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The Bend Bulletin Declares Bankruptcy

LanceyHoward

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2010
Messages
5,795
The parent company of the Bend Oregon Bulletin and some other smaller Oregon papers is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, owing more than 10 million dollars.

Bulletin parent company files Chapter 11

The company declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy about seven years ago. Chapter 11 allows for a reorganization. But I wonder if they are financially strong enough to stay out of liquidation.

Bend has a population of 94,000 people and I thought was growing. How could the paper have gotten that far in hole? Is this a sign of the future?
 
From the link (the bold text is from me):

The company estimates that it owes more than $10 million to more than 1,000 creditors and has assets of $10 million to $50 million, according to the court filing. Its largest unsecured creditor is newsprint supplier Page Cooperative Inc. of King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, which is owed about $946,000.

Almost $1 million in the hole to their newsprint supplier?!?!!! If I worked in Bend (and I've known a few people who have), I'd be cashing my paycheck ASAP from now on.
 
Also has a couple of papers in California, one along the North Coast, the other in Sonora.
 
From the link (the bold text is from me):



Almost $1 million in the hole to their newsprint supplier?!?!!! If I worked in Bend (and I've known a few people who have), I'd be cashing my paycheck ASAP from now on.

Why is a paper in Bend, Oregon purchasing newsprint from Pennsylvania? There are zillions of trees in Oregon, Washington, etc.
 
Perhaps the bigger mystery - who is giving credit to newspaper companies these days? Fun fact: Bob Dickey - CEO of Gannett lives in Bend for some reason. And I remember Otis Chandler of the LA Times lived up there for years as well.
 
Bend is the home of the last Blockbuster Video store. I guess there are only so many throwback dollars to go around.
 
Still, Costa remained optimistic. ...

"We're working our darndest to move over into the new world
of digital reporting and editing and digital revenue particularly," he said.

Turn out the lights, dude. The party's over.
The company seems to have skipped 401K payments. I hope the company has made the paymetns for income tax and social security withholdings.
 
Really. I'd like to the answer to that, too.

The company that sells the paper may have a legal address in Pennsylvania but the newsprint does have to come from Pennsylvania. I bet it came from the West Coast somewhere. But in bankruptcy they use the legal address of the company.
 
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