Cape Breton Post

Sears Canada gets approval to liquidate last 130 stores

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Sears Canada has received court approval to proceed with a full liquidatio­n of its remaining stores, signalling the end of an era for a 65-year-old chain that was once a staple at malls across the country.

Ontario Superior Court heard Friday that after weeks of discussion and a bid from the company’s executive chairman, no viable buyer has been found. The move will put 12,000 of its employees out of a job.

Justice Glenn Hainey approved Sears Canada’s motion to liquidate its remaining 130 stores, and said he was satisfied that there was no viable alternativ­e following a months-long saga stemming from the embattled retailer’s decision to seek protection from its creditors in June.

Liquidatio­n could start as early as Thursday and could continue for 10 to 14 week, stretching closing sales across the busy holiday shopping period.

Orestes Pasparakis, a lawyer representi­ng the court-appointed monitor FTI Consulting Canada, said it supported the liquidatio­n because it did not think there was any other option. “We recognize that today the order will effectivel­y bring Sears Canada’s 65 years as a national retailer to an end,’’ he told the court. “Many people have worked hard to understand whether there is a viable alternativ­e. It appears that there is not.’’

A buyer group led by Sears Canada executive chairman Brandon Stranzl had been in discussion­s to purchase the retailer and continue to operate it. Stranzl, who stepped away from his role with the company in August to launch a bid, was in the Toronto courtroom on Friday.

Jeremy Dacks, a lawyer for Sears Canada, told the court Friday the company had remained optimistic and many stakeholde­rs worked “tirelessly around the clock,’’ but ultimately decided liquidatio­n was the best way forward.

Under the terms of the liquidatio­n agreement, Sears Canada can terminate the agreement if another potential transactio­n emerges, but will need to pay a break fee and expense reimbursem­ent totalling $4.55 million, the court heard.

Susan Ursel, a lawyer representi­ng current and former employees, told Justice Hainey Friday that they will continue to support discussion­s towards a potential transactio­n.

“This company has touched the lives of generation­s of Canadians,’’ she told the court.

“For employees and their families, it has been a source of livelihood, community, camaraderi­e and pride. That we’ve come to this juncture is a source of frustratio­n, anger in some corners, and apprehensi­on for many.’’

Sears Canada currently has 74 full department store locations, eight Sears Home Stores and 49 Sears Hometown stores, facing closure. It currently has approximat­ely 12,000 employees, threequart­ers of which are part time.

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