01-23-2015, 07:17 PM
Here’s how news broke on the Sunshine Coast this past Wednesday...
I’ve been posting stories about real estate and development on the Sunshine Coast for almost two years now. During this period, I’ve often wondered about the Sunshine Coast Credit Union’s exposure since 2007 when the SC real estate market collapsed. There were so many projects already underway or in the pipeline (land bought, architects hired, plans drawn, hearings over, rezoning obtained, development fees paid) that had to forge ahead regardless; and, all impacted by seven years of virtually no buyers.
So, Wakefield has listed 10 “Secured” creditors in its bankruptcy papers and all together they're owed $459,099 and change. The SCCU’s portion of that is...$300,000. Now, those 10 creditors are first in line for any monies obtained when and if Wakefield can liquidate any and all of its assets. But, are there any assets? Isn’t this is the kind of business that likely leases its office(s), vehicles and equipment? As for that equipment, wouldn’t the vast majority of it be supplied or owned by the subcontractors, anyways?
Subcontractors...aye, there’s the rub. They play such a pivotal role in the home construction industry and thus there are so many of them tossed into Wakefield’s pile of 425 “Unsecured” creditors owed a total of $6,028,189 and 69 cents. They join the whole chain of small and medium size enterprises that keep a company such as Wakefield’s in business from the local newspapers (The Local Weekly is owed $2,940), to copy centres, water taxis, cell phone companies, accountants, and the building supply centres that brought in the lumber, drywall, windows, nails, screws, etc., etc. to the tune of $184,579.82 for one SC supplier alone (Wakefield hit them all on the SC).
Now, Wakefield just wasn’t building on the Sunshine Coast. According to its own website,...
Yes, Wakefield certainly spread the pain around – all throughout the lower mainland; up to Squamish and Whistler; and over to Bowen Island. Lordy, you should see what is owed to those poor BI businesses and subcontractors; it’ll make you weep. Do you want to see how much pain was spread around? You bet – as they say in the media biz, “No news is good news”. Here you go: Boale, Wood & Company Ltd, Bankruptcy Trustee & Insolvency Consultants. You want to check out the 21 page .pdf “Notice to Creditors of Filing of NOI”.
I think the writing was on the wall back in January 2013 when Wakefield announced that two new partners and been added, that a new growth strategy was launched, and that a Vancouver West office had been opened to join the other two already in existence.
Wakefield only had two choices: expand or contract. It went with the first and the rest is history; well, it’s history now, too.
I wonder if Wakefield put a low-bid offer in to get that Watermark contract back in May, 2011. The company had never constructed a complex that size working solely with concrete and it might have severely underestimated the time (the project was behind the stated opening schedule) and that alone would have impacted costs or perhaps kicked in a penalty clause. Well, we’ll never know; but, in either case, it could well lie at the heart of this week’s announcement.
There are no winners in this situation – not the employees, not the subcontractors, not the local businesses nor suppliers, not the community and not Lance Sparling. As the list of “Unsecured” creditors shows, he borrowed from himself, too, to keep the ball rolling. His waterfront home was put on the market a year ago and remains unsold despite a -25% drop in the list price; but, as we know those million dollar plus properties have been slow to move on the Sunshine Coast – only 17 sold in 2014 out of a total of 123 listed – that’s barely 14%. Sparling will be starting over again, too. I wonder if it will be on the SC.
Like so many others living in and north of Sechelt I wondered what would replace the old “Wake-in-the-Field” Inn and then was fascinated by those uniquely curved roofs of that replacement – the Wakefield Beach development. When I moved down to Sechelt, I had the opportunity to walk through the project and it is a very special and attractive development. The company, Wakefield Construction, was born from that development and at least in this instance the company name lives on.
Finally, I’m not sure how long the Wakefield website will stay up online; so, just in case it is pulled like all Wakefield’s social media sites (only the LinkedIn link works) here is a screen capture for posterity.
(Yes, that is a Chinese flag up there in the right corner. Clicking on it converts the site to Chinese characters which likely works whether you speak Mandarin or Cantonese. How much impact did that have?)
After completing the above, I decided to pay a last minute visit to the Bowen Island Undercurrent website and here is its news story on Wakefield:
Wow, more than $400,000 owed to that one very small community. Unbelievable.
Quote:Wakefield Construction bankruptcy ‘a great loss’
Rik Jespersen, The Local Weekly, Sechelt. January 21, 2015.
The local construction industry has been rocked by the financial collapse of Wakefield Construction, one of the Sunshine Coast’s biggest and most prolific building companies.
Word leaked out Jan. 9 that Wakefield had suddenly terminated dozens of employees, most of them on the Coast. A search of bankruptcy records at Industry Canada showed that Wakefield Construction Inc. had filed a Notice of Intention, also on Jan. 9.
None of the several employees of the company that the Local Weekly has tried to contact has responded to requests for comments or interviews, including company president and founder, Lance Sparling. It’s believed the bankruptcy leaves a number of major creditors with unpaid bills, including the Coast’s building supply companies, who also have declined comment.
Kim Darwin, president of the Sechelt and District Chamber of Commerce, said Wakefield’s closure, “will be a great loss to the community.” “The impact will surely be felt through the trickledown effect to sub-contractors, construction supply outlets and other local businesses. We sincerely hope that our other local construction companies will be in a position to fill some of the void that will be left as Wakefield exits the local construction scene,” Darwin said.
Sparling started in 1999 with construction of The Embers, a lodge on Thormanby Island. He then formed Wakefield Homes in 2004, which built a 46-home, seven-acre development on the highway in West Sechelt, which was followed by a string of custom home and commercial projects, including the Watermark condominiums in downtown Sechelt. The company opened a marine services division, and in 2012, expanded to the Lower Mainland with the opening of an office in West Vancouver to service the Sea to Sky Corridor. It opened another office in Vancouver in 2013.
