By Rachel Pritchett
rpritchett@kitsapsun.com
BREMERTON
The Oyster Bay Inn and Restaurant is in foreclosure and is
scheduled to go to auction June 11.
According to a notice of trustee’s sale filed with the Kitsap
County Auditor’s Office, hotel owner MS & SK, Inc., owes $288,423
for four unpaid mortgage payments, along with late charges and
interest fees.
It also is behind on its taxes, owing about $38,000 in 2009,
according to the foreclosure papers. According to the auditor’s
office, the total taxes past due including the first half of 2010
taxes totals $70,503.
Numerous attempts to reach Chong Suk Gibbs, president of MS & SK,
were unsuccessful.
Dana Kercher, front-desk manager of the Oyster Bay Inn, hinted that
the recession hasn’t spared the hotel, but said it remains open for
business.
“At this point, we are up and running,” Kercher said.
Only a handful of vehicles were in the hotel’s parking lot during a
visit this week. The premises appeared somewhat worn compared to
1984, when it began operating as an elegant new hotel with rooms
slung over the hillside overlooking Oyster Bay.
Then, the restaurant’s new decor featured nature scenes exquisitely
etched into glass room separators, stunning lighting and excellent
food.
An earlier motel on the premises opened in 1973, according to
Kitsap Sun archives. Today, the establishment has 77 units in three
buildings on about 2.4 acres, according to Kitsap County Assessor
records.
About $4.7 million is owed on the Oyster Bay Inn mortgage, first
with failed City Bank of
Lynnwood and now with Whidbey Island Bank.
The property has had a series of sales transactions over the years
that ranged from $2.1 million in 1994 to $5.4 million in 2008,
according to assessor records. The current value of the property is
about $4.2 million.
Prior owners since 2000 included Lee and Joung Corp., which
purchased the hotel in 2006. Jin Soon Lee was that company’s
president. Two years before, it was purchased by Kyung Kyu and
Minja Kim.
In spite of the down economy, hotels have been coming online at a
fast clip in Kitsap County. Newcomers include two large ones not
far from the Oyster Bay Inn on the redeveloped Bremerton
waterfront, the Fairfield Inn and Suites and the Hampton Inn and
Suites.
They may have been among those siphoning off business from smaller
hotels.
“I know that some of the small hotels have all been struggling,”
said Patricia Graf-Hoke, executive director of the Kitsap Peninsula
Visitor and Convention Bureau.
Graf-Hoke and visitor bureau board member Jack Edwards estimate
that business at local hotels is down by an average of 25 percent
in the first quarter of 2010 compared to the same period of
2009.
A few of the smaller hotels have found niches to weather the new
competition and recession, Graf-Hoke said. The Midway Inn in
Bremerton, for example, goes after clients coming to town for
sports tournaments, she said.
Edwards, who also is director of sales and marketing for Comfort
Inn and Suites in Bremerton, said that the first quarter of 2010
was disappointing for almost everyone in the local hotel
industry.
“I can say recently everyone’s probably seen a downturn,” he
said.
Properties in foreclosure proceedings sometimes don’t make it all
the way to the auction block. The debt can be satisfied.
But if they do go that far and there is no successful buyer, the
properties go to the banks. Often banks then attempt to sell them
to recoup losses. Sometimes in the case of hotels, banks continue
to operate them to generate income.
The auction of the Oyster Bay Inn is scheduled for 10 a.m. at the
Kitsap County Courthouse.