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Lampert Draws Uproar From Warren, AOC on Sears Severance Pay

Lampert's Backpedaling at Sears Renews Uproar Over Severance Pay

(Bloomberg) -- Back when Eddie Lampert was campaigning for approval of his plan to rescue Sears, he emphasized his promise to give severance to employees who lost their jobs after the retailer went bankrupt. If liquidators wound up with the chain, he told Sen. Elizabeth Warren in February, “these employees would be getting nothing.’’

Lampert Draws Uproar From Warren, AOC on Sears Severance Pay

Warren and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez criticized Lampert Friday for backing off his pledge, after his firm said in court papers it had no severance obligation because of a shortfall in funds it expected to get from the old Sears Holdings Corp.

“You are betraying the commitment you made to Sen. Warren, to the bankruptcy court, and most importantly, to the tens of thousands of workers who have lost their jobs and face uncertain futures after your exploitative tenure at Sears,” the lawmakers wrote to Lampert in a letter dated May 30. They asked him to respond by June 14 to a series of new questions about his plans for Sears, including the promise for severance of up to $43 million.

Those accusations are false, according to Lampert’s Transform Holdco, which said in an emailed statement that employees of old Sears have already received their severance payments from the old Sears. The dispute revolves around whether Transform will reimburse the old Sears estate for those payments, it said. Messages to the old Sears corporation weren’t immediately returned.

“This is a dispute between Transform and Old Sears, and no severance payments to terminated employees are ‘at risk,’” Transform said. As part of its purchase of the chain, Transform said it agreed to reimburse old Sears for making those severance payments, in return for certain assets from old Sears. But Transform said it wound up shorted by at least $55 million, so it’s not obligated to make the reimbursement.

Protecting severance has become a hot-button issue for elected officials, bankrupt companies and their advisers as some of the biggest chains get consumed by the U.S. retail bust. Workers and their advocates say it’s unfair that bankers, consultants, lawyers and sometimes owners walk away with millions of dollars in fees and assets while long-time staffers are sent away empty-handed.

Public Matter

The issue burst into the political sphere after more than 30,000 Toys “R” Us workers didn’t get the severance they expected when the biggest U.S. toy retailer collapsed in 2017. Warren was among officials demanding that the chain’s old private equity owners and its financiers create a $75 million fund for the workers. After initially balking, KKR & Co. and Bain Capital created a $20 million fund.

Lampert Draws Uproar From Warren, AOC on Sears Severance Pay

Treatment of Sears workers emerged almost immediately as a central issue after the department store chain filed for bankruptcy last October. Lampert emphasized in his Feb. 19 letter to Warren that his rescue plan would protect jobs and pensions and ensure severance pay for those left behind. Lampert -- who was chief executive when Sears went bankrupt -- agreed to pay severance for the thousands of workers left jobless.

But in a May 25 court filing, Lampert’s Transform Holdco, which took over the Sears chain, said the administration of the old Sears corporation didn’t hand over the assets and funds he was promised, and the shortfall gave his new Sears the right to reduce its severance payment commitment “to zero.”

Lampert previously has said he invested billions of dollars trying to make Sears profitable.

“I have been a long-term investor in a small number of companies and believe strongly in creating value for all stakeholders, especially the employees,” Lampert said in his February letter.

To contact the reporters on this story: Eliza Ronalds-Hannon in New York at eronaldshann@bloomberg.net;Lauren Coleman-Lochner in New York at llochner@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Rick Green at rgreen18@bloomberg.net

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