Everstream is in post-confirmation wind-down: the WholeCo sale has been confirmed, the operating business has moved to the buyer structure, and the remaining estate work is now centered on contract rejections, claims reconciliation, and administrative-claim cleanup. The case began on May 28, 2025, when Everstream Solutions LLC and affiliates filed chapter 11 after entering bankruptcy with roughly $1.06 billion of funded debt across OpCo and HoldCo loan layers, including $794.4 million at OpCo and $262.8 million at HoldCo, against a business-only fiber network platform that had become unable to service its capital structure; the filing story is laid out in the Justin Schmaltz first day declarationDkt. 5.
The restructuring path was sale-led rather than a standalone balance-sheet reset. The confirmed Third Amended Joint Chapter 11 Plan implemented a WholeCo Sale Transaction to Bluebird, established Wind Down Co under Plan Administrator Melker Sandberg, fixed lender recoveries around sale proceeds and residual wind-down value, and created a $2 million settlement fund for OpCo general unsecured creditors while leaving HoldCo GUCs, subordinated claims, and equity with no distribution under the plan framework approved in the confirmation orderDkt. 594. After confirmation, the plan supplement process continued to sort assumed, assigned, shared, and rejected contracts, including the Claims Ombudsman agreement and additional contract schedules in the Fourth Plan SupplementDkt. 754.
The current docket reads like an administered liquidating case rather than an operating reorganization. In mid-May 2026, the Plan Administrator filed another rejection notice covering Pennsylvania tower leases and circuit/service contracts with counterparties including Crown, American Towers, Zayo, Crown Castle Fiber, and North-Eastern Pennsylvania Telephone, with associated abandonment procedures and rejection-claim deadlines in the Twenty-Eighth Rejection NoticeDkt. 884. The court also extended the Plan Administrator’s and Post-Effective Date Debtors’ claims-objection deadline to July 19, 2026, with an automatic extension mechanism if a further extension motion is timely filed, through the claims objection deadline orderDkt. 888. Recent activity also shows discrete settlement cleanup, including FirstEnergy’s allowed $39,293.65 administrative claim and payment mechanics in the FirstEnergy administrative-claim stipulationDkt. 886 and the related withdrawal of its stay-relief motion in the notice of withdrawalDkt. 890.