Washington. The Office of Personnel Management filed a notice in the Federal Register on Tuesday proposing a standardized nondisclosure agreement for both new and existing federal employees. OPM said the draft NDA would require employees to safeguard non-public information, document obligations, and explicitly preserve disclosures authorized by law. The agency asked for public comment on the draft as agencies consider adopting the template, and the Federal Register posting was scheduled to publish Wednesday to open a comment period and potential rulemaking steps. The proposal cites "several recent instances" of unauthorized disclosures, including internal communications about rulemaking and policy development and incidents involving FBI and Department of Homeland Security employees. OPM noted that the New York Times and Washington Post received unauthorized information about a January U.S. raid on Venezuela and delayed publishing to avoid endangering U.S. troops. The filing follows other actions this year, such as the FBI's January seizure of a Washington Post reporter's electronic devices and journalists returning Pentagon badges after new reporting restrictions. Representatives for those newspapers and the American Federation of Government Employees did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
This proposed NDA could affect federal employees' ability to share information. It might impact whistleblowers who expose wrongdoing. If you're a federal employee, you could face new rules about what you can and can't disclose. If you're a citizen, it could change what you learn about government operations.
The government wants to tighten control over internal information. This move follows recent leaks to the press. It's unclear how this will affect transparency and accountability. Keep an eye on the public comment period and any rulemaking steps. Worth forwarding if you know someone in federal service.
The administration and federal agencies seeking to limit unauthorized disclosures stand to gain clearer contractual controls over internal communications and potentially reduced public leaks if agencies adopt the template NDA.
Federal employees, potential whistleblowers, and news organizations may face increased restrictions and legal risk when handling or receiving non-public information, affecting transparency and reporting.
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Administration Proposes NDAs For Federal Employees This Week
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