Four months after finalizing a merger with Bremer Bank, Old National Bank is laying off 244 employees at the Bremer service center in Lake Elmo.
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Most of the terminations will be completed by mid-November and include accountants, cyber-security specialists, legal counsel, payroll administrators and benefits managers.
“This action is due to integration of the Bremer business following its acquisition with Old National Bank,” reads an Aug. 22 explanatory letter from an attorney for Old National Bank to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development.
DEED issued a notice Monday indicating all of the terminations at the 8555 Eagle Point Blvd. facility will take place by the end of 2026. The workers are not represented by a union and do not have bumping rights.
The letter gives no indication of any impacts in downtown St. Paul, where Bremer Bank has maintained a longstanding headquarters. A call to a spokesperson for Old National was not immediately returned Monday.
Lake Elmo Mayor Charles Cadenhead said city officials received a letter informing them of the layoffs.
“We are very sorry to hear about the business center closing, and we hope all the people who are out of a job are able to find a job quickly,” he said. “We hope another business takes the opportunity to use that space in Lake Elmo.”
The Old National Bancorp, which is publicly traded and maintains dual headquarters in Chicago and Evansville, Ind., announced in May it had completed a $1.4 billion merger and acquisition of St. Paul-based Bremer Financial Corp., one of the largest farm lenders in the nation.
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The privately-held Bremer was the bank-holding company for Bremer Bank, which was founded in 1943 by German immigrant Otto Bremer, whose philanthropic trust owned the financial institution. With an 11% stake in the newly-merged institution, the Otto Bremer Trust remains a minority stakeholder in Old National Bank.
The merger has elevated Old National to be the third-largest bank in the Twin Cities — as measured by deposits — and among the top 25 banking companies headquartered in the nation. Bremer maintains some 70 branches in Minnesota, North Dakota and Wisconsin.
The merger followed multiple legal disputes between the Bremer trustees and the bank board over a potential hostile takeover through the sale of voting shares. The trustees’ efforts, the first step toward positioning the bank for sale, were paused during five years of legal fighting, which came to a close through a legal settlement reached about a year ago.
Jeanne Crain, chief executive officer of Bremer Bank, stepped down from the role May 16.
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