GSA
Federal agency responsible for regulations under GSA.
21 regulationsCivilian Board of Contract Appeals: Rules of Procedure of the Civilian Board of Contract Appeals; Implementation of the Administrative False Claims Act
This regulation updates the rules for how the government handles contract disputes and investigates false claims made by contractors. It affects companies that do business with the federal government and establishes clearer procedures for resolving disagreements and punishing fraud.
Civilian Board of Contract Appeals: Rules of Procedure of the Civilian Board of Contract Appeals; Administrative Changes to Agency Rules of Practice and Procedure
The General Services Administration updated the rules for how the Civilian Board of Contract Appeals handles disputes between the government and contractors over federal contracts. These changes make the appeal process clearer and more efficient for businesses and government agencies involved in contract disagreements.
Federal Management Regulation: Updating the Federal Management Regulation to Align with the Administration's Deregulatory Priorities
This regulation updates federal rules about how the government manages its operations and resources, with a focus on reducing bureaucratic requirements. The changes are intended to streamline federal processes, though the specific modifications are not detailed in the available information.
Federal Management Regulation: Conduct on Federal Property
This regulation sets rules for how people must behave when they're on federal government property, such as federal buildings and grounds. It helps maintain order and safety on these properties by establishing clear expectations for visitors and employees.
Federal Travel Regulation: Reorganizing and Streamlining the Federal Travel Regulation To Improve Operational Efficiency
The General Services Administration is reorganizing how federal employees handle travel expenses and reimbursement procedures to make the process simpler and faster. This change affects how millions of federal workers and contractors get reimbursed for business travel and could eventually influence private-sector travel policies.
Federal Management Regulation: Aligning the Federal Management Regulation with the Administration's Deregulatory Priorities
The General Services Administration (GSA) is updating federal management rules to reduce unnecessary regulations and red tape in how the government operates. This means federal agencies will have more flexibility in how they manage their operations, which could affect everything from how government offices are run to how federal employees work.
Federal Travel Regulation: Reorganizing and Streamlining the Federal Travel Regulation to Improve Operational Efficiency
The General Services Administration (GSA) has reorganized and simplified the rules that govern how federal employees can spend money on business travel. These changes aim to make the travel approval process faster and less complicated, which could eventually affect costs for taxpayers who fund federal operations.
Federal Travel Regulation; Rescinding Bulletins
The General Services Administration (GSA) updated federal rules about how government employees can travel on official business by canceling outdated guidance documents. This makes travel policies clearer and more consistent for federal workers and the agencies that reimburse their travel expenses.
Federal Management Regulation; Nondiscrimination Clarification in the Federal Workplace; Rescission
The General Services Administration (GSA) is rescinding a previous rule that clarified nondiscrimination protections in the federal workplace. This change affects how federal agencies handle workplace discrimination policies, though the specific impact depends on what rules replace this rescinded regulation.
Federal Management Regulation; Updating the Federal Management Regulation with Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility Language; Planned Rescission
The General Services Administration (GSA) is proposing to update federal workplace rules to include new language about diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility. This means the government is revising how it manages federal buildings and offices to better reflect commitments to fairness and equal access for all employees and visitors.
Federal Management Regulation: Designation of Authority and Sustainable Siting; Planned Revision
The General Services Administration (GSA) is proposing changes to how the federal government decides where to build or locate its facilities, with a new focus on sustainable and environmentally responsible sites. This regulation matters because it could influence where federal buildings are constructed, potentially reducing environmental impact and improving how taxpayer money is spent on government properties.
Federal Management Regulation: Art in Architecture; Planned Rescission
The General Services Administration is proposing to cancel a federal rule that requires artwork to be included in new government buildings. This change would eliminate the requirement that a portion of construction budgets be spent on art installations, sculptures, or other cultural features in federal facilities that the public uses.