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A Government Finance Officers Association committee approved three recommended practices documents at its winter meeting here last week, including one that urges issuers to hire financial advisers when pricing bonds in negotiated sales and another that says finance officers should play "a central, functional role" in teams exploring or negotiating privatization projects.
February 2 -
BRADENTON, Fla. - The Palm Beach County, Fla., Commission is being urged to delay approval of a financial adviser's contract in light of a series of alleged bond-related misdeeds that led to the resignation of one commissioner and a guilty plea by her underwriter husband.
February 2 -
CHICAGO - The Illinois Senate unanimously voted 59 to 0 to remove Gov. Rod Blagojevich from office for abusing his power, following a four-day impeachment trial during which senators heard what they described as "damning" evidence that he broke the law and sought to trade jobs, legislation, and President Obama's Senate seat for personal gain.
January 30 -
WASHINGTON - Market participants are urging Treasury Department and Federal Reserve officials to create a post for a municipal market expert or "czar" who would provide knowledge about the market and its needs to the administration's policymakers, and some of those officials appear to be open to the idea.
January 30 -
The North American Securities Administrators Association yesterday called for Congress to regulate derivatives and hedge funds as well as impose a fiduciary duty on all investment professionals.
January 30 -
BRADENTON, Fla. - The federal judge presiding over the criminal case against Birmingham, Ala., Mayor Larry Langford and two of his friends in the bond business has scheduled a conference call for Wednesday to discuss the status of the case.
January 30 -
SAN FRANCISCO - California officials say the state has done enough to fix health care at its prisons and a federal court should dismiss a receiver who has ordered the state to spend $8 billion to build and renovate prison hospitals.
January 30 -
WASHINGTON - The Investment Company Institute, the group that represents mutual funds and other investment companies, is pushing for improvements to municipal disclosure, which it generally considers limited, non-standardized, and stale.
January 30 -
BRADENTON, Fla. - Jefferson County, Ala., commissioners yesterday approved a pared-down contract to hire Washington-based Book Hill Partners LLC to lobby for federal financial aid amid controversy about the expense of such an action.
January 28 -
WASHINGTON - The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board is expected this week to discuss whether to change its Rule G-37 to restrict broker-dealer contributions to campaign committees that urge voters to approve ballot measures for new muni bond issues.
January 27 -
CHICAGO - The Illinois Senate yesterday opened its historic impeachment trial of Gov. Rod Blagojevich as the governor took to the national airwaves in a series of talk-show and news interviews, in which he proclaimed his innocence on corruption charges and argued lawmakers want him out so they can raise taxes.
January 27 -
SAN FRANCISCO - Vallejo, Calif., has tentatively agreed to contract changes with its police union, the first breakthrough in months of negotiations on a plan for the city to exit bankruptcy.
January 27 -
SAN FRANCISCO - California Attorney General Jerry Brown is investigating allegations of bid-rigging in sales of derivatives and guaranteed investment contracts to municipalities.
January 26 -
Mary Schapiro, who is poised to be sworn in today as the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, will push to broaden the agency's responsibilities as well as to boost its funding levels, she told a top Democratic lawmaker last week.
January 26 -
BRADENTON, Fla. - Jefferson County, Ala., commissioners tomorrow will be asked to approve a $950,000 contract to hire Washington-based Book Hill Partners LLC.
January 26 -
WASHINGTON - Senate Banking Committee members Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and Richard Shelby, R-Ala., introduced legislation yesterday that would provide an additional $110 million for federal law enforcement agencies to boost the number of investigators and prosecutors of white-collar crimes that have contributed to the ongoing financial crisis.
January 23 -
WASHINGTON - The House yesterday voted 260-166 to pass legislation that would establish new conditions for the disbursement of the second $350 billion portion of the Troubled Assets Relief Program, including a provision clarifying that the Treasury Department has the authority to help the municipal bond market.
January 22 -
Christopher Cox stepped down as the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission Tuesday, after having been criticized for acting too slowly on the financial crisis and failing to protect investors.
January 22 -
CHICAGO - Former Bear, Stearns & Co. public finance banker P. Nicholas Hurtgen faces a March trial on federal charges that he participated in an extortion scheme involving a Chicago-area hospital as it sought Illinois regulatory approval to build a new facility.
January 22 -
CHICAGO - An appeals court in Chicago is expected to rule within the next 60 days on Indiana-based Hoosier Energy Electric Cooperative Inc.'s efforts to stall a demand for a $120 million termination payment on a lease transaction triggered by the downgrade of the transaction's insurer.
January 22



