District votes on sale to KOCE Foundation
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Marisa O’Neil
In its bid to buy KOCE-TV, the station’s foundation removed a clause
from the purchase contract with the Coast Community College District
on Saturday in an effort to ensure a positive vote from trustees on
Wednesday night.
The result of Wednesday night’s vote was not available before
press time.
The now defunct clause called for the district to sign off on a
subordinate, or secondary, loan for the foundation to secure
financing. Under such a deal, if the foundation defaulted on its
loan, the bank would have first claim to the station’s assets,
including its broadcast license. The district would get whatever, if
anything, was left.
And that would “absolutely” be a deal-breaker, board trustee
George Brown said.
Milford W. Dahl, the attorney representing the Coast Community
College District, which owns the public broadcasting station KOCE,
said he received news that the foundation would drop that
“subordination clause” in the purchase agreement.
If the clause was not dropped, Brown said, he “can’t imagine” that
the board would agree to it.
“If that happens, I’d suspect we’d make the decision to keep
[KOCE-TV] for a while,” he said.
KOCE-TV Foundation President Bob Brown, no relation, has said that
the district knew all along that the foundation would have to borrow
money for the $8-million down payment. George Brown, however, said
that subordinating the loan was a new development.
“Legally, I think it’s as good a document as we can get,” Dahl
said of the proposed agreement. “It comes down to whether or not the
district wants to do the subordination.”
UC Irvine finance professor Neal Stoughton said that the practice
of subordinating a loan was not uncommon. Junk bonds, he said, are a
type of subordinated loan. Their main drawback is the increased risk.
The new language would require the board to find a loan without
having the district sign off on a secondary loan as a default option,
Dahl said. The foundation previously contended it could not secure
the loan for the $8-million down payment unless the district agreed
to sign, but has obviously changed its tune.
“They think they can get one without it,” Dahl said.
That clause was just one more glitch in a lengthy process --
complete with public protests, spirited debates, number crunching,
multimillion-dollar bids, missed deadlines and lawsuits -- to keep
the station a part of the Public Broadcasting System and lessen the
college district’s financial burdens.
“We’ve been trying to figure out how to make it available to the
foundation,” George Brown said. “Now, they have fiddled with it, and
it looks like they are still the highest bidder.”
In August, the Coast College District announced it would sell KOCE
and received a number of generous offers from various interests,
including several religious broadcasters. Daystar, the nation’s
largest Christian Broadcaster, offered $25.1 million in cash.
The KOCE-TV Foundation, which tapped high-powered executives such
as Broadcom Chairman Henry Samueli and former baseball commissioner
Peter Ueberroth, made a bid of $32 million -- $8 million cash and $24
million on a long-term note.
The agreement also solidifies a programming agreement in which the
foundation agrees to provide the district with 40 hours of airtime to
broadcast its telecourses and 600 minutes of promotional time for the
district’s three colleges in exchange for $2.5 million worth of the
promissory note, according to the contract.
The station must also bring in 10% more than it spends on
operation, documents state.
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