Thursday, December 31, 2020

A Black day when David Black bought the BJ

 BJ bankruptcy leaves retirees out in the cold

Merry Christmas? More like bah, humbug!

In short, the sad news from Don Screen of the Chandra law firm in Cleveland is that BJ, through its bankruptcy filing, has left us holding the bag.

Prescriptions. Supplemental medical insurance. The who shebang.

Don’s notification, including that those of us benefitting for 8 years when Chandra won the healthcare lawsuit for us (in my case, it totals $60,000 for the 8 years and my $16,000 reimbursement check for underpaid coverage at the time the lawsuit was settled):

All,

As you know, I attended (via Zoom) a meeting of the Beacon Journal Publishing Company's unsecured creditors on Monday, December 28, 2020. The meeting was hosted by Marc Gertz, the bankruptcy trustee, and was attended by about 10-12 people, including David Black (Chairman of Black Press Media), Rick O'Connor (Black Press President and Chief Executive Officer), Mark Merklin (the BJ's bankruptcy attorney), an attorney for the Teamsters local, some other individuals who did not identify themselves, and a due to a technical glitch on Gertz's end, I was not able to access the Zoom feed until about 25 minutes into the meeting. I was on the phone at the time with Ruth West, though, and she was kind enough to hold her phone up to her computer speaker so I could hear (much of) what was being discussed. The following is based on my limited, and possibly fallible, understanding and recollection of the testimony.

 

The meeting began with Gertz swearing in David Black, who then answered questions from Gertz and other participants under oath. Black testified that Black Press bought the BJ, including its retirement and pension obligations, from McClatchey in 2006 for $165 million in stock and placed it under Sound Publishing Company's ownership. Sound continued to own the  BJ until 2018, when it sold most of the BJ's assets (excluding its building and real estate) to Copley, Ohio Newspapers, which in turn was owned by Gatehouse Media. Also in 2018, the BJ ceased operating the newspaper but continued to collect certain revenues from Gatehouse. It continued to pay retiree pension and health-insurance benefits (including the prescription card) through November 2020. Although it was not entirely clear from what I heard, Sound Publishing appears to have administered and funded these benefits. (This may explain why retirees received healthcare-insurance notices from Sound.) But the obligation to pay claims remained with the BJ, which continued to honor that obligation through November 2020. I also understood that at least the health-insurance and prescription benefits were self-funded. That is, rather than pay premiums to a health-insurance carrier such as United Healthcare, the BJ itself paid healthcare and prescription-drug costs as claims arose.     

 

After suffering through COVID and selling its building in 2020, according to Black, the BJ has no real estate assets. It also has no stocks, bonds, or accounts receivable. The BJ's bankruptcy petition discloses that the company's liabilities total $132,786,223.95 ($76,428,314.95 of which is owed to unsecured creditors), while the company owns only $294,000 in assets. Retirees such as yourselves are listed (by name) as unsecured creditors to whom "$0" is owed.

 

A few other participants asked questions of Black, who frequently deferred to O'Connor. One retiree asked about his $15,000 life-insurance policy, to which Black responded that "there's no money for that." (It occurs to me that retirees who paid for life insurance through the BJ may wish to inquire whether all or any portion of such insurance was "vested" or otherwise remains or has become the obligation of the insurance carrier rather than the BJ. If so then that obligation may survive the BJ's bankruptcy, but I have no way of knowing if that is the case.) 

 

The Teamsters' attorney asked about pension benefits. I followed up on that question and learned from O'Connor that the BJ has applied for transfer of its pension obligations to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (or "PBGC," a government agency that guarantees private pension obligations) but that its application remains "pending" at this time. I believe I understood that pensions would continue to be paid in the interim. You should follow up regularly to learn the current status of the application and of your benefits.

 

Gertz brought up our 2012 class-action settlement in Judge Dowd's court. He read the paragraph from our settlement agreement, which I drafted, requiring the BJ to ensure that any company that buys its assets or stock agrees to assume the BJ's healthcare-insurance obligations as well. When it was my turn to question Black, I followed up on that inquiry by asking whether, at any time between 2012 and the present, the BJ sold a substantial portion of its assets or stock (or transferred its healthcare obligations) to any other entity. I mentioned that, if that had happened, the termination of benefits may suggest that a breach of the settlement agreement has occurred, in which case we could seek to force the purchasing entity to restore the benefits. O'Connor, however, answered that nothing like that had occurred, and that those obligations have remained with the BJ at all times. 

 

I also complained loudly about the BJ's (and Sound's) lack of any notice to retirees about the impending termination of their benefits. I asked (rhetorically) if Black knew how the retirees learned of the termination. Hearing no response, I informed him that they learned when they walked into their local CVS or Walgreens and were advised by their pharmacists that they had no coverage. I added that, while a lucky few discovered the cancellation in time to enroll in Medicare Part D or other private insurance, most were unaware of the issue until after the open-enrollment window closed, are currently without coverage, and will remain so unless they can establish the occurrence of a "qualifying event" that would allow them to enroll now. Both Black and O'Connor appeared befuddled. Black muttered something like "Oh dear, that's not good. That shouldn't have happened." But neither he nor O'Connor were able to explain why it happened, let alone propose to rectify the situation in any way.

 

The sad bottom line appears to be that, while the BJ itself retained the retiree health-insurance obligations (I asked O'Connor for a letter confirming that fact, and he agreed to send me one), it has no assets to continue paying benefits and so will not do so. (Both Gertz and Merklin have advised me independently that, even if the obligations the BJ undertook in our settlement agreement were for some reason not "dischargeable" in the bankruptcy, it wouldn't matter because there would be no money to pay for them anyway.) While this appears to be "the end of the line" for our effort to have your benefits restored, I hasten to add that neither I nor anyone in my firm is a bankruptcy attorney and we simply cannot pronounce authoritatively on these issues. We advise anyone who wishes to challenge or pursue the BJ in this matter to retain the services of a qualified bankruptcy attorney, who should be able to advise whether anything can be done. 

 

I regret to communicate this unfortunate news. We fought hard for you back in 2010-12 and were able to secure coverage for eight years more than the BJ would have been willing to provide it without the lawsuit. Sadly it didn't last for your lifetimes as originally promised. I sincerely hope that you are all able to procure satisfactory coverage at a reasonable cost, and, better yet, that your health will be such that you won't need it. 

 

Happy New Year to all!

 

Don 

 


 

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Donald Screen
The Chandra Law Firm LLC

The Chandra Law Building
1265 W. 6th Street, Suite 400
Cleveland, OH 44113.1326

 

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