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Showing posts with label bankruptcy protection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bankruptcy protection. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Harrisburg Files For Bankruptcy Protection

(Wall Street Journal)
NEW YORK—After months of contentious debate among city and state officials, Harrisburg, Pa., filed for municipal bankruptcy protection, days before the state Senate was scheduled to vote on taking over the struggling capital city's finances.

The city, which faces $300 million in debt over a failed trash incinerator project, filed the paperwork in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, in Harrisburg. A faxed filing late Tuesday wasn't valid, according to Terry Miller, clerk of the bankruptcy court.

The overnight fax had first been reported by Bloomberg News.

Robert Philbin, a spokesman for Mayor Linda Thompson, who had opposed such a filing, said the mayor thinks the move is unfortunate and that it will complicate matters and add to expenses for the city. Mr. Philbin said the mayor would have preferred the council come to her with an alternative plan, and pointed to a recent poll of registered Harrisburg voters showing only 13% supported a bankruptcy filing.

On Aug. 31, the city council had rejected Ms. Thompson's financial recovery plan, which opened the door for Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett to make good on his threat to take over the state capital's finances.

The plan called for an 8% property tax increase and the outsourcing of some city services, but didn't seek to raise revenue with a 1% sales tax surcharge or a tax on commuters, as some city officials had suggested. The mayor had also backed the state's previous proposals to sell the incinerator, as well as the city's parking-garage system.

Mr. Corbett had pledged state funding to the city if it adopted the recovery plan and warned the state wouldn't bail out the city if it rejected the proposal.

Pennsylvania's General Assembly has passed legislation that would allow it to establish a state-run panel to operate Harrisburg, or other cities that reject recovery plans, under Act 47 for aid to distressed municipalities. The state Senate is due to take up the legislation when it reconvenes next week.
City Councilman Brad Koplinski has long advocated for a bankruptcy filing and voted in favor of the filing on Tuesday to give Harrisburg court-ordered protection from its creditors while it seeks solutions to its financial crisis. The filing was made under Chapter 9, the municipal market's equivalent of Chapter 11.

But opponents believed such a filing would likely impose significant losses on bondholders, which could have ripple effects on the state's credit rating and the broader municipal-bond market.
In addition to Mr. Koplinski, council members Susan Brown-Wilson, Wanda Williams and Eugenia Smith voted in favor of the filing, while Kelly Summerford and Patty Kim joined Gloria Martin-Roberts in opposing the action.

Harrisburg is projected to run out of cash to pay bills and cover payroll costs by the fourth quarter.
The filing had little effect on the municipal bond market Wednesday because the city's troubles had been brewing for a long time and because local-government defaults remain rare.

"This has been one of the slowest-moving train wrecks in my memory," so it isn't likely to affect the market, said Christopher Ryon, a portfolio manager at Thornburg Investment Management in Santa Fe, N.M. "For the calendar year, if you include about $500 million in Harrisburg's liability, that would be $1.6 billion of defaults, which is still very low."


Thursday, September 1, 2011

Oprah Can't Save You From Bankruptcy

Oprah Winfrey can do a lot of things: give you a car, get you to read, inspire a hilarious “Saturday Night Live” skit. But we’ve found one crack in the legendary media maven’s track record of wins. Surprisingly, it seems she can’t save a company from bankruptcy.
In 2003, the then-talk show queen bestowed her stamp of approval on the macaroni and cheese served up by Delilah’s at the Terminal, a southern-style eatery located in Philadelphia’s Reading Terminal Market. Oprah deemed it the best mac and cheese in the country, and buzz followed.

But even Oprah’s praise and tasty southern delicacies like fried chicken and collard greens couldn’t keep Delilah’s in good financial health. Southern Girl Inc., which does business as Delilah’s at the Terminal and Delilah’s at 30th—the restaurant’s outpost at downtown Philadelphia’s 30th Street train station—sought bankruptcy protection on Friday, listing assets of up to $50,000 and debts of $500,000 to $1 million.

Despite its steep debt-to-asset ratio and inability to pay its debts as they come due, Delilah’s, which is led by President Delilah Winder, seems determined to see her company emerge from Chapter 11 intact. The company is seeking permission to tap the cash securing its debt, saying the move could fund operations at both Delilah’s locations and help the company generate $55,000 in proceeds next month. With the cash collateral in hand and the ability to pay its expenses, Southern Girl said it would be able to “facilitate its reorganization and enhance the collateral and going concern of its restaurants.”

The company also wants permission to continue paying its nine employees, calling the move “critical and essential to employee morale and future business needs.” A hearing on that request, made Tuesday, has been set for Sept. 2.

Before she was signing off on bankruptcy forms, Delilah herself had a few moments in the spotlight, going on to write her own cookbook and appear on the Food Network following the Oprah nod. But her brush with celebrity chef Bobby Flay on his competition series “Throwdown! With Bobby Flay” didn’t lend credence to Oprah’s take on Delilah’s signature dish. Flay’s version of mac and cheese took the prize in the competition.

Read original article here.


Thursday, June 30, 2011

Teen Clothing Chain DEB Files for Bankruptcy Protection


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Harry & David Plan to Exit Bankruptcy by Late Summer

Associated Press - Fruit basket and gifts retailer Harry & David Holdings Inc. plans to exit bankruptcy protection in late summer, the company said in a reorganization plan filed on Monday.

The company, which entered Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in March after struggling to remain afloat during the recession and as online and discount competitors proliferated, said the plan has the support of its official committee of unsecured creditors and about 81 percent of the company's noteholders.

Under the plan, Harry & David, based in Medford, Ore., will be able to convert all of its $200 million in outstanding notes into equity. It will also raise $55 million in equity financing after it emerges from Chapter 11. That financing will be used to pay down debt.

A hearing on the plan's disclosure statement is expected in June, after which Harry & David will see approval from classes of creditors and hold a confirmation hearing on the plan.