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California ski resort town to file for bankruptcy

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SAN FRANCISCO | Mon Jul 2, 2012 8:57pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The leaders of Mammoth Lakes, California, voted on Monday to approve a bankruptcy filing for the ski resort town, just days after Stockton, California, became the most populous U.S. city to turn to bankruptcy court for protection from its creditors.

The vote by the Mammoth Lakes town council to seek Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection was unanimous, according to a statement on the town's website. (Statement: www.ci.mammoth-lakes.ca.us/)

The town of about 8,000 residents in the Sierra Nevada mountains about 300 miles north of Los Angeles saw no other options after its largest creditor, Mammoth Lakes Land Acquisition, refused to negotiate concessions, the statement said. Mammoth Lakes Land Acquisition won a $43 million legal judgment against the town stemming from a property development dispute that began in 2006.

A new state law requires financially troubled municipalities to attempt mediation with their creditors before they may file for bankruptcy.

Lawyer Dan Brockett said the town invited Mammoth Lakes Land Acquisition to enter into mediation only to follow the law until it could move forward with a bankruptcy filing.

"The mediation in our view was something they would do to check a box," Brockett told Reuters, adding that his client will contest the town's eligibility for bankruptcy.

"We're going to fight this," Brockett said. "This whole idea we forced them into bankruptcy is nonsense."

Brockett said the town snubbed a plan by his client that would allow it to pay off the judgment over 30 years.

"We structured a very reasonable proposal to resolve this," Brockett said. "They're not even insolvent."

Lawyers for Stockton, a city of nearly 300,000 people in California's Central Valley, are due to appear at Sacramento court this week. The city filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection last week.

Stockton is seeking court approval for its 2013 fiscal year budget. The city negotiated with creditors for three months but failed to produce enough concessions to close its budget gap by the time the deadline for the talks expired last week.

(Reporting by Jim Christie; Editing by Eric Walsh and Lisa Shumaker)

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Comments (4)
tomdenver wrote:
land deals, development deals….deals deals deal. aren’t you supposed to ski there?

Jul 02, 2012 9:48pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
ccsccs123 wrote:
Democratics have destroyed California. What sucks is the same people keep getting elected and year after year the problems get bigger and bigger and California gets more into debt. This is just a sign of things to come in California. First off get rid of these unions. Unions have been on the decline since 1981. A few reasons I don’t like unions…Labor usually cost the most and often times way too much. Healthcare is way too expensive. Pensions are RIDICULOUS here in California. Here’s so more good information too back up what I’m saying, dare any liberal fool try to challenge.

L.A. Times,”Reporting from Sacramento — Managers in California’s government routinely ignore official limits on the number of vacation days their employees can save, compelling the state to cut huge checks — many worth six figures — for unused time off when workers retire.

Prison doctor Fong Lai received $594,976 when he retired in 2010. Like most state employees, Lai was supposed to bank no more than 80 days of vacation, but his payment represented more than 2 1/2 years of unused time off.”

Jul 02, 2012 10:01pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
gregbrew56 wrote:
It’s what many diocese within the U.S. Catholic Church did to avoid paying monetary awards due to their sexual abuse of children.

$100M award? Declare bankruptcy! It’s the American way!

Jul 02, 2012 10:11pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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