- Pennsylvania
According to the report, the city absorbed $264 million of incinerator bond debt that year.
July 25 -
Neil Grover of the taxpayer group Harrisburg Debt Watch will resume the battle against receiver William Lynch over tripling the earned-income tax in Pennsylvania's capital city.
July 24 -
The school's Aa1 rating is at risk after the NCAA imposed a $60 million fine for its role in a child sex-abuse scandal.
July 24 -
A court hearing looms on a state receiver's lawsuit demanding that it triple the city's income tax.
July 23 -
The rating agency does not expect the NCAA's $60 million fine to immediately affect the long-term ratings on various revenue bonds issued by and for the school.
July 23 - Pennsylvania
The City Council has introduced tentative agreements with the police and fire unions that reflect the state Supreme Court ruling last fall.
July 20 - Pennsylvania
A new Pennsylvania law will consolidate the functions of the Securities Commission into the Department of Banking to form a new Department of Banking and Securities.
July 20 -
Mark Schwartz, who has represented the Harrisburg City Council since October and filed a Chapter 9 petition on its behalf, withdrew from its most recent filing from the Commonwealth Court, saying he has not been paid.
July 20 - Pennsylvania
A local private-sector consultant, invoking the 1975 New York City crisis, says M&T should tell the Pennsylvania city to drop dead.
July 19 - Pennsylvania
But employees, who have gotten the federal minimum since July 6, will not get back pay yet as the city lacks the funds.
July 18 - Pennsylvania
The rating agency, one day after lowering the state's GO bond rating to Aa2 from Aa1, took further action affecting the Keystone State.
July 17 -
After a long, bumpy road, Gov. Tom Corbett signs a bill that establishes a framework for infrastructure public-private partnerships.
July 15 -
But the teetering city, frozen out of the capital markets and under national glare for paying employees the minimum wage in defiance of a court order, must agree to a revised recovery plan.
July 13 -
The broke city has yet another problem. It can't sell its sewer conveyance system to a local authority, as projected, because the authority has owned it since 1968.
July 11 -
In the aftermath of financial guarantees by Scranton, Penn. and Stockton, Calif. recently contributing to the cities' defaults, the Government Accounting Standards Board is seeking to improve the visibility of these guarantees.
July 10 -
William Lynch wants a state court to force the City Council to raise the earned-income levy to 1.5% from 0.5%.
July 10 -
Linda Thompson proposes ending a five-year old incinerator fee agreement with the Harrisburg Authority public works agency that she said would redirect $275,000 per year to Pennsylvania's distressed capital city.
July 9 - Pennsylvania
The joint venture between The Carlyle Group and Sunoco, Inc. that will save a Philadelphia refinery from closing its doors is a credit positive for the city, Moody's Investors Service said.
July 9 -
A Lackawanna County, Pa., judge late Friday enjoined Scranton from paying its employees only the federal minimum wage, but the mayor of the cash-strapped city said there's no money left with which to comply.
July 6 -
Penn State University will endure the "trauma and potential credit stress" from the child sex-abuse conviction of former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky and expected claims, Janney Capital Markets said.
July 6


