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.”
- Pennsylvania
Rebranding and internal improvements paid off for Capital Region Water the former Harrisburg Authority which landed its first investment-grade rating since 2011.
By Paul BurtonApril 4 -
As the battlefield shifts to its 2017 budget from its 2016 budget, Pennsylvanias sharp political divide has had heavy ramifications in the capital markets.
By Paul BurtonApril 1 -
States and cities should prioritize OPEB overhaul as much as they do pension overhaul, according to a Manhattan Institute report.
By Paul BurtonMarch 31 - Pennsylvania
Scranton, Pa.s pending $195 million wastewater sale could help end its long stay in a state oversight program for distressed cities, Mayor Bill Courtright said.
By Paul BurtonMarch 31 -
The University of Connecticut intends to sell $342 million of GO bonds under its UConn 2000 infrastructure improvement program, including a $42 million refunding.
By Paul BurtonMarch 31 - Connecticut
Connecticut lawmakers approved a plan to close an estimated $220 million deficit for fiscal 2016, while a nearly $1 billion shortfall for the following year hovers.
By Paul BurtonMarch 30 - New York
One-third of New York small business owners endure long waits for approvals to open shop, according to city Comptroller Scott Stringers red-tape panel.
By Paul BurtonMarch 29 - Massachusetts
Connecticut, home to the two tribal casinos that launched a gambling boom in the northeast, may become a victim of that boom as gambling behemoth MGM builds a casino just across the state line in Massachusetts.
By Paul BurtonMarch 24 - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania finally has a state budget but remains vulnerable to more rating downgrades, said a Philadelphia-based municipal strategist.
By Paul BurtonMarch 24 - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said he would allow the nine-months-late fiscal 2016 budget to become law without his signature.
By Paul BurtonMarch 23 -
New Yorks MTA expects to know the fate of its five-year capital program by the end of the month, said Chairman Thomas Prendergast.
By Paul BurtonMarch 23 -
Following a consultant's scathing report, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer's office has set out to streamline the Bureau of Asset Management.
By Paul BurtonMarch 21 -
Scranton, Pa., may finance its $31.5 million back-pay settlement with police and fire unions with a refunding of some of its $50 million stranded parking authority debt, officials said.
By Paul BurtonMarch 18 - Pennsylvania
Gov. Tom Wolf and the Pennsylvania legislature are still at odds over a tardy $30 billion fiscal 2016 budget, even after lawmakers sent him another version.
By Paul BurtonMarch 17 -
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority intends to hand its oversight board a $2 billion budget that trims its structural deficit from $242 million to $80 million.
By Paul BurtonMarch 16 -
So-called headline and political risk, notably in Pennsylvania, could further complicate an already difficult muni landscape, according to PNC Capital Markets.
By Paul BurtonMarch 15 -
A settlement over back pay for the citys police and fire unions is a major step to financial recovery in Scranton, Pa., says Mayor Bill Courtright.
By Paul BurtonMarch 14 -
The savings are that New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio trumpets from significant changes to the citys employee health plans are a matter of debate.
By Paul BurtonMarch 11 -
Revised outlooks to negative from two of the four bond rating agencies represent bittersweet news for Connecticut, said state Treasurer Denise Nappier.
By Paul BurtonMarch 10 - Connecticut
Connecticuts bond outlook was revised to negative from stable by Moodys Investors Service, citing budget strains from weakening demographics.
By Paul BurtonMarch 9













