Accountability for Conduct in 2025: 6-part Training Series – February 6 – July 10, 2025
An employee fails to report onsite and claims telework instead. Or ignores an order. Or gets arrested off-duty. What do you do? At FELTG, we take accountability seriously. It’s been part of our mission statement for almost 25 years. As a Federal supervisor, advisor, HR practitioner, or union representative, you need to take accountability seriously, […]
Making Sense of the 2025 Trump Federal Workforce Executive Orders – February 11, 2025
Each presidential administration brings its own priorities and policies to the White House, but the speed with which the Trump Administration has issued Executive Orders regarding the Federal workplace is unprecedented. In this 60-minute review, FELTG President Deborah J. Hopkins will provide up to-minute guidance on what several new Federal workplace-related Executive Orders cover and […]
Making Sense of the 2025 Trump Federal Workforce Executive Orders
Each presidential administration brings its own priorities and policies to the White House, but the speed with which the Trump Administration has issued Executive Orders regarding the Federal workplace is unprecedented. In this 60-minute review, participants will receive up to-minute guidance on what several new Federal workplace-related Executive Orders cover and how to ensure compliance […]
UnCivil Servant: Holding Employees Accountable for Performance and Conduct – February 12-13, 2025
FELTG’s flagship course UnCivil Servant empowers Federal supervisors and advisers to confidently handle the challenges that come with supervising in the Federal workplace. It shatters misconceptions about performance and misconduct-based actions and gives you simple step-by-step guidance for taking swift, appropriate, and legally defensible actions. This course fulfills the 5 CFR 412.202(b) mandatory training requirements for new […]
Stay Up to Date: Hostile Work Environment Harassment in 2025 – February 19, 2025
A joke. A threat. A slap. A social media post. These could all possibly lead to viable claims of a hostile work environment harassment. But then again, they may not. Claims of harassment and more specifically, hostile work environment, continue to soar in the Federal workplace, along with confusion about what actions fit the legal […]
Workplace Investigations Week – February 24-28, 2025
This week of FELTG training focuses on conducting administrative investigations in the Federal workplace with an emphasis on employee misconduct, including workplace harassment. Workplace Investigations Week always includes the most up-to-date information on the skills, trends, and cases, including OPM’s regulations on investigative leave. February 24: Administrative Investigations: The Substantive Basis Why investigate? This kick-off […]
Telework as a Reasonable Accommodation in 2025: Handling Return to In-Person Work Exemption Requests – February 25, 2025
President Trump's inauguration day Memorandum to agencies was clear: Agency leaders must “require employees to return to work in-person.” In a follow-up memo, the Office of Personnel Management noted that agency supervisors could excuse employees “due to a disability, qualifying medical condition, or other compelling reasons.” Telework is already the most commonly requested reasonable accommodation, […]
Taking Performance and Misconduct-based Actions: Implementing Executive Order 13839 Policies in 2025 – March 5, 2025
President Trump recently reinstated the policies outlined in his 2018 Executive Order 13839: Promoting Accountability and Streamlining Removal Procedures Consistent With Merit System Principles — and you are now on the clock. Agencies have until March 7 (yes, March 7, 2025) to report to OPM all policies that have been enacted, modified, or repealed in […]
Handling Insubordination and Failure to Follow Instructions – March 6, 2025
An employee does not follow an order. Seems like an open-and-shut case of insubordination, right? Think again. Was it a refusal or simply a failure to comply? When you charge an employee with insubordination, you must prove intent along with the other elements of the charge. This class explains what it takes for insubordination charges […]
Telework as a Reasonable Accommodation in 2025: Handling Return to In-Person Work Exemption Requests – March 6, 2025
President Trump's inauguration day Memorandum to agencies was clear: Agency leaders must “require employees to return to work in-person.” In a follow-up memo, the Office of Personnel Management noted that agency supervisors could excuse employees “due to a disability, qualifying medical condition, or other compelling reasons.” Telework is already the most commonly requested reasonable accommodation, […]
EEOC Law Week – March 24-28, 2025
Let’s face it: EEO law can be complex. Not only do you have several different laws and the growing caselaw to keep up with, but many areas, such as contractor complaints and mixed cases, are flat out confusing as heck. The increasing reasonable accommodation requests based on religion, disability, and pregnancy and the rise in […]
Got Nexus? Accountability for Off-duty Conduct – April 3, 2025
The borderline between on-duty and off-duty has become increasingly blurred with the omnipresence of social media and many employees working flexible hours from home. Yet, one thing has remained clear and constant: If you’re going to discipline someone for what they do on their own time, you need to show a nexus between the employee’s […]