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An appellate court ruling could mean increased financial pressure for cities that transfer revenue from electric utilities to general operating funds, Fitch Ratings warned in a report.
February 11 -
The Missouri Senate will vote Thursday on legislation tightening limits on how much local governments can rely on court-related fines to prop up their operating budgets.
February 11 -
Opponents of California's High Speed Rail project filed an appeal Monday challenging a ruling that favored federal jurisdiction over California environmental regulations on a segment of the line from Fresno to Bakersfield.
February 11 -
Bond insurers Assured Guaranty and MBIA may be among the beneficiaries after a federal judge ruled Puerto Rico's Recovery Act was unconstitutional, according to analysts at BTIG LLC.
February 10 -
Owners of the bankrupt Indiana Toll Road assured a federal bankruptcy judge recently that they expect to find a new owner for the 75-year lease within a few months and that the asset could fetch as much as $5 billion.
February 10 -
A federal court rejection of Puerto Rico's public corporation bankruptcy law has heightened uncertainty about the future of Puerto Rico debt.
February 9 -
Nebraska legislators will hold a public hearing March 3 on a bill that would give bondholders priority over retirees in the event of a bankruptcy.
February 9 -
A day after Wayne County officials warned of a grim financial picture, Moody's Investors Service stripped the county of its investment-grade rating and Fitch Ratings put its already junk-bond ratings on negative watch.
February 9 -
Fitch Ratings, which already maintains junk ratings on Wayne County, Mich., put the ratings on a negative watch just hours after the release of a new audit that warns the county could be out of cash by next summer.
February 6 -
Having sold its incinerator, Harrisburg, Pa., has a new symbol of a deal gone sour: a 12-story downtown office building, subject of a $6.9 million borrowing in 1998 that straddled the city with $42 million in debt service the city recently restructured.
February 6 -
Connecticut will receive $36 million of a $1.4 billion multistate settlement with Standard & Poor's over allegations that S&P misled investors, state officials announced.
February 5 -
The newly elected head of Wayne County Michigan, home to Detroit, warned Thursday that the county is on track to run out of cash by August 2016, calling it financial Armageddon.
February 5 -
In a formal written opinion, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Klein reiterated that bankruptcy law gave Stockton, Calif. the legal authority to impair pensions, even though the city chose not to.
February 5 -
The Republican parties of New York State and Tennessee will square off against the Securities and Exchange Commission in oral arguments in a federal court March 23 over rules restricting finance professionals from giving money to political candidates.
February 5 -
The Association of Bay Area Governments plans to reimburse San Francisco the $1.3 million missing from a city redevelopment fund after an alleged theft by its finance director and conduct a forensic audit the transactions he worked on.
February 4 -
Ex-JPMorgan bankers have asked a federal judge to dismiss federal pay-to-play charges related to the sewer deals that helped push Jefferson County, Ala., into bankruptcy.
February 3 -
As if bond rating downgrades, a $50 billion unfunded pension liability and teetering school districts werent enough, Pennsylvania must wrestle with more political scandal as its treasurer resigns to plead guilty after a federal investigation.
February 2 -
Moody's Investors Service has placed Kern County under review for a possible downgrade affecting approximately $86 million in debt.
February 2 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a motion for summary judgment in its securities fraud case against two former JPMorgan bankers involved in Jefferson County's sewer deals and swaps.
January 30 -
Pennsylvania Treasurer Rob McCord resigned late Friday, effective immediately, as news reports swirled that he will plead guilty to charges of threatening would-be campaign contributors with the loss of state business.
January 30














