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US Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, who is overseeing Detroit's bankruptcy, ruled in favor of the city Monday when he dismissed a restraining order blocking the city's ability to shut off water to nonpaying customers.
September 29 -
Detroit Friday gained Michigan's final approval for a plan to issue $1.1 billion of bonds for a bankruptcy exit financing and to raise money to pay off several creditors.
September 26 - Ohio
Ohio has launched what officials say is a first-of-its-kind program that creates a new state-backed credit for local government note issuers.
September 26 -
Detroit officials regained control of most government functions, while remaining under state-controlled emergency management, after the city council late Thursday adopted a resolution that keeps Kevyn Orr on as manager with reduced powers until the bankruptcy is over.
September 25 -
Chicago officials said the city's O'Hare International Airport is on pace to reclaim the title of the world's busiest airport by flights, a title it ceded a decade ago to Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson Memorial Airport.
September 25 - Missouri
Moberly, Missouri has adopted new debt management policies as it seeks to repair its junk bond credit bruised over a failure to make good on bonds sold for a troubled artificial sweetener construction project.
September 25 -
Batavia, Ill., officials plan to ask the Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan's office to examine the city's 2007 decision to purchase power from the controversial bond-financed, coal-fired Prairie State Energy Campus.
September 25 -
A day after Michigan gave a $2.6 million loan to the city of Allen Park, Gov. Rick Snyder declared that the Detroit suburb's financial emergency is resolved, allowing the city's emergency manager, Joyce Parker, to formally step aside.
September 25 - Iowa
Moody's Investors Service has raised by one notch its sales tax ratings on three Iowa school districts to reflect an extension of their sales tax base not previously factored into its ratings by Moody's.
September 24 -
A federal judge granted class action status to an investor lawsuit accusing the former Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc. of securities fraud for its role in underwriting $39 million of defaulted bonds issued for a failed artificial sweetener plan in Moberly, Missouri.
September 24





