What-a-deal category

Buy the Stimson Property East of Missoula, and Get a Working Mill for Free


By Robert Struckman, 8-07-08

 
  The Stimson mill in Bonner a few years ago

Stimson lumber officials in Missoula met with Craig Rawlings of TimberBuySell.Com, representatives of Montana’s congressional delegation and others to spread the news about an offer: Buy the former Stimson plant in Bonner for $16 million and get all the equipment, including a working stud mill, for free.

The offer stands until Sept. 30., said Stimson’s Jeff Webber.

“We’re going to get it out over the Small Wood Utilization Network as fast as we can,” Rawlings said. His North American network has about 10,000 members. “Time is of the essence.”

Local developer Scott Cooney has bought a few parcels of former company land and the homes sitting on them along U.S. Highway 200, but his bid for the remainder of the land was rejected about a month ago by Stimson, which is a privately held Portland-based lumber company with mills across the Northwest. By the way, Stimson isn’t out of the manufacturing game. The company recently purchased a mill in Idaho.

The best case scenario, said those who attended the Stimson-led event, would be for another company to buy the plant. They wouldn’t have to operate it on the same level Stimson did. For instance, the buyer could downsize the boiler to make it into a small public utility providing power, heat and cooling to the homes there and also possibly run a scaled-down stud mill and lease out the planing mill to other industrial users.

“There are a lot of different ways to skin a cat,” Rawlings said. “But whoever it is will have to move really fast.”

If the whole package isn’t sold by Oct. 1, Stimson will sell the land to the highest bidder and auction off the mill and other equipment, Webber said.

“We would love to see somebody pick this property up before the auction and continue to run a sawmill in the county. It’s important in the long haul for forest health reasons,” Webber said. “Once this infrastructure is gone, it’s not coming back.”

The former mill sits at the junction of the Blackfoot and Clark Fork rivers. For a period in the 1970s, it produced more board feet of plywood under its massive roof than any other plant on earth.



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Comments

By East Missoulian, 8-07-08
By problembear, 8-07-08
By jhwygirl, 8-07-08
By rickclemens, 8-08-08
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By problembear, 8-09-08

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