Friday, October 23, 2015
By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
Up to 600 Baha Mar jobs could have been saved had the project’s joint provisional liquidators secured $16 million in additional funding, Tribune Business can reveal.
This newspaper’s contacts said the 2,026 staff cuts would not have been as deep had the team of Bahamian accountant, Ed Rahming, and UK duo, Alastair Beveridge and Nick Cropper, been able to convince the four parties to the Baha Mar dispute to supply the extra financing.
While it was unlikely that the 1,442 Baha Mar staff already ‘sitting at home’ could have been saved, Tribune Business was told that some of the 584 employees still ‘actively’ engaged at the development site - and who were given notice of their termination yesterday - might have been retained.
Tribune Business was told that the joint provisional liquidators’ lay-off programme, which was approved by the Supreme Court, would “certainly not have been to the level they had to do today” had the extra $16.662 million been forthcoming.
Mr Rahming and his colleagues, in a letter to Baha Mar staff, effectively confirmed they had been unsuccessful in raising the total $25 million deemed necessary to cover the costs likely to be incurred by the two-month joint provisional liquidation.
“The provisional liquidators have urgently sought to obtain external funding, and whilst their efforts in this regard are continuing, to date limited sources of funding have been identified,” Messrs Rahming, Beveridge and Cropper said.
“Following our review of the financial affairs of the companies, it is clear that the companies would not have sufficient cash available to continue to meet all operating costs, including maintaining employment at existing levels.
“I am therefore writing to advise that due to the perilous financial position of the companies, the provisional liquidators have today made the decision to implement an employee redundancy plan in respect of Baha Mar Ltd and Baha Mar Enterprises .
“This will result in a significant number of employees being made redundant as of 23 October, 2015, and a reduced workforce being retained to assist the provisional liquidators in continuing to preserve and maintain the Baha Mar project.”
Tribune Business was yesterday told that some 350 persons will remain employed by Baha Mar following tomorrow’s terminations.
Sources familiar with the situation told this newspaper that while the joint provisional liquidators had successfully obtained the $9.5 million balance owed by the Government to Baha Mar for the West Bay Street re-routing, and convinced the China Export-Import Bank to pay the $8.7 million property insurance premium due on the resort campus, requests for the additional $16.662 million had fallen on ‘deaf ears’.
This was despite appeals to the four parties to the Baha Mar dispute - the developer, Sarkis Izmirlian; China Construction (America); the China Export-Import Bank; and the Government - to provide the extra $16.662 million.
“The companies are financially insolvent, the liquidators have run out of cash, and they are still working with the parties to move the project forward,” one source close to the Baha Mar situation, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were no authorised to speak to the media, told Tribune Business.
“They couldn’t afford to keep the employees at the cost they were costing, and they have not been successful in securing the interim financing. At this point, they’ve just not been able to raise any funding, and the monies they have won’t suffice.”
The source added that even had the $16.662 million been forthcoming, it was unlikely the 1,442 ‘non-active’ Baha Mar employees could have been retained because doing so was “not consistent” with the Supreme Court mandate for the joint provisional liquidators to preserve and maintain the $3.5 billion project’s assets.
Tribune Business previously revealed the joint provisional liquidators’ likely costs, which were contained in a late September affidavit filed with the Supreme Court by Mr Rahming.
“In order to defray the costs, excluding the insurance costs, to maintain and preserve the assets of the seven entities in provisional liquidation, the joint provisional liquidators require authority to borrow up to the sum of $16.262 million,” he alleged.
“By granting the joint provisional liquidators the authority to borrow this sum, we verily believe that we will be better able to comply with our mandate under the provisional liquidation orders to preserve the assets of the companies.”
The likely source of the $16.262 million was not disclosed in Mr Rahming’s affidavit, but given that Baha Mar was in provisional liquidation, the joint provisional liquidators were likely relying on the Chinese to carry them through to November 2 - the date when the Supreme Court will formally hear the winding-up petition.
The 1,000 staff employed by Cable Beach Resorts, the Baha Mar company that owns the Melia Nassau Beach Resort, are not impacted by yesterday’s termination announcement.
Their salaries will continue to be paid as normal from the daily operations of the hotel.
Comments
GrassRoot says...
right. of course. you can raise as much money as you want. if this thing does not become operational it is a black hole at best.
Posted 23 October 2015, 2:41 p.m. Suggest removal
MonkeeDoo says...
Presumably the Bahamian contractors and other vendors can just write their receivables off now. The Government has caused their loss but will make no move to cover their losses. One hell of a lot of Bahamians are getting their corns mashed by this eventuality. And we will never know now if Izmirlian's plan would have borne fruit or not but he seems to be the ONLY honest broker in the mix.
Posted 23 October 2015, 5:29 p.m. Suggest removal
TalRussell says...
Comrade time face the financial reality that it was never from the pockets Izmirlian that has been paying millions dollars for his workers to sit at home - but every penny from the pockets taxpayers.
For the sake God, how many times can taxpayers be footing payrolls for another, then another and then another $16.662 million. Enough this taxpayers monies to protect the damaged image of one man. He Papa is said have billions, so go ask daddy -not taxpayers fund his cosmetic surgery.
I say let taxpayers take possession of Baha Mar and we leave that damn 'dock' for the developer walk up and down, as he meditates over what brought this mess to Cable Beach. .
Posted 23 October 2015, 5:38 p.m. Suggest removal
MonkeeDoo says...
Boy/Gal, you still fixated on that bloody dock. !!! You sure got a prickle up your behind on that. Plus you can't even write a sentence. Much less spell. Looks like you could read though, or maybe someone reading to you.
Posted 23 October 2015, 6:23 p.m. Suggest removal
banker says...
Tal is one of those people who threw their hat in with the PLP and invested their entire lives in it. And then when they come to the bitter realisation, they they were comrades with a phony, criminal, devolved, deviant, odious organisation, there really was/is only one option, and that is to deny the truth and still support the criminal gang that let them down and made their lives a laughingstock.
These people -- are not stupid or ignorant -- they are trapped in a lie in which they invested their lives in, and now they are trying to save what personal dignity they may keep in their own legacies. It is really sad, because each new revelation chips away at their self worth. They all know that history will eventually see the PLP as uncivilised, animalistic brutal thugs, and so they have to choice but to defend them, and distort and deny the truth. These people are real broken legacy of the PLP. They believed in them, and were grievously let down.
Like the beggars in the marketplace, they gather their torn robes around them to try to preserve what little personal dignity that they have left. The "comrade" shtik is that they want to believe that we are all in the same boat, because misery loves company. They destroy enlightenment to hopelessly try and save their own dignity.
You cannot pray a lie, but they try.
Posted 24 October 2015, 10:33 a.m. Suggest removal
MonkeeDoo says...
Well that's a good explanation and a truthful one. Neither Tal nor birdie can challenge that but truth hurts, so in a way I am a teenie bit sorry for them..
Posted 24 October 2015, 12:58 p.m. Suggest removal
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