Truro News

Sears Canada granted permission to liquidate remaining 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 Oct. 19, and could continue for 10 to 14 weeks, 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, three-quarters of which are part-time.

That tally doesn’t include the 2,900 job cuts Sears Canada previously announced in June.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Daniel Westreich, left, Associate Vice-President, Senior Corporate Counsel at Sears Inc., Philip Mohtadi, centre, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary at Sears Inc., and Billy Wong, right, Chief Financial Officer at Sears Inc., arrive at the Ontario...
CP PHOTO Daniel Westreich, left, Associate Vice-President, Senior Corporate Counsel at Sears Inc., Philip Mohtadi, centre, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary at Sears Inc., and Billy Wong, right, Chief Financial Officer at Sears Inc., arrive at the Ontario...

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