December 26, 2024
Business

Red Shield hearing delayed in $13.6 million aid request

OLD TOWN – A hearing on Red Shield Environmental LLC’s request for $13.6 million in funding has been postponed to Sept. 15.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Leron H. Kornreich approved the postponement Friday. The hearing was to have taken place Tuesday at U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Bangor. It was the second time the hearing was postponed.

Red Shield attorney Bob Keach said the court also on Tuesday approved a $550,000 loan to keep the facility idle.

Red Shield Environmental LLC and its subsidiary RSE Pulp and Paper, needed the delay because the companies want more time to work with the Finance Authority of Maine and its state loan program.

“We’re continuing to work out issues with the FAME staff regarding the FAME guarantee of the larger borrowing,” Keach said of the $13.6 million loan.

The $550,000 will help the company get through the weeks before the Sept. 15 court date, and if the funding is approved, the time after that is needed to get the facility up and running.

“It takes us essentially to the end of the month,” Keach said.

If everything goes through, employees could be back to work by the end of the month, he said.

Funding approval would allow Red Shield and the affiliated RSE Pulp & Chemical to borrow money from Woodside Capital Partners of Massachuetts, a group that assists companies that are having financial difficulties and plan to restructure.

The final bankruptcy hearing initially was scheduled for Aug. 20 but was postponed to give all the parties time to work out more details. After the hearing was postponed, Kornreich approved a loan of about $220,000 to keep the mill idle until Tuesday’s scheduled hearing.

Red Shield also received a loan of roughly $1.25 million in July to help pay about 160 employees who were laid off.

jbloch@bangordailynews.net

990-8287

Correction: 09/16/2008

In two articles about the fiscal status of Red Shield Environmental LLC of Old Town that appeared in the Business section on Sept. 3 and Sept. 13, the bankruptcy judge was misidentified. He is Judge Louis Kornreich.


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