- Existing MSRB Dealer and Municipal Advisor Fees Maintained Upon Withdrawal of 2024 Annual Rate Card.
- Average Underwriting Spreads Stagnant in 2023, but Negotiated, Refunding Spreads Rise.
- Proposed Rule Change to Amend MSRB Rule G–14 and FINRA Rule 6730: SIFMA Comment Letter
- GASB Issues Guidance on Disclosure of Certain Risks.
- Remote Work Tax Debate Settled By Ohio Supreme Court Decision.
- Schaad v. Alder – Supreme Court of Ohio holds that income tax statute providing that, for limited time during COVID-19 pandemic, Ohio workers would be taxed by municipality that was their principal place of work rather than by municipality where they actually performed their work did not violate federal due-process limits on taxation power of the State.
- Planning and Conservation League v. Department of Water Resources – Court of Appeal upholds Department of Water Resources’s approval of amendments to long-term contracts with local government agencies that receive water through the State Water Project, including expanding the facilities listed as eligible for revenue bond financing.
- And Finally, When Promenades Attack is brought to us this week by Mayor of Baltimore v. Wallace, in which, “Jamie Wallace, was riding her bicycle through the Waterfront Promenade on her way home from work. While she was cycling, the wheel of her bicycle became stuck in a gap between the granite bulkhead and brick pavers. She was ejected from her bicycle and fell into the Harbor.” But her death was not in vain. Ok, she didn’t actually die, just sustained the usual harbor-related fractures, contusions, and ejections for our amusement (if not hers). As Mel Brooks said, “Tragedy is when I cut my finger. Comedy is when you fall into an open sewer [or harbor] and die.”