Lawmakers form committee to protect miners, Wyoming in bankruptcies
Legislative leadership voted Thursday to create a special committee of lawmakers to try and stem losses from future coal company bankruptcies for both miners and the state.
Priorities for the new committee include securing taxes owed to Wyoming counties, getting the Wyoming attorney generals office to assist county officials in bankruptcy court and trying to stop companies from ditching their obligations to workers as they reshape and escape debt. This last objective could be a challenge given federal bankruptcy laws design to protect capital, not workers, a UW law professor said.
Coal bankruptcies have wreaked havoc on both Wyoming workers and state coffers this summer. Laws passed in the 2020 session wont shape those ongoing bankruptcies, lawmakers said, but the state could strengthen its position for the future. Some lawmakers also suggested theyre preparing for oil and gas company bankruptcies as well, a dire suggestion for Wyomings energy-based economy and government.
The hazards of bankruptcy courts have been brought to light by very large bankruptcies that happened to coal companies, said House Majority Floor Leader Eric Barlow (R-Gillette), but counties are dealing with some of these issues not just with coal but with oil and gas as well.
Read more: https://www.wyofile.com/lawmakers-form-committee-to-protect-miners-wyo-in-bankruptcies/