The Strategic Café: Episode 5 - "Invest In People: Mature Digital Workplace"
A podcast designed to deep dive into different areas of the DFAS FY22-26 Strategic Plan.
Americans have volunteered an estimated 113 billion hours over the past fourteen years. Maeve Yourdon has contributed to those hours for the past 11 years with the Deerfield Volunteer Fire Department in Deerfield, New York.
INDIANAPOLIS, May 4, 2022 - Lauren Aggen was born on a frigid day in Chicago, Ill., in December 1989, the doctors only gave her three days to live, but Lauren surpassed doctors' expectations and lived.
COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 3, 2022 – Pam Caldwell will tell you that she is part of a "small group with a large heart." But without hearing the context or extent of her initiatives for the community, she is underselling herself by far.
COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 3, 2022 – Terri Hilton may have joined the Defense Finance and Accounting Service in 2008 as a Leader in Motion (LIM), but she's been a leader in her community for a long time before that.
At the end of November 2021, residents and workers in military housing and offices near Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, began complaining of fuel-like odors in their water. By the time December began, testing revealed contamination of water supplying a number of military housing areas and base facilities.
The Non-Appropriated Funds (NAF) Travel Pay office at Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS) Texarkana has an interesting mission. They are responsible for making payments for Morale and Welfare Recreation (MWR) program travel.
Two Defense Finance and Accounting Service employees published books this past year based on their life experiences. The wife of Brian K. Lewis died from a rare form of stomach cancer, and his book "When God Doesn't Heal" describes their faith journey. Jennifer J. Griffin wrote a children's book in honor of her daughter so that children like her could see more representation. Griffin's book is called "Chyra's Chronicles, When Chyra Gets a Dog."
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 18, 2021 – Call them chocolate peanut butter balls, candy, or anything of the sort, and you might get a questionable look (in Ohio). They are called Buckeyes.