Caution tape surrounds the fuel pumps at a station on Marine Drive in Port Angeles. Pettit Oil provided the fuel for the station before the company's closure. Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News

Caution tape surrounds the fuel pumps at a station on Marine Drive in Port Angeles. Pettit Oil provided the fuel for the station before the company's closure. Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News

Peninsula’s petroleum users grease past Pettit Oil’s sudden closure

PORT ANGELES — Officials with the North Olympic Peninsula’s two ports and transit agencies are weathering fuel and heating-oil uncertainties created by the closure of Pettit Oil.

Meanwhile, the company’s creditors await their turns in bankruptcy court in Tacoma.

Managers with the ports of Port Angeles and Port Townsend, as well as with Clallam Transit and Jefferson Transit agencies, said Tuesday they have filled the gap — at least temporarily — for fuel and heating-oil supplies caused by Pettit’s Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition.

The Lakewood-based company filed the petition Jan. 17 to seek protection from creditors one day after it ceased operations.

“There has been no interruption in fueling services, and interim measures allow flexibility in maintaining access to fueling services for the foreseeable future,” Port of Port Angeles Public Works Manager Randy Brackett told port commissioners at a meeting this week.

The port purchased a 1,600-gallon, 1967 GMC fuel truck — “a tank on wheels,” Brackett called it — from Rite Brothers Aviation Inc. that was filled by Masco Petroleum of Aberdeen.

Pettit still owes the port $2,513 for December and January rent for less than an acre it leases for a large, moveable container on Marine Drive, port Property Manager Tanya Kerr said Tuesday.

Masco, distributing out of its own facility in Forks, has gained about 1,000 new residential and business customers in Western Washington since Pettit’s shutdown, company Vice President Sean Mason said.

Pettit also supplied heating oil for buildings in the Port of Port Townsend’s picturesque Point Hudson buildings, port Executive Director Larry Crockett said.

The port has contracted with Cooper Fuel and Auto Repair of Bremerton to replenish Point Hudson on a temporary basis.

Crockett did not know who will supply fuel to the commercial fishing boats at Port Townsend Boat Haven that will leave for Alaska in May and June.

“This gives us a little bit of time to work this out,” Crockett said.

Jefferson Transit did not feel any pinch from the Pettit shutdown, Manager Tammi Rubert said Tuesday.

A transit system emergency that was declared Jan. 20 at the Jefferson Transit board meeting allowed the agency to bypass bidding requirements and buy fuel immediately, Rubert said.

Clallam Transit had 46 fuel cards through Pettit, which provided daily fueling in the West End, agency Maintenance Manager Kevin Gallacci said in a memo to General Manager Wendy Clark-Getzin.

The agency recently finished converting the portion of the van-pool fleet that originates in Port Angeles to propane, Gallacci said.

By Jan. 18, the agency ordered new Pacific Pride fuel cards from Associated Petroleum Products Inc. of Tacoma, which supplies Clallam Transit with bulk diesel fuel.

Pettit owns facilities in Port Angeles, Forks, Port Townsend, Lakewood, Hoquiam, Everett and Bremerton, including offices and unattended card-lock fueling locations in Port Angeles and Forks, and a tank farm in Glen Cove Industrial Park near Port Townsend.

The cardlock locations were used by agencies such as Jefferson Transit, which since Pettit’s shutdown has applied to be part of U.S. Bank’s Voyager cardlock fueling services.

All property owned by Pettit — “the debtor” in court filings — has been turned over to Chapter 7 Trustee Kathryn Ellis.

“At this point, the debtor no longer exists in any real or practical sense,” Olympia attorney Brian Budsberg of Budsberg Law Group PLLC, representing Pettit, said in a Jan. 23 court filing.

Budsberg’s motion with the court to withdraw as Pettit’s counsel is scheduled for a Feb. 13 hearing.

“There is no reason for Budsberg, as debtors counsel, to remain engaged and involved,” the motion states.

