As we await a revised list of properties the GSA deems “non-core,” a critic ponders the fate of Washington’s historic landscape.
Trump and Musk are calling on the GSA to begin terminating leases on all of the 7,500 federal offices nationwide, including 25 regional offices of the BIA.
The Trump administration announced Tuesday that it is considering selling off hundreds of “non-core” federal properties, according to the General Services Administration.
The Trump administration announced Tuesday that it is considering selling off hundreds of “non-core” federal properties, according to the General Services Administration.
The General Services Administration published a list of 320 federal properties it identified to close or sell after deeming them “not core to government operations.”
Several Miami federal buildings could be on the chopping block as the Trump administration seeks to sell offices that "are not core to government operations." Why it matters: Among the local properties that the General Services Administration slated for sale are a former courthouse leased to Miami Dade College,
A list of hundreds of federal office buildings to be put up for sale was published by the General Services Administration Tuesday, stunning observers.
The Trump administration unveiled plans to sell 443 federal properties, including six in Alabama. The list included several major government buildings, but the General Services Administration later took it down.
In a statement released Tuesday, the GSA announced that they are planning to put 440 “underutilized” federal properties across the United States up for sale or otherwise dispose of to save money. In Mass.
The General Services Administration did not immediately respond to questions about the changes or why the properties that had been listed had been removed. The initial list had included some of the country’s most recognizable buildings.
The GSA identified two federally-owned San Francisco buildings for disposal Tuesday. Here's what market insiders say about the properties.
The Trump administration published a list on Tuesday of more than 400 federal properties it said it could close or sell. It included a number of locations here in Washington state. A list was published by the General Services Administration,