B.C. fruit group, $50 million in debt to bank, files for creditor protection
British Columbia’s fruit growers co-operative that served farmers for almost a century has filed for creditor protection, citing more than $58 million in liabilities and a disastrous crop failure this year that it called “the final tipping point.”
But a former board member of the BC Tree Fruits Cooperative said the board’s decision to close the business was made amid a power struggle for control and member discontent over its management.
Amarjit Lalli, an apple grower in the Okanagan, said Tuesday that the co-op’s board “didn’t want to give up control of the organization” at a special general meeting, so they decided to shut the organization down instead.
Lalli said some apple growers were so disenchanted with the board that they didn’t provide crop estimates to the co-op last month because they felt “the company was being mismanaged and their fruit was mishandled last year.”