Second CA town Bankrupt

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
BBC


Mammoth Lakes becomes second bankrupt Californian town

The ski resort town of Mammoth Lakes has voted to become the second California local government to file for bankruptcy.

The town of 8,000 in the Sierra Nevada mountains is facing a bill of $43m (£28m) for a botched development agreement more than twice its budget.

Mammoth Lakes also faces a deficit in its general fund of up to $2.5m.

The filing comes days after Stockton became the largest US city to go bust since Cleveland, Ohio did so in 1979.

Stockton, California, faces a projected $26m budget shortfall.

While under bankruptcy protection, Mammoth Lakes police and fire services will remain intact, town officials say.

In 2008, the California Supreme Court ordered the town to pay its largest creditor, Mammoth Lakes Land Acquisition.

The town, about 300 miles (483 km) north of Los Angeles, had tried to back out of a 1997 agreement that gave a developer the right to build a hotel and buy land in return for improving the local airport.

The $30m judgement grew to $43m from interest and legal fees before Mammoth Lakes lost its final appeal
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
and the point is????

always get sound legal advice before signing deals?.....and get a second opinion?...
 

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
What I find hilarious in all of this is unions and others just want these cities to go get a loan to cover everything. What bank do they think is going to loan them money when they can't pay the millions they currently owe? Just amazing. But of course there is the federal government that can print their own money to lend.:rolleyes:
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
They learned the lessons from their 'mentors' quite well. Mentors, like Greece and France and ............................................ Socialism at it's finest! We are headed down the same path. Why does anyone believe that the results will be any different? :confused:
 
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