Pettit employed 125 full-time employees with an average monthly payroll of $725,000.

Company President Chris Sather said in a court filing that they were paid through Nov. 15, or 10 days before Pettit filed for bankruptcy protection from creditors.

Pettit had 10,000 customers, including individuals with prepaid heating-oil accounts.

Mason said he had received possibly 50-100 calls from prepaid card holders in Pettit’s Western Washington coverage area.

A creditors’ meeting is March 10 in federal bankruptcy court, 1717 Pacific Ave., Tacoma.

Ellis has filed an application with the court to hire $440-an-hour Seattle lawyer Deborah Crabtree of Foster Pepper PLLC on retainer to help process claims.

The bankruptcy court hearing is at 9 a.m. Thursday.

“I have been deluged with inquires from various attorneys relative to their interests in the debtor’s assets,” Ellis said in a court filing.

Ellis and Sather did not return calls for comment Tuesday.

Bankruptcy court documents state that KeyBank is owed $11.3 million and U.S. Bank $8.8 million as Pettit’s largest creditors.

A total of 49 creditors were listed.

Pettit was “financially too weak to be profitable” after selling a portion of its business and buying a heating-oil supplier in February 2013, Budsberg said in a court filing.

Pettit bought the heating-oil and commercial fuel lubricants distribution assets of Tacoma-based SC Fuels.

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Increased police presence expected at Port Angeles High School on Friday

An increased police presence is expected at Port Angeles… Continue reading

Clallam County Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Stanley is sworn in by Judge Simon Barnhart on Thursday at the Clallam County Courthouse. Stanley, elected in November to Position 1, takes the role left by Judge Lauren Erickson, who retired. Barnhart and Judge Brent Basden also were elected in November. All three ran unopposed. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Judge sworn in

Clallam County Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Stanley is sworn in by Judge… Continue reading

Clallam trending toward more blue

Most precincts supported Harris in 2024

Landon Smith, 19, is waiting for a heart transplant at Children’s Hospital of Seattle. (Michelle Smith)
Teenager awaits heart transplant in Seattle

Being in the hospital increases his chances, mom says

Port, Lower Elwha approve agreement

Land exchange contains three stormwater ponds for infrastructure

Clallam County lodging tax funds awarded

$1.39 million to be provided to four organizations

Forks DSHS outstation updates service hours

The state Department of Social and Health Services has announced… Continue reading

A 65-foot-long historic tug rests in the Port of Port Townsend Boat Haven Marina’s 300-ton marine lift as workers use pressure washers to blast years of barnacles and other marine life off the hull. The tug was built for the U.S. Army at Peterson SB in Tacoma in 1944. Originally designated TP-133, it is currently named Island Champion after going through several owners since the army sold it in 1947. It is now owned by Debbie Wright of Everett, who uses it as a liveaboard. The all-wood tug is the last of its kind and could possibly be entered in the 2025 Wooden Boat Festival.(Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Wooden wonder

A 65-foot-long historic tug rests in the Port of Port Townsend Boat… Continue reading

Mark Nichols.
Petition filed in murder case

Clallam asks appeals court to reconsider

A 35-year-old man was taken by Life Flight Network to Harborview Medical Center following a Coast Guard rescue on Monday. (U.S. Coast Guard Air Station Port Angeles via Facebook)
Injured man rescued from remote Hoh Valley

Location requires precision 180-foot hoist

Kevin Russell, right, with his wife Niamh Prossor, after Russell was inducted into the Building Industry Association of Washington’s Hall of Fame in November.
Building association’s priorities advocate for housing

Port Angeles contractor inducted into BIAW hall of fame

Crew members from the USS Pomfret, including Lt. Jimmy Carter, who would go on to become the 39th president of the United States, visit the Elks Lodge in Port Angeles in October 1949. (Beegee Capos)
Former President Carter once visited Port Angeles

Former mayor recalls memories of Jimmy Carter