Special Report: Payday at the mill [View all]
Last edited Wed Apr 22, 2015, 01:39 PM - Edit history (2)
Special Report: Payday at the mill
How sophisticated financiers used a Maine investment program they devised to wring millions of dollars in risk-free returns at taxpayer expense
By Whit Richardson Staff Writer
wrichardson@pressherald.com | @whit_richardson | 207-791-6463
First of two parts
Sometime this year, the state of Maine will cut two checks worth a total of $2.8 million and mail them to out-of-state investors. Next year, it will send two more checks, worth $3.2 million, to the same recipients. It will repeat that process for the next three years until roughly $16 million of taxpayer money has been withdrawn from Maines General Fund.
This payout of taxpayer dollars through 2019 will make whole a commitment the state made in December 2012 to encourage what was on paper touted as a $40 million investment in the resurgence of the Great Northern Paper mill in East Millinocket.
But the resurgence failed. A year after the investment was received, the mills owner, private equity firm Cate Street Capital of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, shuttered the mill and laid off more than 200 people. Great Northern filed for bankruptcy a few months later with more than $20 million in unpaid bills owed to local businesses, leaving many to wonder what happened to that $40 million investment that was supposed to save the mill.
The reality is most of that $40 million was a mirage. .... In the end, heres what really happened: Two Louisiana financial firms arrived in Maine with a plan to create such a program, hired lawyers and lobbyists to get it passed in Augusta, then put together the Great Northern deal using one-day loans that made an $8 million loan look like a $40 million loan. While they claim they did this to leverage more investment, the result is that Maines taxpayers are going to pay $16 million to banks and investment firms that invested only half that amount. And all of it was legal.