hospital payments and...
This bill provides discretionary and mandatory appropriations to three federal departments: the Department of Labor (DOL), the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and the Department of Education (ED). In addition, the bill provides annual appropriations for more than a dozen related ...
Our customers have seen more than $1.5bn in benefit from utilising our solutions this year, helping to stretch scarce federal resources, to reach more eligible patients and provide more comprehensive services. Extending the considerable support provided for many years, we continue to develop programmes...
The international tax proposals in the Biden Administration's FY 2024 Budget come largely from prior-year budgets.
Government Contracting and the Federal Budget Understand the federal procurement process, top markets trends in FY24, and proposed budget and priorities for FY25. Budget & Appropriations The President’s FY25 Budget Request Compare FY24’s proposal with FY23’s budget, in terms of topline numbers...
workforce and employees of start-ups. Pursuant to 10 U.S.C. § 1559g, private sector acquisition employees detailed to DoD under either exchange program would receive pay and benefits from their private organization and would be subject to some federal-employee restrictions, includi...
Nominal wages rose 1.9% in the last fiscal year ending in March, the fastest increase in 31 years, but inflation at 3.8%outpaced those pay gains, resulting in real wages falling 1.8% in fiscal 2022, the data showed. It was the biggest yearly decline since fiscal ...
Let me be clear. Under my plan — and I made this commitment when I ran, and I haven't broken it yet and I never will — no one making less than $400,000 will see a penny in federal taxes go up. Not a single penny.