NEWS - Written by Rick Conroy on Wednesday, November 11, 2009 - 5 Comments
Land locked

Rough outline of Skypower’s Bryan Project before the company filed for creditor protection.
Related: Stantec Construction Property Liens list
About 150 properties that make up the Byran wind energy project, part of the failed Skypower Corporation in the northeast corner of Prince Edward County, have had construction liens placed upon their land and registered on title by a creditor to whom Skypower owes a quarter million dollars. Construction liens are legal claims on a project to ensure a builder, tradesperson or consultant gets paid for his or her work.
Worse for the property owners, these construction liens have been perfected through a special court order that was granted last Thursday.
At best this means the property owners will be limited, until the liens are discharged, as to what they can do with their encumbered property. It may be difficult or impossible to refinance mortgages, borrow money using the land as collateral, finance new buildings on the property or even purchase seed and fertilizer for the property as long as the liens remain in place.
At worst the landowners could be on the hook to pay Skypower’s creditor, Jacques Whitford Stantec, the $265,000 it says it is owed by Skypower.
The liens offer a cautionary lesson to those who choose to enter land agreements with developers. But, perhaps the most surprising information to come to light in court docuemnts obtained by the Times is that one of the landowner that appears to be caught up in the bankruptcy of Skypower is the County of Prince Edward. Three properties registered to the municipality are included in the list of properties covered by the construction liens.
The apparent participation of the County in Skypower’s project raises many serious questions: What deal was made between the municipality and Skypower? Why wasn’t this arrangement made public? Who knew about this? When did they know it? What were the financial terms? Are there other deals with other wind energy developers?
And if the municipality is a stakeholder in the Byran project, even in a marginal way, how can it be objective as to the appropriateness of industrial wind energy development in this County? Most County residents believed their municipality to be acting in good faith when it a held a public meeting into wind energy development at the end of September.
Councillor Peter Mertens said he has no knowledge that any municipal property had been optioned, leased or sold to Skypower or to any wind developer. Mayor Leo Finnegan was unavailable for comment. Chief Administrative Officer Dick Shannon did not respond to the Times inquiries by deadline.
THE PROMISE Skypower first came to local prominence in the summer of 2007. They had been busy for months earlier acquiring options and leases on land primarily north of Picton up to Big Island, as well as around Milford. Until then, much of the wind energy interest had been focused in South Marysburgh. But Skypower’s strategy was to attempt to lock up the electricity transmission capacity by locating close to the largest transmission station in the County. Skypower had high-powered partners including an investment arm of Lehman Brothers, a large U.S. investment bank. When Lehman’s collapsed last fall, Skypower had not only lost a critical financial backer. The subsequent freeze on credit worldwide left the Toronto wind energy prospector in the same boat as its competitors—no capital, no credit but burning cash at a rapid rate.
THE FAILURE Pretending otherwise, Skypower continued to contract services from Jacques Whitford, an engineering consultancy that would soon merge with Edmonton-based Stantec, to advance the status of the Byran project in Prince Edward County. It had hoped to get the project to such a state of preparedness that it could either be sold or possibly financed.
So it was that on Aug. 11, Skypower public relations representatives were in Picton pitching their project to the local community. They gave no hint as to the company’s troubles. Meanwhile, back in Toronto, Skypower management was busy preparing documents to file for creditor protection. The next morning a court granted them an initial order putting creditors on hold until the business could be refinanced or sold.
}THE FALLOUT
Since then a sales process has been underway, dismantling the company into bits and pieces. Skypower’s half-share of the Stone Mills solar array north of Napanee has been sold to a real estate developer, CIM Group, based in Los Angeles.
Twenty-two bids were received for various parts of Skypower’s development business including its leases and options that comprise the Byran project. But none of the bids received are for all of Skypower’s development projects.
So in September Jacques Whitford Stantec registered construction liens against Skypower’s interest in 150 properties in Prince Edward County to ensure it will get paid.
Last week those liens were perfected to establish its priority claim. This is required to validate and extend the claim. Aperfected lien is valid against bona fide purchasers of property, and even against a trustee in bankruptcy.
