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CHICAGO — Illinois plans to sell $3.7 billion of taxable general obligation bonds Tuesday and Wednesday, the state said this morning.
February 18 - Michigan
CHICAGO — New Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder presented a $45.9 billion all-funds fiscal 2012 budget that features $1.8 billion in cuts and what the governor dubbed a sweeping overhaul of the state’s tax structure.
February 17 - Illinois
CHICAGO — Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn Wednesday unveiled a $53 billion fiscal 2012 budget that relies on a controversial $8.75 billion bond sale to pay off a huge backlog of bills bogging down the cash-strapped state.
February 16 - Minnesota
CHICAGO — Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton unveiled a two-year, $64 billion spending plan that relies heavily on income tax increases to overcome a $6.2 billion shortfall.
February 15 - Illinois
CHICAGO — Illinois has postponed its $3.7 billion taxable general obligation bond sale scheduled for Thursday until next week to give investors time to digest Gov. Pat Quinn’s budget proposal Wednesday.
February 15 -
An Illinois surge helped issuance volume in the Midwest rise more than 26% last year, to $83.8 billion.
February 15 - Wisconsin
A week before Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker presents a fiscal 2012 budget, he unveiled a controversial “budget repair” bill that implements a number of strategies, including major employee cuts, to eliminate the state’s current $137 million shortfall.
February 15 - Michigan
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources last Friday gave an initial green light to a new coal-fired power plant to be located in the city of Holland.
February 15 - Michigan
Cash-strapped Detroit estimates it spent $1.24 million on snow removal and clean-up from the blizzard that swept across much of the Midwest two weeks ago.
February 15 - Michigan
The Detroit Water and Sewerage Department will now be run by a new regional water board, ending months of negotiation between city and county officials.
February 15 - Iowa
Moody’s Investors Services last week affirmed its Aa2 rating on the Cedar Rapids School District but revised the outlook to negative, warning of narrowed reserves and ongoing challenges to replenishing its fund balance.
February 15 - Indiana
The population of Gary lost nearly a quarter of its population in the last decade, according to 2010 census figures released last week.
February 15 - Michigan
CHICAGO — Michigan would give emergency financial managers who are appointed to take over local governments the authority to terminate labor contracts under a proposed overhaul of the state’s main law for dealing with fiscally stressed credits.
February 11 -
CHICAGO — Detroit Public Schools’ emergency financial manager Robert Bobb is pushing Michigan lawmakers to enact a bill that would insulate a chunk of the district’s debt from bankruptcy to address concerns by the debt’s bond insurer.
February 9 -
New Gov. John Kasich said again last week that he is considering leasing the Ohio Turnpike, a move that could bring in $2.4 billion. Of that, the state would have to pay off $600 million of outstanding debt, which would need to be defeased in the event of privatization.
February 8 - Missouri
Moody’s Investors Service last week downgraded Springfield’s waterworks utility revenue bonds to Aa3 from Aa1, citing consolidation of the water revenue pledge and the public utility pledge into one combined utility security.
February 8 - Michigan
Michigan has diverted more than $4 billion in state revenue that was intended for local governments in order to balance its budgets over the last few years, according to the Michigan Municipal League.
February 8 -
Indiana college and university officials say they need at least $700 million for new capital projects, but lawmakers say they are unlikely to fund the requests in the cash-strapped state’s upcoming two-year budget.
February 8 - Indiana
The Indiana House last week unanimously passed a bill to set up a House-Senate committee that would spend five years examining the condition of the state’s roads, bridges, and other infrastructure.
February 8 - Indiana
A pair of Indianapolis state senators have introduced a bill that would repeal two future tax increases aimed at boosting the board that runs the city’s sports venues and convention center.
February 8
