
Deal means former Nortel employees and pensioners closer to getting paid
TORONTO — A nearly eight-year legal battle over how to divide what remains of Nortel Networks Corp. has ended in a deal that will put a stop to legal fees eating away at the remaining US$7.3 billion pot and bring former employees and pensioners one step closer to being paid out.
“It’s about time,” said Mark Zigler, a lawyer with Toronto-based Koskie Minsky LLP, which represents a group of nearly 20,000 Canadian claimants.
“It stops the bleeding in terms of continued costs worldwide.”
Considered one of the largest bankruptcy cases in Canadian history, the legal and professional fees of Nortel’s demise have climbed to US$2 billion over the past five years, according to an audit by independent financial analyst Diane Urquhart.