Monday, June 24, 2019

Buyers in wings for Western's smaller papers: Bulletin fate uncertain


            As Western Communications prepares to shrink while liquidating assets through bankruptcy including real estate and small newspapers in Oregon and California the future is uncertain for the company’s 117-year-old flagship Bend Bulletin and its 87,000 square foot headquarters facility.
            The Bulletin reported in its June 22 edition that the company has received an offer of $1.15 million for the Sonora (CA) Union Democrat weekly and office building and $240,000 for a Redmond building that formerly housed the Redmond Spokesman.
            The combined offers totaling $1.39 million follow earlier reported offers of $775,00 for The Observer in LaGrande and the Baker City Herald, and $350,000 for the Curry Coastal Pilot in Brookings and the Del Norte Triplicate in Cresent City, CA.
            Any offers must be approved through the company’s Chapter 11 federal bankruptcy proceedings. A hearing is scheduled for June 27 for the earlier offers and July 29 for the more recent ones. Other potential buyers for the Union Democrat can submit competing offers by July 11 but must exceed the original offer by $50,000.
            All the offers to date total $2,515,000, a small step in reducing the approximately $30 million debt carried by the company, much of that to its largest secured creditor, Sandton Master Fund Credit Solutions III LP, a fund of New York based Sandton Capital.
            The largest single debt is a note with a face value of nearly $19 million on the Bend headquarters facility, built in the early 2000s. Sandton acquired the debt from Bank of America after Western emerged from an earlier Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing in 2012. 
            Investor groups such as Sandton typically pick up troubled debt at deep discounts but the price it paid BofA is not recorded in county records
            As the largest secured creditor, Sandton would have first position claims on any funds generated by Western’s asset sales, including real estate, printing equipment and newspaper operations.
            The prospective buyer of the Union Democrat is Rhode Island Suburban Newspapers, RISN, which the broker representing Western said in an August 2018 news release owns media properties throughout Canada and the United States.
            Other online sources show that in 2007 RISN purchased the Rhode Island newspapers then owned by the Journal Register Corp, which also owned the New Haven (CT) Register before acquisition by another company.
            EO Media has offered to buy the LaGrande and Baker City papers, while Country Media wants to purchase the Del Norte Triplicate and Curry Coastal Pilot. EO Media owns the East Oregonian in Pendleton and the Hermiston Herald, as well at the Capital Press in Salem, and currently prints the LaGrande and Baker City papers for Western. Country Media has small weeklies on the Oregon Coast, in Montana and North Dakota.
            In its bankruptcy filing Western has said it anticipates selling newspaper operations in a wide price range from $5 to $10 million. The company has listed the headquaraters property for sale at $18 million and has also offered to lease approximately 5,000 to 20,000 square feet of the building.
            The building is well-located along SW Chandler Avenue, named for the late, respected Robert Chandler whose daughter is currently Western’s chairman and pubisher. Some speculation has arisen whether the building would be appropriate for expansion of the new nearby OSU-Cascades campus along the street to the north.

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