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An email sent last week from GSA headquarters in Washington instructed regional managers to begin terminating leases on roughly 7,500 federal offices nationwide. “Lease terminations are the clear priority at this time,” according to a Jan. 29 email from a senior GSA manager, a copy of which was provided to the AP by a GSA employee.
The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, the federal judiciary's administrative arm, in an internal memo issued on Thursday said it received the lease inquiry from the U.S. General Services ...
In 1973 GSA created the Office of Federal Management Policy. GSA's Office of Acquisition Policy centralized procurement policy in 1978. GSA was initially responsible for emergency preparedness and stockpiling strategic materials to be used in wartime until those functions were transferred to the newly created Federal Emergency Management Agency ...
Additionally, regulation of interaction between contracting agencies and the GSA is detailed here. Section 302(b) states the "declared policy" of the United States, that "a fair proportion of the total purchases and contracts for supplies and services [should be placed] with small business concerns". [3] 41 U.S. Code § 3104 now reads
GSA (the property owner and manager for the U.S. federal government) began seeking to lease or build a structure to house the new agency in late 1965. [12] Donald T. Kirwan, chief of GSA's leasing division, knew Nassif from a previous lease negotiation and discussed the siting of a building and its size with him. [12]
Are federal workers in Buffalo losing their office, ... including by modifying the GSA’s lease structure. The DOGE site lists the office being eliminated as 37,000 square feet. But the staff ...
The Robert C. Weaver Federal Building is a 10-story office building in Washington, D.C., owned by the federal government of the United States.Completed in 1968, it serves as the headquarters of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). [4]
It was only the fifth time the government had signed a "lease-to-own" agreement. [11] With 1.4 million square feet (130,000 m 2) of office space and 500,000 square feet (46,000 m 2) of space for trade center activities, the planned trade center would be larger than any other federally owned building except for The Pentagon. [11]