- Muni Investors Brace for Hospital-Bond Pain From Medicaid Cuts.
- One Big Act: Tax-Exempt Bonds Avoid Annihilation – Squire Patton Boggs
- WSJ: A Mystery in the High-Yield Muni Market: What Are the Riskiest Bonds Worth?
- US Airports Rush to Bond Market With $10 Billion of New Sales.
- Megawatts to Megabytes: Orrick’s 2025 Guide to Developing, Financing & Powering Data Centers
- GFOA: Taking the Pulse of Local Government Finance
- Ohio Enacts Law Regulating Ransomware Payments and Cybersecurity: Thompson Hine LLP
- Fort Worth Bitcoin Mining Pilot: A Path for Municipal Crypto Adoption
- And Finally, Department of Redundancy Department – The State of the Great State of Maine Edition is brought to us this week by Rinaldi v. Maine Correctional Center, in which the titular (hee, hee) state sorely tests our patience. Let’s start with the court handing down the decision: The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine. Oh, the Judicial court! Without that qualifier we would have assumed that it was the Diana Ross and the Supremes Court of Maine. Then there’s the opinion itself, in which Ms. Ross informs us that, “The Maine Correctional Center complex is fully surrounded by a locked, gated fence.” Ah. There are those who might suggest that this would go without saying. The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine is clearly not one of those. The one bright spot is that Your Editor misread, “the road was not adapted to realty” as “the road was not adapted to reality.” Which is much, much funnier. You know how Hemingway stated that he drank to make other people interesting? I resort to weapons-grade hallucinogens to make the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine tolerable.
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