- Ed. Note: We’ll be off next week. Double dose o’ drivel 12/8.
- Regulator Joint Statement Highlights Need to Move on from LIBOR (But For Some, Not Necessarily to SOFR) – McGuireWoods
- The Transition Out of LIBOR: What State and Local Governments Should be Discussing with Their Financing Teams
- IRS PLR: City’s Geographic Boundaries Constitute Qualified Service Area
- Treasury Releases Priority Guidance Plan.
- S&P: Approval Of Nontraditional Revenues Dominates Recent Ballot Measures For U.S. State And Local Governments.
- S&P: The Post-Election Landscape For U.S. Public Finance
- Without Fed’s MLF, Stakeholders Warn of a Fragile Future for Munis.
- Ethical Considerations in a Digital World: Live NABL Webinar – (Whee! CLE!)
- And finally, Great Moments in Judicial Rhetoric is brought to us this week by Faulkner v. Crumbley. Imagine this: you’ve worked your way through college; LSATs; law school; clerkships; Big Law; dickhead partners (you know who you are); appointment to the Superior Court; and finally a gig on the Court of Appeals of Georgia; only to find yourself writing this piece of soaring legal rhetoric, “the Crumbleys presented testimony evidence that three cows, not just one, were on the road the night of the accident…” It was a dark and bovine night.