Northern Berkshire Healthcare Reports Less than $1M in Assets

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Northern Berkshire Healthcare's petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy declares it has between $500,000 and $1 million left in assets, but owes up to $50 million.

Hearings on the bankruptcy proceedings for the health care system and its subsidiary, Northern Berkshire Healthcare Physicians Group, are set for Monday, April 7, at 3 p.m. in the Federal Courthouse in Springfield.

The board voted unanimously on April 2 to file Chapter 7, which allows an appointed bankruptcy trustee to sell of assets to pay the claims of creditors.

The case is being heard by Judge Henry J. Boroff.

On Thursday, the federal bankruptcy court assigned Harold B. Murphy of Murphy & King PC of Boston as an interim trustee to preside over the initial hearing of creditors in the U.S. Trustee's office on May 15.

Olga L. Gordon of Murtha Cullina LLP in Boston was hired as counsel at a cost of $18,666.67.

Northern Berkshire Healthcare closed abruptly last month, shutting down North Adams Regional Hospital on Friday, March 28, and its physician practices last week. The health-care system had been in talks for some time with Berkshire Health Systems based in Pittsfield for a merger or affiliation. The negotiations broke down when an agreement could not be reached between BHS and bondholders for NBH's debt, prompting the board of trustees to vote to close when it could not make payroll for the coming week.

The filings in Thursday's bankruptcy notice included the top 20 unsecured creditors for each nonprofit organization. The total number of creditors is between 200 and 999.

According to the filing, the health care system estimates that once exempt property and administrative expenses are excluded, "there will be no funds available for distribution to unsecured creditors."



NBH owes the most in unsecured claims to Berkshire Health Systems, at about $1.8 million; it also owes more than $600,000 to two Pension Benefit Guarantee accounts and another $129,000 to the NBH Plan Trust.

Other creditors range from Wells Fargo Bank ($71,882) to Margulies Peruzzi Architects Inc. of Boston ($64,843).

Northern Berkshire Healthcare Physicians Group lists the same assets and liabilities, but a much lower amount in unsecured debt. It owes the most, $20,000, to Berkshire Surgical Associates and the least, $424.98, to WB Mason Co.

There are, however, numerous other creditors for both organizations, including a significant amount of bonding debt for Northern Berkshire Healthcare that has been estimated between $20 million and $40 million.

In 2011, the health group failed to make payments on some $43 million in bonds issued for expansion and for renovations on the North Adams Regional Hospital campus in the decade before.

In August 2012, not long after re-emerging from Chapter 11 reorganization, some $36 million in bonds were issued through the Massachusetts Development & Finance Agency and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, to replace the older bonds and backdated for interest to June that year.


Tags: bankruptcy,   NARH,   NBH,   

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North Berkshire Secondary Ed Study to Be Rebid

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The task force looking at middle and high school regionalization is going back out to bid for a consultant after both remaining bids came in over budget.
 
The Northern Berkshire Regionalization Study Steering Committee opened the bids on Wednesday night, with Vaysen Studio of Syracuse, N.Y., bidding $213,400 and the joint bid of Academic Discoveries of Boylston and The Management Solution of Auburn at $172,000.
 
Both came in higher than the $125,000 the committee has available.
 
After some discussion, the committee, meeting at McCann Technial School, voted unanimously to retool the request for proposals and send it back out to bid.
 
"To me, it's as simple as that. The price has exceeded the available funding, and now we're going to create something that has smaller scope so that, so that it can fit," said Mount Greylock Regional Schools Superintendent Joseph Bergeron. "And then that means, hopefully, you're just deducting from the work you already got through, rather than trying to do something completely different."
 
The group is charged with overseeing a study of secondary education in North Berkshire and includes Mount Greylock, North Adams Public Schools, Hoosac Valley Regional School District and the five member districts of the North Berkshire School Union. The consultant will look at the educational and financial aspects, as well as such areas as special education, enrollment, transportation and long-term sustainability.
 
The initiative is an outgrowth of declining enrollment and rising costs. For example, Drury High and Hoosac Valley High together graduated 116 seniors last year; in 2008, Drury alone graduated 133.
 
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