WASHINGTON (AP) — Exploring the cosmos makes for happy employees, federal workers like to work from home like everyone else, and an agency that has struggled with low morale is showing improvement.
Those are some of the highlights of a survey released Monday of more than a million federal workers.
In a city that revolves around the federal government, the annual Best Places to Work survey is a closely watched annual event worthy of bragging rights — provided you’re one of the agencies such as NASA or the Government Accountability Office who topped the survey.
The survey uses information from the Office of Personnel Management’s Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey and is produced by the Partnership for Public Service and the Boston Consulting Group.
It covers 532 federal agencies including 17 large agencies, 26 midsize agencies, 30 small agencies and 459 subcomponents. The rankings first came out in 2003, and agencies that do well are known to post the results on their websites.
Kosovo prepares a new draft law on renting prison cells to Denmark after the first proposal failed
China activates emergency response to rain, snowstorms amid holiday traffic peak
The Rolling Stones' US tour 'set to feature iconic popstar after setlist leak'
Messi in and Dybala out in Argentina squad for pre
Ryan Garcia vs Devin Haney is ON despite troubled fighter weighing 3.2lbs overweight
Chinese scientist awarded for groundbreaking work in transplantation, cellular therapy
Tennessee Volkswagen employees vote to join United Auto Workers union
Ricky Stenhouse punching Kyle Busch could lead to suspension
Italy approves participation in EU naval mission in Red Sea
French sports minister calls for sanctions after Monaco player tapes over anti
China had over 1.26 mln UAVs by end of 2023