Relief as NewPage creditors, bondholders accept offer
New owners looking for a break on energy costs, tax issues
CBC News
Posted: Aug 15, 2012 8:10 AM AT
Last Updated: Aug 15, 2012 9:41 PM AT
Creditors of the former NewPage mill file in for a vote Wednesday (CBC)Both the creditors and the American bondholders of the former NewPage mill in Port Hawkesbury have voted overwhelmingly in favour of accepting the $33-million offer from Stern Partners' subsidiary Pacific West Commercial Corp. of B.C.
Of the 1,034 creditor votes, 1,028 were cast in favour of accepting the offer. NewPage's American bondholders voted 80 per cent in favour of accepting the offer Wednesday afternoon.
Pacific West has said it would like to open the mill next month. There are two things that would have to happen:
First, the new owner of the mill, Ron Stern has applied to receive a break on the cost of electricity from the Utility and Review Board. He has said that the deal is conditional on getting an energy discount.
Stern had requested an expedited decision by Wednesday, but a representative of the Utility and Review Board said a decision is not ready.
Second, the company wants help with some tax issues from Revenue Canada, a decision on that is expected sometime in September.
Parker Stone, president of the Strait Area Chamber of Commerce, said the community has a lot riding on Wednesday's vote.
"This vote is extremely important and it's really needed for the town of Port Hawkesbury to continue to grow, to progress forward. There's been a lot of job losses and we have to start replacing those jobs, and with getting about 800 jobs out of the pulp mill — that would be a start on the road to recovery," he said.
"Maybe some of the merchants will start rehiring, and things will move on."
Now that the deal has been accepted, creditors will get only a fraction of what they're owed.
About $31 million will go to American bondholders who were out close to $3 billion when NewPage folded.
The next priority is general unsecured creditors including municipalities owed property tax, mill employees and pensioners.
Pacific West Commercial Corp., an affiliate of Stern Partners Inc., has offered to buy the NewPage mill for $33 million. (CBC)About 1,000 NewPage employees and pensioners will be eligible to share an estimated $2 million.
Port Hawkesbury Mayor Billy Joe MacLean says the sale is important to the region, but it's bittersweet.
"It's sort of a sad day for those that have trades…that are going to receive pennies for dollars in this settlement. But that's not the responsibility of Stern, it's from the old company and the courts."
The mill has been closed since September 2011.
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- More safety investigators urged after electrocution
- The head of the Nova Scotia Federation of Labour is renewing his call for specially trained safety investigators and prosecutors to deal with workplace safety after a 39-year-old worker was electrocuted on the job. more »
- Friends fundraising for boy with rare brain cancer
- Family and friends of a 20-month-old toddler from Eastern Passage are appealing for help to send the boy to Texas to treat a rare form of brain cancer. more »
- Blood donation ban lifted for some gay, bisexual men
- Health Canada allow gay men to donate blood if they haven't had sex with a man in the last five years, a change in policy to take effect in the coming weeks. more »
- Children's mouths allegedly taped shut at N.S. school
- An assistant instructor at a school in Bedford, N.S., is under investigation by police after allegedly taping shut the mouths of several students. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Standing room only for Tim Bosma memorial
- It's standing room only at the memorial for Timothy Bosma in Hamilton today. 1,000 chairs were filled an hour before the memorial was set to start. Bosma is the Hamilton man killed after taking two strangers on a test drive in a truck he had listed for sale online. CBCNews.ca will livestream the event starting at 11 a.m. ET from Carmen's Banquet Hall where Bosma was married just three years ago.
more »
- Video forensics: How easy would it be to fake a Rob Ford video?
- Two media outlets reported last week that they had seen a cellphone video of Mayor Rob Ford allegedly smoking crack, a claim that has gone global. If a video does surface, how easy would it be to determine its authenticity? CBC News asked video forensic analyst David McKay. more »
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado
- Rescue workers raced to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children. more »
- Jimmy Kimmel, Jon Stewart crack jokes about Rob Ford
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's woes over crack cocaine allegations are providing plenty of late-night TV fodder for Jimmy Kimmel, Jon Stewart and other comedians south of the border. more »
- Man being questioned in Boston bombing probe shot dead by FBI
- The FBI says a man being questioned by authorities in the Boston bombing probe was fatally shot after he initiated a violent confrontation during an interview with officers in Orlando, Fla. more »
- Children's mouths allegedly taped shut at N.S. school
- Judge scolds 'flabby, sad generation' for skipping jury duty
- Friends fundraising for boy with rare brain cancer
- Dartmouth man reports roofers not wearing safety gear
- Man electrocuted in Halifax industrial accident
- More safety investigators urged after electrocution
- Annapolis Valley apple orchard quarantined
- Sudden death of Digby man investigated
- Pink Shirt Day co-founder seeks Tory nomination

