TPG Raises $5 4B for Rise Climate Fund environmentalleader.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from environmentalleader.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A Columbus City Schools employee arrested for allegedly pandering child pornography earlier this year will resign from the district on July 31.
Michael McCammon, 57, of Dublin, works as a controller in the central office and has been employed by the district since 2006.
He submitted his resignation letter on April 23, which The Dispatch obtained via a public records request.
Columbus Board of Education members voted 6-0 to accept McCammon s resignation as one of several personnel moves approved as a package Wednesday evening. Board President Jennifer Adair abstained from voting on the personnel matters. There was no discussion on the matter.
McCammon is accused of sharing a sexually explicit image of two girls during an online conversation in January.
Where to Invest in Real Estate Right Now, and Where Not to, Say 2 CIOs
Ohio SERS’s Majeed and NEBF’s Tarbox assess infrastructure, offices, retail, and more in our webinar.
Data centers and infrastructure are promising. Offices aren’t, but the situation there may not be as dire as many fear. Maybe urban centers won’t go down the chute, after all. Some retail will be OK. Forget about farmland.
These are among the insightful observations from
CIO’s latest episode in our “2021 Asset Allocator Series.” With institutional investors looking for opportunities not correlated to equities, yet offering better returns than fixed income amid low interest rates, the session, which focused on real estate and real assets, was a bonanza of useful information.
Commentary By
Norbert Michel studies and writes about housing finance, including the reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as The Heritage Foundation’s research fellow in financial regulations. Read his research.
Politico reports that progressive Democrats are set to “crack down” on the private equity industry, with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., likely to reintroduce her 2019 Stop Wall Street Looting Act.
Warren has said: “For far too long, Washington has looked the other way while private equity firms take over companies, load them with debt, strip them of their wealth, and walk away scot-free leaving workers, consumers, and whole communities to pick up the pieces.”