Paul Burton is the Northeast Regional Editor for The Bond Buyer. His major coverage has included New York City and MTA finances; the Harrisburg, Pa., debt crisis; the 38 Studios bond financing fiasco in Rhode Island; and unfunded pension liability. Paul hosts podcasts and videos and has moderated at Bond Buyer conferences. Previously, Paul was senior editor and copy chief at M&A-oriented financial media company The Deal LLC. His award-winning career has spanned financial, sports and political journalism. A Boston native, Paul is the author of the book “Tales from the Newsrooms.” He is a frequent public speaker and has appeared as an expert on municipal debt on radio and television shows, including former CBS News White House correspondent Sharyl Attkisson’s public-affairs program, “Full Measure.”
- Rhode Island
Pawtucket, R.I., received a two-notch upgrade to A3 from Moodys, which cited the 71,000-population citys improved and stabilized financial position.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 20 - New York
A city agency unanimously approved the New York Yankees stadium bond refunding of roughly $1 billion.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 20 - Connecticut
Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin timed his latest dire financial picture about his citys government with a call for a regional approach to problem solving in Connecticuts cities.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 16 - New York
The New York Yankees expect to price a $1.2 billion stadium bond refunding in mid-October.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 15 - New York
Four investment management firms received awards from New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer for diversity initiatives on behalf of city pension funds.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 13 - New York
Municipal bonds played a key role in New York Citys rebound from the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 12 - Connecticut
Admitting its budget imbalance problem is Connecticut's first step to reversing bond rating downgrades, said state Comptroller Kevin Lembo.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 12 - New York
Industry professionals 15 years later share memories of the terrorist attack on New York and how it still shapes their perspectives.
By Paul Burton and Christine AlbanoSeptember 9 -
Rhode Island will use $400 million under its RhodeWorks infrastructure initiative to rebuild and replace bridges at a crumbling Providence interchange.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 7 -
Surety provider Arch Insurance will take over costs and oversee construction of a stalled minor-league ballpark in Hartford, Conn., Mayor Luke Bronin announced.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 7 -
The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission is headed toward a fiscal pileup that could imperil the states entire transportation system, said state Auditor General Eugene DePasquale.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 7 -
The New York City Transitional Finance Authority intends to sell roughly $1 billion of future tax-secured subordinate bonds later this month.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 6 - Connecticut
Fitch downgraded Connecticut's outstanding special tax obligation bonds to AA-minus from AA, citing its revised U.S. tax-supported rating criteria.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 2 - Rhode Island
Rhode Island ended fiscal 2016 with a $167 million surplus, or $44 million more than expected, said Gov. Gina Raimondo.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 2 - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Auditor General Eugene DePasquale has begun an audit of Pittsburgh's public pension plan and repeated his call for statewide overhaul.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 1 -
The National Development Council closed its $32 million parking system transaction with Scranton, Pa.
By Paul BurtonSeptember 1 - New York
The New York Yankees intend to refinance more than $1 billion in tax-exempt revenue bonds issued to build their latest stadium.
By Paul BurtonAugust 30 -
Amtrak countersued the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority over $30 million for track maintenance between Boston and Rhode Island.
By Paul BurtonAugust 29 -
Fifty years ago, Rhode Island Health and Educational Building Corp. issued a $1.6 million bond for a now-defunct biblical school. Since then it has handled roughly $7.4 billion in debt.
By Paul BurtonAugust 26 - Connecticut
Connecticut's two largest pension funds exceeded benchmarks but only returned 0.26% and 0.25%, state Treasurer Denise Nappier announced.
By Paul BurtonAugust 23














