-
Paige Cognetti will fill out the term of Bill Courtright, who resigned and pleaded guilty to corruption charges.
November 6 -
Strong investor demand for Philadelphia bonds underscores the city’s fiscal strides, according to Jim Kenney.
October 25 -
The expiration of a federal highway bill could provide a catalyst for expanding bonds, according to former Senate Finance Committee tax counsel, Ryan Abraham.
October 24 -
Interest rates the district will pay on a recent $600 million deal are lower than it paid in its previous bond deal a year and a half ago.
October 23 -
Greater Nanticoke Area School District has posted a legal notice of plans to float bonds in an amount "not to exceed" $17.5 million, to be used for "advanced refunding of the school district's outstanding general obligation bond." The move is projected to save about $600,000.
October 4 -
Fitch Ratings upgraded the district to BB-plus from BB-minus.
October 3 -
The legal teams for Baltimore and Philadelphia asked the court to reject the banks’ plausibility argument as well as their claim that the suit is barred by a four-year statute of limitations.
October 1 -
Penn Hills School District officials hope to save millions through bond refinancing.
September 24 -
-
-
An influential message in the locker room at Temple University's football practice facility has resonated throughout Christian Dunbar's professional life.
September 5 -
Municipal bond issuers in the Northeast sold $44.9 billion of municipal bonds in the first half of 2019, down 7% compared to the first half of 2018.
August 16 -
Buoyed by strong investor demand, Philadelphia reported millions in savings from a $293.4 million general obligation bond sale.
August 12 -
The review of the final credit, Chicago's senior-lien water bonds, was resolved when the bonds were defeased.
August 9 -
Rasheia R. Johnson has returned to the firm where she worked before joining Mayor Jim Kenney's administration in 2016.
August 8 -
The complaint filed by Philadelphia and Baltimore fails to rise to the level of specificity needed to prove conspiracy, Wall Street banks told a federal judge.
July 31 -
The rating agency cited an on-time budget and a rainy-day deposit in boosting its outlook on Pennsylvania's AA-minus rating to stable from negative.
July 31 -
The ruling on tax assessments orders Philadelphia to repay $48 million, with $34 million coming from the school district.
July 22 -
An oversight board approved Philadelphia’s financial plan with some caveats about revenue projections in the event of a recession.
July 17 -
Bill Courtright surrendered in a Pennsylvania federal court to plead guilty on pay-to-play charges, one day after he resigned as Scranton's mayor.
July 3























