Mr Kevin Zych > Bennett Jones LLP > Toronto, Canada > Lawyer Profile
Bennett Jones LLP Offices

3400 ONE FIRST CANADIAN PLACE
PO BOX 130
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Canada
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Mr Kevin Zych

Position
Partner, Co-Head of Restructuring + Insolvency
Career
Kevin Zych is co-head of the Restructuring and Insolvency Practice Group in Toronto. His practice focuses on private loan workouts and judicially supervised restructurings under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act and the Canada Business Corporations Act, including related litigation, with an emphasis on cross-border restructuring.
Education
McMaster University, BA, 1987, summa cum laude
University of Ottawa, LLB, 1990, magna cum laude
Lawyer Rankings
Canada > Restructuring and insolvency
(Leading individuals)The group at Bennett Jones LLP advises clients on the gamut of restructuring and insolvency matters, regularly acting on behalf of creditors, debtors, and court-appointed monitors. Working closely with colleagues in the firm’s litigation, corporate and M&A practices, the lawyers demonstrate sectoral expertise in energy, oil and gas, healthcare, construction and cannabis. The practice is led by Toronto-based Kevin Zych, who majors on private loan workouts and judicially supervised restructurings under the CCAA. Partner Sean Zweig and Kelsey Meyer additional key contacts. Ex-practice head Christopher Simard was appointed a Justice of the Court of King’s Bench of Alberta, effective June 2023.
Lawyer Rankings
Top Tier Firm Rankings
- Transport > Aviation
- Cannabis
- Dispute resolution: Alberta
- Environment
- Technology
- Technology
- Energy and natural resources > Oil and gas
Firm Rankings
- Competition and antitrust
- Corporate and M&A
- Dispute resolution: Ontario
- Infrastructure projects
- International trade
- Energy and natural resources > Mining
- Energy and natural resources > Power
- Real estate
- Restructuring and insolvency
- Tax
- Banking and finance
- Capital markets
- Indigenous law
- Intellectual property
- International expertise
- Labour and employment
- Pensions
- Technology
- Construction
- Dispute resolution: British Columbia