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Medieval Glass Iowa Files for Chapter 11; Says No Interruptions
Will Take Place
Medieval Glass Iowa has filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 in
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Iowa. The documents
were filed on Monday, February 23.
Medieval general manager Bill Oates, however, stresses that the business
will continue without
interruption.
"The Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Code provides Medieval Glass Iowa the
latitude to continue daily operations providing jobs, with no interruption
in sales or production," he says. "This action will enable Medieval
Iowa
to begin to reorganize the Iowa operation and to build off of the 12 years
on durable growth this facility has provided. The management team in Estherville,
Iowa, the employees, our client base and vendor supply group has been
and will continue to be the heart and soul of what is Medieval Glass Iowa."
Oates attributes the company's troubles to the housing industry, coupled
with the difficulty in the banking industry. He says that Medieval Glass
has been a borrower and partner with a large national bank for over 12
years. In October 2008, Medieval Glass and the bank entered into a forbearance
agreement through December 31, 2008.
"The changes within the original banking relationship agreement began
to have new and aggressive negative effects on cash flow," said Oates.
"Consequently, the bank ceased any and further advances to Medieval
Glass on our line of credit starting January 1, 2009. This situation along
with new actions has made it extremely difficult to operate. The ownership
group has invested the required amounts of funding to enable Medieval
Glass Iowa to continue to operate in the hopes that our team and the bank
could come to some new banking partnership."
However, on Friday, February 20, 2009, Medieval Glass Iowa learned that
the bank had initiated a lawsuit for injunction and for replenance of
Medieval Glass's assets pledged to secure the bank's loan.
"Medieval Glass Iowa determined that it was in its customers', employees'
and creditors' best interest to seek to reorganize under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code," says Oates.
According to the bankruptcy documents the company has between $1-10 million
in debt. A few of the creditors listed include Guardian Industries, Q'So
Inc. and Truseal Technologies.
CLICK HERE for full text of Medieval's petition for reorganization.
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