41°F
weather icon Clear

Agreements made to purchase some Haggen stores; fate of BC location unclear

The future of the Boulder City Haggen store remains uncertain after the Pacific Northwest-based grocer released an ambiguous statement.

Haggen announced on Monday that it has "filed motions with and is seeking the approval of the bankruptcy court to establish procedures of ongoing sales."

What's not established, however, is what will happen to Haggen's Boulder City location.

Of the 127 stores going out of business, 36 in California and Nevada have received bids from "stalking horse" bidders, or investors who make agreements with the bankrupt company on a fixed price that will set the bidding bar.

Of the seven Nevada stores, only Summerlin's location is being bid on.

Haggen is seeking a court hearing for Oct. 19 to hear the company's proposed global bid procedures. The deadline for submission of bids to purchase some or all of the assets would be on Nov. 2, with an auction scheduled one week later on Nov. 9.

If that goes through, the hearing to consider the auction's results would be held Nov. 24.

Haggen previously announced it requested to begin going out of business and to exit operations in the Pacific Southwest during the last weeks of November. Until an official 60-day notice is handed out, condemned locations will remain open.

Haggen has also filed two separate asset purchase agreement motions for its stalking horse bidding packages. Gelson's Markets signed an agreement for eight stores in California, while Smart & Final LLC signed for 27 stores in California and Nevada's Summerlin location.

If no buyer comes forth between now and then, Boulder City's location will be abandoned.

The company has arranged for Sagent Advisors to accept bids for the stores and begin selling off assets.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Ring in the new year in downtown BC

It’s now less than a week away before people will be practicing their backward countdown from 10 to 1, while often wishing the year ahead will be better than the 365 days that just went by in a blink of an eye.

Four King students hit reading milestone

If one were to listen to William O’Shaughnessy, Kailaash Malacarne, Emma Graham and Maxwell O’Connor talk about reading, and the excitement that elicits, it shows that there’s hope that in a digital-based world, book stores and libraries will be around for many years to come.

Dump fees set to increase in 2026

Success or failure as a local politician is rarely about big flashy issues.

Council to take another look at second station

Boulder City Councilman Steve Walton has a soft spot for fire departments, especially the local one.

Volunteers place wreaths at cemetery

Saturday, dozens of volunteers turned out to help place thousands of wreaths at the Southern Nevada Veterans Memorial Cemetery as part of the nationwide Wreaths Across America program.

Council nixes Medo’s monster (truck) idea

There was a lot of talking around the issue and trying to be diplomatic. For a while. But, while the discussion centered around the appropriate use of land, in truth the discussion was likely over with the first mention of the term, “monster truck.”

Railroad museum set for spring completion

Construction on the Nevada State Railroad Museum at the busiest intersection in town is progressing at a rapid pace and because of that, is set for a spring completion.