MM&A gets green light to operate until October - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 08:17 PM | Calgary | 0.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

MM&A gets green light to operate until October

The railway company involved in the Lac-Mgantic disaster has been given the go-ahead to resume its operations in Canada until Oct. 1.

Judge says railway executives should fork over cash to pay for Lac-Mgantic

A police officer walks amongst axle gear in Lac-Mgantic after the train derailment that levelled the town's centre and left 47 dead. (Reuters/Mathieu Belanger)

The railway company involved in the Lac-Mgantic disaster has been given the go-ahead to resume its operations in Canada until Oct. 1.

Earlier this month, the Canadian Transportation Agency moved to suspend the operations of Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway (MM&A)citing a lack of funds to cover insurance costs in the event of other rail accidents.

But the CTAsaid it would reverse the decisionif the company could prove byyesterday's deadlinethat itcouldafford to pay itsinsurance premiums.

In a court hearing yesterday,.Quebec SuperiorCourt JusticeMartin Castonguay gave his consent to free up $250,000 of the MM&As assets, enough to ensure the railway would be able to pay the insurance deductible in the case of another accident.

Castonguay saidthat suspending the railways operations would be to the detriment of its creditors and the municipalities whose economies rely on the railway.

The MM&A has about 60 clients in Canada, according tocourt documents filed by the MM&As lawyers.

In his decision, Castonguay said that "in an ideal world" the companys executives would "dig into their own pockets" in order to cover some of the costs associated with the July 6 tragedy in Lac-Mgantic.

When asked by reporters for his reaction to the judge's suggestion, MM&A's president and CEO, Robert Grindrod, brushed them off saying he didn't know what the judge had said as he doesn't understand French.

Before the railway company's authorization to operateexpires in October, MM&A executives will be searching for a new buyer to take over the company's services.

J.D. Irving Ltd. has shown interest in acquiring the MM&A, which would be a strategic addition to its railway branchthe New Brunswick Railway.

The MM&A filed for bankruptcyprotection in both the United States and Canada on Aug. 7.

With files from the Canadian Press