In effect, these manoeuvres make the purchase price for Skypower’s Byran project higher than it might fetch otherwise. This raises the prospect that Jacques Whitford Stantec may end up as owners of the County wind energy prospect.
Most troubling for landowners is that they may not know their land is encumbered with a lien until they try to sell part or all of it, or erect a new building or use it for collateral on a loan. Even renewing a mortgage may be made more complicated by the presence of the lien. At least one landowner with an agreement with Skypower was unaware of the lien on his property until contacted by the Times last week. Planning Commissioner Gerry Murphy was also unaware of the liens placed on County properties.
If you suspect your land may be encumbered by a Jacques Whitford Stantec lien you can check your property title at the Land Registry Office, 1 Pitt Street, Picton. Online you may visit the Wellington Times website www.wellingtontimes.ca for a link to the list of Stantec Construction Lien Properties.
5 Comments
M Anderson
I have a very difficult time feeling sympathy for these landowners who now have liens against their properties. They had been warned time and time again. Anyone who gets involved with the windustry whether it be investor, landlord or government official must realize they are dealing with the most effective conmen of our time.
The Ontario government just gave away Billions of your tax dollars for incentives to a Korean company for the snake oil “promise” called industrial wind energy. By the way, did you happen to notice a huge jump on your hydro bill this month? Get use to it. This is a direct result of McGuinty’s so-called “green” dream. The only thing green about industrial wind power is the subsidy and ratepayer money. Perfect scam.
Bruce Phinney
I am a Councillor for the Town of Sackville in New Brunswick. We just recently passed in our municipal Plan to allow wind energy in our municipality. It was put together by our Planning Commission. When it was brought forward it had nothing in the way of such information as you have presented here. It also did not include information about any kind of medical or health risks associated with Wind Turbines/Farms. When members of the community came forward with such information they were labelled as idiots by some of our councillors and planning commission employees who work for the Town of Sackville. They said that the information they brought forward is unsubstantiated and just plain bogus. I must say that I did pass the municipal plan because I received no negative information from the planning commission and the councillors who are in favour of Wind Turbines/Farms.
Thank you for the information presented here and I would like to receive any other information you feel would be of interest to me, especially further developments pertaining to the subject you have presented.
I look forward to hearing from you.
Sincerely,
Bruce Phinney
Councillor – Town of Sackville, N.B.
Steven
So Stantec say that their intention is not to recover funds from the landowners, or prevent them from selling property. They will provide a letter to land owners if required to such effect. However what this case appears to demonstrate is that the option holder is – at some point – accountable for the actions that they agree to allow on their land, and that at some point in the future the talk from creditors may not be so reassuring. This is where the implications for credit secured on a property with options starts to becomes less clear as a greater risk that is now emerging will have to be balanced. As we enter NEW legal territory and with so much at stake for so many it looks like the only winners will end up being the lawyers who will have to sort it all out.
Finally a lien is a lien, and just like you can underpin a building that has suffered subsidence there is a stigma attached to the building; there are many people that won’t touch a property with a lien, regardless of any letter from Stantec.
Sincerely,
Steven Draper
Prince Edward County, ON
Matthew Wood
Snake oil salesmen? That would be a term that should be used for “NIMBY’s” such as yourselves. “Can’t feel sorry for” What kind of Schadenfreude are you Quixote. What folly Don charging at windmills. There isn’t any real science done about the health effects to date. But there is a study being done on Wolf Island by Queens University researcher Neal Michelutti. It will be interesting to see the results in 3 years time. But in the mean time there is a rumble on Wolfe Island against turbines. They are causing longer ferry lines because of increased tourism on the island.
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Can’t really feel too sorry for these landowners as the “writing has been on the wall” for some time.
The Wind Industry as a whole is somewhat the “snake oil salesmen” of the 21st century.
Just to find out how deeply involved they are with our own Provincial Government just try and ask the Province for help. 100’s of families in South Western Ontario are living beneath Wind Turbines that are causing major health problems for them and their families. These poor souls have continually asked the Provincial Government for help and have been told everything from “it’s all in your mind” to the most insulting as being called a “Nimby”!
Now it’s your turn to discover what kind of Provincial Leadership Onatrio has “devolved into”!