Freedom Industries Receives $4M To Cover Cleanup

The embattled company behind West Virginia's chemical spill has reached a bankruptcy court deal for up to $4 million in credit from a lender to help continue operations and also provide funds to cover environmental cleanup from the spill in the Elk River, an attorney said.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — The embattled company behind West Virginia's chemical spill has reached a bankruptcy court deal for up to $4 million in credit from a lender to help continue operations, an attorney said.

The arrangement reached Tuesday will allow the company to continue paying its employees and top vendors and also provide funds to cover environmental cleanup from the spill in the Elk River, said Freedom Industries attorney Mark Freelander.

In bankruptcy court testimony, Freedom Industries President Gary Southern called the 12 days since the company's Jan. 9 chemical spill "completely chaotic."

The spill contaminated water supplies for 300,000 people in West Virginia.

Southern had said the company spent $800,000 last week to remedy environmental damage from the spill.

Southern said money isn't the solution to lift the stigma on his company for its suppliers and customers. He said the spill was causing "perception problems" for the firm.

Freedom Industries filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Friday, freezing dozens of lawsuits against the company. Many are by local businesses that remained closed for days during a water-use ban. State and federal investigations into the spill of a coal-cleaning chemical are continuing.

The deal Freedom Industries reached Tuesday lets the company continue paying its 51 employees in the short term, a biweekly payroll of about $172,000, according to Freelander. The company can also continue paying costs for environmental remediation and will have money for critical day-to-day administrative expenses, and can pay top vendors, according to the attorney.

West Virginia American Water Company, the supplier for the nine-county region, objected to Freedom Industries' first proposal for emergency financing of up to $5 million in credit. Freedom Industries is using a lender created Friday that essentially is run by the company's top executive, J. Clifford Forrest of Pittsburgh.

West Virginia American Water argued through its attorneys that Freedom Industries' financer could foreclose on the company's valuable assets and abandon the rest, leaving behind "only the toxic facilities and huge damage claims caused by the Freedom spill."

Chief Judge Ronald G. Pearson, who called the case one of the most unusual he's seen, said Freedom Industries wouldn't obtain all the protections it sought, since the company so far has offered very little financial information.

After about five and a half hours in court, lawyers for the water company and Freedom Industries agreed to strike out the possibility of controversial liens. Freedom Industries can access $3 million in credit initially, with the chance for another $1 million, according to Freelander.

The rest of the hearing offered a closer look at the company.

Freedom Chief Finance Officer Terry Cline said the company owes hundreds of thousands of dollars in back taxes to the Internal Revenue Service. Most of its business isn't in coal-cleaning chemicals like the one that spilled; it's in a variety of anti-freeze agents, the court also heard.

The company has about a $1 million to $2 million insurance general policy, and a $3 million policy specifically for pollution incidents, Southern said.

Charleston attorney Anthony Majestro, representing several businesses that sued Freedom Industries, said it is still possible to try to collect on the insurance policy during bankruptcy proceedings. He hasn't indicated whether his clients will attempt that.

Freedom Industries had $1 million in an escrow account to make "certain upgrades in facilitation of the business" when it merged with several other companies Dec. 31, Southern said.

Department of Environmental Protection officials have said that money was set aside to fix the cracked containment wall that ultimately let chemicals seep into the Elk River. But Southern would not specifically say the money was for fixing that wall.

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