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Esmark Would Like to Buy Back Pieces of Company

Bouchard wants downtown office and corrugating division

June 1, 2012
By CASEY JUNKINS Staff Writer , The Intelligencer / Wheeling News-Register

WHEELING - One of the city's largest and oldest buildings may soon have a new owner, as James Bouchard said his company, Esmark Inc., hopes to purchase the RG Steel building on Market Street.

On the same day RG Steel filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Bouchard - founder, chairman and chief executive officer of Pittsburgh-based Esmark - said his company is bidding to purchase the downtown Wheeling office, as well as most of the Wheeling Corrugating facilities across the nation.

This proposed purchase, however, will not include the Beech Bottom or Martins Ferry portions of the Wheeling Corrugating business. Bouchard said Esmark is also not making an effort to buy the other local RG Steel plants in Steubenville, Mingo Junction, Yorkville, or the Follansbee Mountain State Carbon coke plant.

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Photo by Casey Junkins
Esmark Inc., former owner of the RG Steel building in downtown Wheeling, is making a bid to repurchase the structure and most of the Wheeling Corrugating operations as RG Steel files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

"Steubenville has been down for so long that restarting it would be a monumental ... task. That's not something we're interested in," said Bouchard.

Esmark previously owned all the former Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel facilities before selling them to Russian steelmaker OAO Severstal for $1.23 billion in July 2008. Severstal, after idling the Steubenville and Mingo plants in 2009, later sold these plants to RG Steel.

"We owned the Wheeling Corrugating business before, and we know it well. It is a great, 120-year-old company that we want to see stay in operation," Bouchard added.

The other Wheeling Corrugating facilities, according to the company's website, include Emporia, Va.; Fallon, Nev.; Fort Payne, Ala.; Grand Junction, Colo.; Houston, Texas; Lenexa, Kan.; and Louisville, Ky. Bouchard said these plants are basically "finishing" facilities, making them more easy to operate than the Martins Ferry or Beech Bottom plants.

The Wheeling Corrugating website notes the company, founded in 1890, specializes in roofing and siding, decking, highway and bridge building, painted coil, galvanized steel and coil products and specialized detailing.

Esmark spokesman Bill Keegan said these operations should fit well with Esmark's business model, noting, "We feel these assets fit well with our operations in the midwest and northeast."

Bouchard and Keegan said the downtown Wheeling office - which has stood as one of the largest in the city since 1905 and served as the headquarters for the former Wheeling-Pitt. steelmaker for many years - now houses the headquarters for Wheeling Corrugating on four of its floors. Bouchard wants to keep the company working in the building, while marketing office space on the other eight floors.

Although Esmark will not be purchasing the Beech Bottom plant, Bouchard said he would like to take some of the equipment out of the plant to use at a new Esmark operated facility. He did not know exactly where this new facility would be or when it would open, however.

 
 

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