Business & Tech

6 Georgia Sears Stores To Remain Open — For Now

Sears managed to stave off liquidators Wednesday and keep the struggling chain open. What it means for remaining GA Sears, Kmart stores.

ATLANTA, GA — Sears will stay alive in Georgia, for now. The company's chairman Eddie Lampert won a bankruptcy auction in the early morning hours Wednesday, beating out bids from liquidators, multiple media outlets reported.

Over the last few days, Lampert upped his bid to more than $5 billion through an affiliate of his hedge fund ESL. The plan has to be approved by the bankruptcy judge overseeing the court case. That means the company's roughly 400 remaining stores, including six Georgia stores, might all remain open. Tens of thousands of people would also be able to keep their jobs.

Sears’ most recent store closures were announced on Dec. 28, 2018, the same day Lampert made his bid for the company. The 80 stores announced for closure that day will terminate business in March 2019. An additional 40 store closures announced in November will close in February 2019.

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Sears Holdings, which owns both Sears and Kmart, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October.

At the end of 2018 the retailer closed 142 unprofitable locations. As of April 2019, there will be four remaining Sears stores — not including appliance outlets, HomeTown stores or auto centers — left in Georgia if the company survives. They are located at:

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  • Athens, 3700 Atlanta Hwy Ste 270
  • Douglasville, 6580 Douglas Blvd.
  • Gainesville, Pearl Nix Pkwy.
  • Kennesaw, 400 Ernest W Barrett Pkwy.

Georgia will have two Kmart stores left if the retailer continues, located at:

  • Covington, 6239 Turner Lake Rd.
  • Peachtree City, 400 Crosstown Road

These three Sears stores in Georgia closed in November:

  • 2860 Cumberland Mall, Atlanta
  • 100 Mall Blvd Suite 300, Brunswick
  • Oglethorpe Mall, 7810 Abercorn Street, Savannah

The future of Sears and its Kmart brand have been discussed in Manhattan since Monday after a bankruptcy judge last week gave the company one last chance to survive. Sears was reportedly very close to liquidating. While the exact details of the rescue plan weren't immediately known, Lampert's bid on Tuesday reportedly included some concessions, including more cash.

Bloomberg News reported the bid was sweetened by more than $150 million over the last offer. One of the major sticking points in negotiations was over whether Lampert should be insulated from lawsuits over his past turnaround agreements. Such a release was reportedly not in Wednesday's deal.

Lampert, who took control of Sears in 2005, was the only person to put forth a proposal to save the struggling chain in its entirety, according to The Associated Press. He has said publicly he wanted to rescue the company because he thinks it can still succeed.

"For as long as I have been involved with Sears, I have cared deeply about the company, its associates and the people they serve," Lampert said in a statement sent through ESL to AP. "While the opportunity I saw from the start for Sears to benefit from the disruptive changes in retail and technology has not worked out so far, it is still there to be taken. Every transformation involves perseverance and risk, but I am hopeful that we can execute better and faster on the smaller platform we are bidding on ... There is every reason to fight for its future."

Sears' most recent store closures were announced on Dec. 28, the same day Lampert made his bid for the company.

Patch national staffers Feroze Dhanoa and Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

Check back for updates as we learn more about the liquidation proceedings. Patch will update this report if any store closings are announced.

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Pictured, Sears at The Mall in Columbia, MD, which closed in late 2018. Photo by Elizabeth Janney.

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