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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 11:29 a.m., Friday, March 13, 2009

Hawaiian Telcom wins extension to file turnaround plan

Bloomberg News

Hawaiian Telcom Communications Inc., the bankrupt telephone company owned by The Carlyle Group, won an extension until June 30 to file a turnaround plan and address a "myriad of creditor concerns."

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Lloyd King in Honolulu granted the so-called exclusivity extension yesterday and gave the company through Aug. 31 to seek acceptance of a plan from creditors. Creditors seeking a total of $1.27 billion have the right to file competing plans once the deadline expires.

The company told King last month that it needed more time to analyze restructuring alternatives. Hawaiian Telcom, with 1,450 employees, is the state's biggest phone company.

The company filed a Chapter 11 petition on Dec. 1, listing assets of $1.35 billion. It blamed the bankruptcy partly on transition difficulties after Carlyle, a Washington-based private-equity firm, bought Hawaiian Telcom from Verizon Communications Inc. in 2005 for $1.6 billion.

Hawaiian Telcom told the judge last month that it can't afford to pay $6.6 million in interest each quarter to secured lenders for the right to use cash that has been set aside as collateral for them. Without the payments, the company said its cash flow would be at a break-even point in 2009.

The "myriad" of creditor concerns were sparked by the start of the bankruptcy, the relocation to Hawaii and completion of a business plan, the company said in a court filing.

Hawaiian Telcom's liabilities include $574.5 million secured by all the assets, senior unsecured notes of $350 million, $150 million in subordinated notes and $40 million owing to trade suppliers, court papers show.

The case was originally filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., and was transferred to Honolulu in December to be closer to creditors.