- New York
Seasonal borrowing for fiscal 2015 will not be necessary, thereby saving New York City $75 million in debt- service costs, Comptroller Scott Stringer said.
June 6 -
Health-care cost savings in contracts between New York City and its municipal labor unions should be recurring and "bend the cost curve" by making the system operate more efficiently, said Carol Kellermann, president of the Citizens Budget Commission watchdog organization.
June 6 -
Infrastructure in New York City and around the Northeast is crumbling. How to pay to fix it is a question without easy answers.
June 6 - New York
Fitch's AA rating of New York City's general obligation bonds reflects the city's effective management, said a spokesman for Mayor Bill de Blasio's budget office.
June 5 - New York
The Suffolk County, N.Y. legislature is taking steps to both increase and decrease the county's borrowing.
June 4 - New York
Stronger than expected tax revenue has narrowed outyear budget gaps for New York City, said city Comptroller Scott Stringer.
June 4 -
HUD's post-Sandy program awarded combined $540 million for a 10-mile berm along Manhattan's Lower East Side, a living breakwater along Staten Island's shore and protection for the Hunts Point food market and Long Island waterways.
June 2 -
The Federal Transit Administration awarded about $167 million to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and $67 million to New Jersey Transit to help both agencies continue rebuilding and replacing after Hurricane Sandy.
May 30 - New York
Comptroller Scott Stringer named 27-year TIAA-CREF veteran Scott Evans chief investment officer for the $150 billion New York City pension funds.
May 29 - New York
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is negotiating a deal with developer Larry Silverstein to cut the transportation infrastructure operator's risk and increase its potential gain from the construction of Three World Trade Center.
May 28 - New York
New York City's economic growth outpaced the nation in the first quarter of 2014, said Comptroller Scott Stringer.
May 28 - New York
New York City plans to price $850 million of tax-exempt, fixed-rate refunding bonds on June 11 after a two-day retail order period.
May 27 -
A de Blasio administration official disputed a Barclays report that called New York City's agreement with the United Federation of Teachers a credit negative.
May 23 - New York
Robert Lurie, in what he called 'a welcome return to the bond market,' was named executive vice president and CFO of the New York Power Authority.
May 22 -
The risk of a Long Island Rail Road strike hovers over officials at New York's MTA, even as board members approved a five-year deal with its subway workers.
May 21 - New Jersey
How utilities pay for damage related to Hurricane Sandy affects credit quality, Standard & Poor's said in a report.
May 20 -
The State University of New York is starting to shut down its money-losing Long Island College Hospital.
May 19 -
Public finance guru Richard Ravitch, in a lengthy interview, discusses his new book and how cities and states haven't learned from New York's 1975 fiscal crisis.
May 16 - New York
Moody's Investors Service has upgraded Yonkers, N.Y., general obligation bonds to A3 from Baa1 on Monday.
May 13 - New York
Mayor Bill de Blasio's 10-year plan to build and preserve so-called affordable housing is credit neutral for New York City, according to Moody's.
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