- Illinois
CHICAGO — Underwriters, financial advisers, and bond counsel interested in working on upcoming general obligation issues for Cook County, Ill., have until tomorrow at 10 a.m. to submit their interest to the county.
March 3 -
CHICAGO — Faced with aging infrastructure and a pledge to not raise taxes, Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard wants to use public-private partnerships to raise new revenue that could fund water and sewer upgrades and other citywide projects.
March 2 - Nebraska
Strengthened by a voter-approved income tax increase last year, triple-A rated Columbus will be able to move forward with a number of capital projects this year, Mayor Michael Coleman said in his 11th annual state of the city address last week.
March 2 - Nebraska
A bill that would have paved the way for Nebraska cities to create separate political subdivisions to issue bonds and impose new taxes appeared dead for the year after lawmakers sent it back to committee Monday.
March 2 - Michigan
Fitch Ratings downgraded to BBB-plus from A-minus $30 million of general obligation bonds issued by the Lincoln Park School District outside Detroit.
March 2 -
CHICAGO — Cincinnati-based public finance law firm Peck, Shaffer & Williams LLP has tapped bond counsel veteran Carol Olson to head up the firm’s tax and financial analysis group.
March 1 - Nebraska
CHICAGO — Douglas County School District 1, Nebraska’s largest school system, will enter the market this week with $89.5 million of refunding bonds.
February 26 - Michigan
CHICAGO — Voters across Michigan approved a series of school bond proposals in Tuesday’s election, while splitting on controversial tax increases proposed by two struggling cities in Oakland County.
February 25 -
CHICAGO — The Indianapolis Local Public Improvement Bond Bank today will price $466.6 million of debt, marking the second piece of financing for a new $754 million public safety hospital in downtown Indianapolis.
February 23 - Ohio
Toledo Mayor Mike Bell last week said he decided not ask voters to increase the city’s income tax but will support a proposal giving it greater flexibility in how it spends part of the revenue.
February 23 - Ohio
Standard & Poor’s last week awarded a three-notch upgrade to the Lake Michigan Shoreline Water and Sewage Treatment Authority based on the strengthened credit quality of two of its members.
February 23 - Michigan
More than a third of Detroit’s residential lots are either vacant or contain abandoned buildings, but more than 90% of the remaining occupied parcels are in good or fair condition, according to a massive new report on the city’s housing stock that was released last week.
February 23 -
CHICAGO — Lincoln, Neb., would partner with the University of Nebraska to build a $344 million arena on a stretch of blighted rail yard west of downtown under a plan that will go before the city’s voters in May.
February 22 -
After two years of turmoil, the nonprofit health care sector might see some relief in 2010, Standard & Poor's said in a new outlook report.
February 18 -
The Michigan Department of Transportation says a report released this week confirms the need for a proposed $2.3 billion, bond-financed bridge spanning the busy trade route between Detroit and Canada.
February 17 - Ohio
Ohio will sell $146 million of general obligation bonds Monday in a transaction that includes $120 million of new-money taxable Build America Bonds and just under $26 million of fixed-rate tax-exempt refunding bonds.
February 16 -
Moody's Investors Service downgraded the Health Alliance of Greater Cincinnati to A2 from A1 after two hospitals separated from the five-hospital system and two more have said they intend to leave. The outlook remains negative.
February 16 - Michigan
CHICAGO — Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm yesterday unveiled a $47 billion all-funds fiscal 2011 budget that eliminates a $1.8 billion shortfall in part by imposing a tax on services and cutting state employee retirement and health care benefits.
February 11 -
CHICAGO — A central Indiana task force yesterday unveiled a nearly $10 billion regional transportation plan that recommends imposing a local sales tax and building express toll lanes to help keep Indianapolis competitive in the Midwest.
February 10 -
CHICAGO — Fitch Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service are maintaining their negative outlooks on the nonprofit health care sector, warning that the industry faces a slew of pressures ranging from risks associated with variable-rate debt to the uncertainty of national health care reform and the likelihood of state and federal reimbursement cuts over the next 12 to 18 months.
February 9


