Hampton Inn
A five-story, 84-room Hampton Inn in St. Albans opened last month with two liens on it that have since been paid. Photo by Alan J. Keays/VTDigger

[S]T. ALBANS โ€” An $11 million, five-story, 84-room hotel in downtown St. Albans is now open, and the bills associated with its construction are getting paid or have already been paid, including several that led to liens and heated words.

โ€œAbout 98 percent, or 99 percent, of the punch list is complete,โ€ Jerry Davis, president and CEO of Williston-based PeakCM, the project developer, said last week of the remaining work related to the Hampton Inn hotel. โ€œThereโ€™s a couple little things left.โ€

The hotel held a grand opening ceremony June 2 and is welcoming guests. Construction started more than a year ago on the facility that includes a fitness center, indoor pool and meeting space.

Meanwhile, contractors complained that they have not received payment.

โ€œI anticipate everybody being paid within the next two weeks,โ€ Davis said of the more than 75 contractors, subcontractors and suppliers. โ€œAs far as weโ€™re concerned, itโ€™s over with.โ€

There were a few testy moments leading up to the grand opening and the projectโ€™s anticipated 100 percent completion.

In late May, two news releases, one with the heading โ€œContractors Still Unpaid for Hampton Inn Construction,โ€ were sent from companies reporting they had placed liens on the property for unpaid bills.

And the language in them was strong, with one reading, โ€œSub-contractors say they have gotten the run-around instead of payment.โ€

Josh Laber, of Green Mountain Electrical Supply Inc. of Colchester, according to the release from late May, said payments to his company had been overdue since March. โ€œJerry Davis will not discuss payment with me,โ€ the release stated.

The company had placed a $168,185 lien on the 43 Lake St. property in May.

Laber, listed as a contact person in one of the releases, later declined to comment, saying only that the matter had been resolved and he was satisfied with the outcome.

He also issued a follow-up news release, stating, โ€œWe were unhappy when payments were past due, but now that weโ€™ve been paid, we are happy again.โ€

Jerry Davis
Jerry Davis of PeakCM. File photo by Anne Galloway/VTDigger
The lien was released June 12, according to St. Albans city records.

Paula Traynor, of Colchester Contractor Services, was also listed as a contact in a release. That company had placed a $104,542 lien on the property in May.

She said Friday that the matter had been resolved and she was satisfied with the result.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been paid in full,โ€ she said. โ€œI think there was a little bit of miscommunication along the way, but we got our work done and got paid.โ€

That lien was released June 29, city records show.

Davis, reached last week, said cash flow was never an issue when it came to paying bills for contractors, subcontractors or suppliers. He said it was a matter of making sure the work that was billed for was complete.

โ€œBoth of those were resolved and withdrawn,โ€ he said of the liens. โ€œYou get this on every construction project.โ€

When asked about the tone of the news releases, Davis said he understands that sometimes emotions can run high.

Hampton Inn
The new Hampton Inn in St. Albans. Photo by Alan J. Keays/VTDigger
โ€œWe respect people for their opinions, but it doesnโ€™t have to mean that theyโ€™re right,โ€ he said. โ€œWe take pride in paying our subcontractors when they do the work, but, you know, unfortunately we get stuck in that position sometimes where we have to look out for the owners, the designers and our interest too.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a little hard sometimes to please everybody all the time,โ€ he added. โ€œWhen we get a quality control report โ€ฆ we have to address it.โ€

He declined to talk specifically about what the โ€œquality controlโ€ or other issues were related to the invoices.

โ€œThere was nothing there that was huge,โ€ Davis said. โ€œItโ€™s just those have to get taken care of before the company can get paid.โ€

The hotel construction in St. Albans came at a time PeakCM has been struggling itself to get paid for work it did in Northeast Kingdom developments. Those developments, including the 116-room hotel at Burke Mountain in which PeakCM served as general contractor, ended in fraud allegations against the developers, Bill Stenger, former CEO and president of Jay Peak, and Miami businessman Ariel Quiros, Jay Peakโ€™s owner.

While PeakCM is the project developer for the St. Albans property, the hotel management company is American Resort Management LLC of Erie, Pennsylvania.

The project is part of a larger effort aimed at boosting downtown St. Albans, with a variety of funding sources.

About midway through the St. Albans hotelโ€™s construction process, in September, a news conference was held just across the street from the site to tout the stateโ€™s tax credit program. In the hotel development, the tax credit program allowed the city to receive $103,492 in sales tax reallocation credits.

That money comes from sales taxes generated on the construction materials associated with building the hotel. The tax revenue was being reallocated to the city to fund infrastructure improvements, including new sidewalks, landscaping and lighting upgrades.

The city also contributed $1 million to the hotelโ€™s construction from its redevelopment fund. The developer will repay St. Albans over five years at 3 percent interest. In addition, the Vermont Economic Development Authority provided $1.5 million financing for the project.

Davis declined to say how much PeakCM made in profits on the hotel project.

VTDigger's criminal justice reporter.

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