Re: Who Owns What?
SirRoxalot said:
Seems like Route 81 sold off anything of value, hoping to forestall bankruptcy. They certainly didn't pursue a long-term strategy, unless they sold the AM tower locations to a holding company that wasn't involved in the bankruptcy. If they had a long-term lease in place, it might generate needed cash, and create income from whoever buys the stations next in case they did go under. Does anybody know who actually owns the tower facilities for the AMs?
This could be a rare opportunity for a local group to get into the radio biz at a reasonable price. The price may include significant hidden costs for equipment and new technical facilities. The nice thing about AM is that you can put in a tower system on land that can't be used for other buildings (i.e. flood plain). Just be sure to put your towers on really tall concrete pylons to keep the bases out of the local river.
Now, if Giardina and Smith pool their retirement funds, and get some engineering help from Savage...
Route 81 started with a decent idea. Lloyd Roach the owner of WCOJ believed that if someone was to buy some of the small-power local stations that had been bought up in the Telecom '96 frenzy and return them to their local towns, people would support them again. With the exception of the E-C group, they really weren't into cluster ownership. They set up a collection of stand alones..WCOJ in West Chester, WHYL in Carlisle, WAZL in Hazleton, WCDL in Carbondale, a simulcast of WNAK Nanticoke and what had been WCDL-FM in Carbondale, and then, the E-C cluster. At the start, the company was funded by Avalon Equity partners. It was originally set up so that they would lend the money, and hold a percentage of the company as collateral on their loans, and then Lloyd would be the CEO and have a percentage for WCOJ. If things had followed a logical progression to the end, the money would have been paid back to Avalon, and Lloyd would have been the majority stockholder of Route 81. But..in early 2004, Route 81 made a disasterous decision to make a deal with the devil and buy some radio stations in Utica from Ed Levine. To do the deal, they needed more capital, and that's when Waller-Sutton was brought into the picture. Most people who remember, will know that dealing with Ed Levine is at best dangerous, and this turned out to be a huge disaster, that was fought over legally for some time. All the legal wrangling over the Levine properties drained Route 81 of a lot of needed capital, and of course the projected revenues from the Utica stations messed up the cash flow, and started the dominos tumbling. In mid 2005, Waller pushed for an independent consultant to take a look at Route 81. The board hired Ira Rosenblatt. Anyone who knows Ira, knows that he has a reputation for cost-cutting & staff cuttting. In September of 2005, the combined board voted Lloyd off the island, and installed Ira as the CEO. So now what you had was 2 investment banker groups owning radio stations that they didn't want to own, being run by someone who wasn't an owner and had no real stake in the company's success. There are people who have opinions about Lloyd, but opinions aside, the problem with Route 81 in September of 2005, was that the company had lost the person who had designed the company, and had come up with it's mission and vision. Without that, Route 81 was a collection of stations that didn't for the most part make any money, and Avalon & Waller now had to fund. At what amounted to the 5 year mark of the company Avalon & Waller got in a fight over who owed who money, and Waller wanted to get out and get out as fast as possible. So in the end, they pushed whatever financial papers that they had against Avalon, and foreclosed on their interests, and kicked Avalon out, much in the same way the 2 groups had forced out Lloyd Roach earlier. Then they moved as quick as possible to start getting rid of the properties, so that they could go home and lick their wounds. So the command is now, sell, Sell, SELL!!! and Carlisle is gone, as is Hazleton, and Wset Chester is nearly gone, and soon it will be time to clear out the rest of northeast PA, and then out with E-C. Anybody got any money???