Yvette was a senior reporter, covering the Midwest. She earned a bachelors in journalism from Columbia College Chicago, began her reporting career at the storied City News Bureau of Chicago, and joined the Bond Buyer in 1997 leading Midwest coverage from her hometown Chicago.
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The spat between Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner and the Chicago Public Schools could threaten the school district's authority to borrow, if the governor gets his way.
February 22 - Missouri
St. Louis and Missouri leaders say they wont waver in paying off Edward Jones Dome bonds, though the stadiums National Football Leagues tenant has decamped for California and state lawmakers may balk.
February 22 -
The Illinois Board of Education has opened an investigation of Chicago school finances, the latest sign tensions between Chicago Public Schools and Gov. Bruce Rauner.
February 19 - Wisconsin
Gonzalez Saggio & Harlan LLP, a national minority-owned law firm based in Milwaukee with an 11-strong public finance team, will shut down at the end of this month.
February 18 - Illinois
Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner introduced his fiscal 2017 spending plan by asking the legislature's Democratic majorities to support at least some of his policy proposals or give him sweeping powers to balance the state's books.
February 17 - Ohio
Chicago-based investment bank William Blair is moving into Ohio by hiring of a team of veteran public finance bankers from Fifth Third Securities.
February 17 -
Legislation to fund Illinois' community college payments and student financial aid grants was delivered to Gov. Bruce Rauner's desk Tuesday.
February 16 -
Continuing turmoil at the College of DuPage, Ill., cost the two-year school one of its triple-A ratings as Standard & Poor's cut it two notches to AA.
February 16 - Illinois
Illinois elected leaders have plenty of advice about how to solve their budget problems, with no sign that they are going to take any of it.
February 11 -
The U.S. Justice Department filed suit against Ferguson, Mo., after the city rejected portions of a negotiated consent decree stemming from a fatal police shooting, adding more financial uncertainty for the citys already junk-rated credit.
February 11 - Michigan
Detroits old water and sewer debt is now investment-grade across the board for the first time since the city left bankruptcy.
February 10 -
The head of the agency that accredits Illinois' state universities issued a warning to state leaders as the schools struggle in the absence of state funding because of a continued budget stalemate.
February 9 -
Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc. will pay $850,000 to settle securities fraud charges brought by Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander over the firm's underwriting of $39 million of bonds issued for a failed artificial sweetener plant.
February 8 - Minnesota
Minnesota is offering $350 million of its high-grade state revolving paper in a competitive sale set for Tuesday.
February 8 - Illinois
The head of Chicago Public Schools said this weeks deal may mark the end of the troubled districts market access until it makes significant financial changes.
February 4 - Illinois
Battered by negative headlines about its solvency, labor troubles, and a state takeover threat, the Chicago Board of Education returned to the market Wednesday after a one-week delay to price a scaled-down deal that offered a hefty high yield of 8.50%.
February 3 -
The Chicago school district, bringing $875 million to market Wednesday after a week's delay, is amplifying its support for the idea that the bonds' pledged tax revenue stream could survive a Chapter 9 bankruptcy.
February 3 - Illinois
Chicago Public Schools said it will price its delayed $875 million bond sale Wednesday, amid heightened acrimony with its teachers union and a renewed state takeover threat.
February 2 - Illinois
Illinois is on pace to close out the fiscal year with a $10 billion to $12 billion backlog of unpaid bills as the state moves into its eighth month without a budget, state comptroller Leslie Geissler Munger said.
February 2 - Illinois
The junk-rated Chicago Board of Education plans to price its delayed deal as soon as this week amid headlines that include a fresh downgrade and possible progress on a new teachers' contract.
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