I’ve been posting stories about real estate and development on the Sunshine Coast for almost two years now. During this period, I’ve often wondered about the Sunshine Coast Credit Union’s exposure since 2007 when the SC real estate market collapsed. There were so many projects already underway or in the pipeline (land bought, architects hired, plans drawn, hearings over, rezoning obtained, development fees paid) that had to forge ahead regardless; and, all impacted by seven years of virtually no buyers.
So, Wakefield has listed 10 “Secured” creditors in its bankruptcy papers and all together they're owed $459,099 and change. The SCCU’s portion of that is...$300,000. Now, those 10 creditors are first in line for any monies obtained when and if Wakefield can liquidate any and all of its assets. But, are there any assets? Isn’t this is the kind of business that likely leases its office(s), vehicles and equipment? As for that equipment, wouldn’t the vast majority of it be supplied or owned by the subcontractors, anyways?
Subcontractors...aye, there’s the rub. They play such a pivotal role in the home construction industry and thus there are so many of them tossed into Wakefield’s pile of 425 “Unsecured” creditors owed a total of $6,028,189 and 69 cents. They join the whole chain of small and medium size enterprises that keep a company such as Wakefield’s in business from the local newspapers (The Local Weekly is owed $2,940), to copy centres, water taxis, cell phone companies, accountants, and the building supply centres that brought in the lumber, drywall, windows, nails, screws, etc., etc. to the tune of $184,579.82 for one SC supplier alone (Wakefield hit them all on the SC).
Now, Wakefield just wasn’t building on the Sunshine Coast. According to its own website,...
Quote:From Whistler to the Sunshine Coast to the North Shore, Bowen Island, Vancouver, Burnaby and beyond, we build in communities throughout the Lower Mainland and BC.
Yes, Wakefield certainly spread the pain around – all throughout the lower mainland; up to Squamish and Whistler; and over to Bowen Island. Lordy, you should see what is owed to those poor BI businesses and subcontractors; it’ll make you weep. Do you want to see how much pain was spread around? You bet – as they say in the media biz, “No news is good news”. Here you go: Boale, Wood & Company Ltd, Bankruptcy Trustee & Insolvency Consultants. You want to check out the 21 page .pdf “Notice to Creditors of Filing of NOI”.
I think the writing was on the wall back in January 2013 when Wakefield announced that two new partners and been added, that a new growth strategy was launched, and that a Vancouver West office had been opened to join the other two already in existence.
Wakefield only had two choices: expand or contract. It went with the first and the rest is history; well, it’s history now, too.
I wonder if Wakefield put a low-bid offer in to get that Watermark contract back in May, 2011. The company had never constructed a complex that size working solely with concrete and it might have severely underestimated the time (the project was behind the stated opening schedule) and that alone would have impacted costs or perhaps kicked in a penalty clause. Well, we’ll never know; but, in either case, it could well lie at the heart of this week’s announcement.
There are no winners in this situation – not the employees, not the subcontractors, not the local businesses nor suppliers, not the community and not Lance Sparling. As the list of “Unsecured” creditors shows, he borrowed from himself, too, to keep the ball rolling. His waterfront home was put on the market a year ago and remains unsold despite a -25% drop in the list price; but, as we know those million dollar plus properties have been slow to move on the Sunshine Coast – only 17 sold in 2014 out of a total of 123 listed – that’s barely 14%. Sparling will be starting over again, too. I wonder if it will be on the SC.
Like so many others living in and north of Sechelt I wondered what would replace the old “Wake-in-the-Field” Inn and then was fascinated by those uniquely curved roofs of that replacement – the Wakefield Beach development. When I moved down to Sechelt, I had the opportunity to walk through the project and it is a very special and attractive development. The company, Wakefield Construction, was born from that development and at least in this instance the company name lives on.
Finally, I’m not sure how long the Wakefield website will stay up online; so, just in case it is pulled like all Wakefield’s social media sites (only the LinkedIn link works) here is a screen capture for posterity.
(Yes, that is a Chinese flag up there in the right corner. Clicking on it converts the site to Chinese characters which likely works whether you speak Mandarin or Cantonese. How much impact did that have?)
After completing the above, I decided to pay a last minute visit to the Bowen Island Undercurrent website and here is its news story on Wakefield:
Quote:On Friday, January 9th, Bowen Islanders working for Wakefield Construction Inc. were informed that their employer was headed for receivership. On Tuesday of this week, a formal bankruptcy hearing was held, according to insolvency consultants Boale, Wood & Company. Also this week, the same company released a list of all the outstanding debts owed by Wakefield Construction.
In total, the company owes more than $6 million. On Bowen, Wakefield Construction owes more than $400,000. Among the Bowen Island companies owed money are Artisan Office Services, Black Bear Transport, Blomberg Building Group, Bowen Bay Plumbing and Heating, and the Bowen Building Centre.
The letter that accompanies the list of creditors explains that Wakefield is required to formulate and file a “Proposal” to its creditors within 30 days or apply to Court to extend that period. In the “Notice of Intention” (to make a proposal) “no creditor shall have any remedy against the debtor or his property or shall commence or continue any action, execution or other proceedings for the recovery of a claim.”
Employees are also owed money for the final pay period prior to January 9th. According to a letter sent by Boale, Wood & Company, these employees are entitled to the federal Wage Earner Protection Program, which will re-imburse them with up to $3,600 in lost wages.
Wow, more than $400,000 owed to that one very small community. Unbelievable.