- GASB Requests Input on Proposals to Improve Key Components of Government Financial Reports.
- GASB Adds Resources to Emergency Toolbox Addressing Issues Arising from COVID-19 Pandemic.
- NFMA Cybersecurity White Paper.
- NABL Submits Letter to IRS and Treasury.
- LIBOR Summer Update: Regulatory Scrutiny Heats Up on Transition Preparedness – Sherman & Sterling
- SEC Identifies LIBOR Preparedness as an Examination Priority – Sherman & Sterling
- NABL: SEC, MSRB, FINRA to Hold Virtual Program for Municipal Advisors
- GFOA 25th Annual Governmental GAAP Update: Webinar
- Weiss v. People ex rel. Department of Transportation – Supreme Court of California holds that Eminent Domain Law motion for requesting a ruling on evidentiary or other legal issue affecting determination of compensation would not be imported into inverse condemnation proceedings, disapproving Dina v. People ex rel. Dept. of Transportation.
- And finally, Capture the Tort Claim is brought to us this week by Erickson v. Canyons School District, in which high-school student Juel [sic] Erickson was attending an assembly in the high-school gym. “Before the assembly, a supervisor confiscated a home-made flag, fastened to a pole, from junior class officers and placed it on the east side of the gym. When a student retrieved the flagpole, the supervisor instructed another student to reconfiscate it. That student placed the confiscated flagpole underneath the bleachers, from where yet another student retrieved it. Student then climbed to the top of the bleachers and threw the flagpole into the crowd of students below, striking Erickson in the head and knocking her unconscious. No high school employee called an ambulance or provided Erickson with any medical care. Erickson thereafter ‘suffer[ed] from neck injuries and post-concussive symptoms.’” Among the many questions raised by this incident, one stands out: WHAT IN THE NAME OF ALL THAT IS HOLY WAS ON THAT FLAG?!
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