Kyle Glazier is the Washington Bureau Chief of The Bond Buyer. He has previously covered securities law, the Far West, and markets. He has previously written for the Houston Chronicle, Albany Times-Union, and The Denver Post. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Arizona State University and a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Colorado.
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The project will construct a new 11-mile east-west freeway south of Lincoln, Nebraska, and it will be financed in a way that doesn’t infringe on state borrowing limits or expose investors to undue credit risk.
By Kyle GlazierDecember 14 -
The board, at the first quarterly board meeting of its 2021 fiscal year, also voted to split its existing Nominating and Governance Committee into two.
By Kyle GlazierOctober 23 -
As the country and the market hurtle toward an uncertain future, the Rising Stars will be among those working to keep states and localities strong.
By Kyle GlazierOctober 19 -
Legislation signed into law Thursday keeps the government open and federal transportation funding flowing.
By Kyle GlazierOctober 1 -
A judge ruled Monday that the facts of the case supported a finding the defendants broke the law.
By Kyle GlazierAugust 18 -
SIFMA said Friday it had filed suit in Federal court in Washington D.C. asking the court to vacate the SEC’s Temporary Conditional Exemption.
By Kyle GlazierAugust 14 -
A lot is at stake for the public finance industry in this fall's elections, in addition to the Fed's involvement in the municipal market. Bond Buyer editors Lynne Funk and Kyle Glazier discuss the climate in Washington. (10 minutes)
By Lynne FunkAugust 14 -
The total number of COVID-19 disclosures reported to EMMA for the week ending Aug. 9 was about 700, down from nearly 1,000 the previous week.
By Kyle GlazierAugust 11 -
Prominent current and former public officials and analysts broadly agree that states and localities are headed for deep financial holes without additional and substantial federal aid.
By Kyle GlazierJuly 29 -
VRDO reset rates in California consistently were too high to be justified, a new filing contends.
By Kyle GlazierJuly 20