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Chrysler targets 800 dealers in reorganization

Thu May 14, 2009 5:52 PM EDT
us-news, business, us, auto, dealers
Tom Krisher, AP Auto Writer
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 8 photos
<p>Salesman Michael Friel surfs the web for news on the fate of his employer, John Flynn Chrysler Jeep in Philadelphia, Thursday, May 14, 2009. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke) </p>

Salesman Michael Friel surfs the web for news on the fate of his employer, John Flynn Chrysler Jeep in Philadelphia, Thursday, May 14, 2009. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

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DETROIT — In tiny Millerstown, Pa., the owner of the only car dealership in town found out Thursday he was on Chrysler's hit list — one of 789 across the nation that the troubled automaker wants to eliminate.

"It's really, really a blow," Jeff Potter, whose family owns the dealership, said after hearing the news from a customer who spotted the closing list on the Internet. "When you talk about being here 34 years, it's my life."

Chrysler disclosed in a bankruptcy filing Thursday that it wants to close a quarter of its dealers in a matter of weeks, a strategy that might help save the company but would wipe out thousands of jobs.

With General Motors Corp. expected to announce it will close about 1,100 dealerships, the crisis in the auto industry is reaching the front doors of Americans who live far from Detroit.

Millerstown Chrysler will try to survive by selling used cars. Otherwise, the town of 700 will lose one of its largest employers and a major source of tax revenue. And in other communities that depend on dealers for everything from newspaper advertising to Little League sponsorships, the ripple effect could be devastating. Dealerships on the closing list are in every state but Alaska.

The National Automobile Dealers Association says about 40,000 people work at the affected dealerships. Many will keep their jobs, but their dealerships will be left to sell only the other brands in their showrooms, or used cars.

Chrysler said in its filing that sales are too low at many of the dealerships. Half its dealers account for 90 percent of its sales, and the company is trying to cut poor performers that compete for the same customers.

Dealers learned their fates in letters Thursday morning. The effects will go much further than their bottom lines.

Bart Wolf, the general sales manager at Wolf's Motor Car Co. in Plymouth, Wis., estimated he donated an average of $10,000 per year for local high school and middle school events, supporting band trips and athletic activities.

"The way things are going now, that could be cut down to under $2,000," he said. "It's hard to say no to anyone, but this could make things tough."

Local media will feel the pinch, too. The average new car dealer spent $341,000 on advertising last year, said Paul Taylor, NADA's chief economist. About a quarter went to newspapers, which are already in a struggle for survival.

The average dealer spends $16.5 million per year in the community, including sales, payroll taxes and charitable contributions, Taylor said. On top of that, laid-off workers will spend less, and towns will suffer from lost tax revenue.

Braintree, Mass., will lose the $24,000 it collects every year from South Shore Chrysler.

"We hate to see businesses close up shop," said Christine Stickney, the town's director of planning and community development. "Anytime that we see a business close like this, there is a trickle-down effect. Those 25 employees may have had lunch in town, bought gas."

NADA's chairman, John McEleney, himself an Iowa auto dealer, said the group understands that dealers have to be consolidated. "We just think the process needs to be slowed down."

Chrysler Vice Chairman Jim Press called the cuts difficult but necessary. He said the list of dealers is final.

"This is a difficult day for us and not a day anybody can be prepared for," Press told reporters during a conference call.

A hearing is scheduled for June 3 for the bankruptcy judge to determine whether to approve Chrysler's motion. Chrysler said it wants to shed the dealerships by June 9.

Chrysler executives said the company is trying to preserve its best-performing dealers. More than half the dealerships being eliminated sell fewer than 100 vehicles per year.

The company is also trying to reduce the number of single-brand dealerships to bring all three Chrysler brands — Jeep, Chrysler and Dodge — under one roof.

The 3.5 million customers who bought cars and trucks from the affected dealers will be notified about the closures, and their warranties will still be honored, said Vice President Steven Landry.

Both Chrysler and GM have dealership networks that were built when they had a much larger share of the U.S. market. As both lost market share to Japanese and other overseas brands, GM and Chrysler ended up with too many dealers. Many are barely getting by and can't afford to upgrade their facilities or hire the best personnel.

Still, some dealers say the firings make no sense because they will ultimately cost the company sales. Some have hired lawyers to fight the decision.

Millerstown, on the east bank of the Juniata River west of Harrisburg, would be devastated if the Potter family had to close up shop, said Billy Roush, the longtime borough council president.

The borough, which provides fire, ambulance and other services to the area, had an annual operating budget of $158,805 last year, a big chunk of it from the Potter dealership.

"In our town," Roush said, "we have very little employment."

___

Associated Press Writers Dan Strumpf in New York, Jacob Adelman in Los Angeles, Deborah Yao in Philadelphia, Rodrique Ngowi in Boston, Ken Thomas in Washington, D.C., and Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Regions: United States , Japan , Detroit
  • Public Discussion (16)
Evil FoursomeDeleted
Eric AlbertDeleted
Evil FoursomeDeleted
Bernhard Meck

Some of these dealers may be better of selling used cars anyway! Many of the new car dealers claim to be making most of their profits on the used cars, and who would want to peddle the wares from the weakest link of the American not-so-big-anymore Three in this market anyway? One door closes, another opens up!

  • 2 votes
Reply#4 - Thu May 14, 2009 8:23 PM EDT
Eric AlbertDeleted
Rixar13

What happened to Plymouth?

The company is also trying to reduce the number of single-brand dealerships to bring all three Chrysler brands — Jeep, Chrysler and Dodge — under one roof.

Jeep, Chrysler and Dodge

It's sad to see the fallout of this economic crisis and all of the lives it will affect.

CCdesign

Anyone here old enough to remember what happened to Harley Davidson in the mid-late '70's when AMF owned them...? That is what is going to happen to Chrysler and GM x10.

Buy a Ford.

Harley went to Japan for awhile but later came back to America. I agree that I would only buy a fordin the American car industry.

  • 2 votes
Reply#6 - Thu May 14, 2009 9:43 PM EDT
Bernhard Meck

Plymouth was Chrysler's weakest link and went to auto heaven. It was later joined by Oldsmobile and now by Pontiac. Hummer and Saturn are in intensive care and not expected to live.

I recall a high-school teacher in social studies, many years ago confidently predicting the evolution of the automotive world. "One day there will only be about five car companies surviving in the world. The biggest ones are Chrysler, Ford and GM... no telling who the other two lucky survivors will be!"

Survival of the 'fittest' doesn't seem to mean biggest, but the most adaptable. For vehicle manufacturers that may mean the ones not relying on riches from truck-based vehicles, skirting fuel standards and producing half-baked, rental-car-generic offerings. And the few exceptions to the rule (to new Malibu or whatever) don't explain why the tin-cup is being rattled as Ford still stands and VW had the best year in 2008.

  • 3 votes
#6.1 - Thu May 14, 2009 10:37 PM EDT
eriq samson

Chrysler as a corporation does not understand it's own marketing department. In the 50's it was DeSoto as the bread and butter brand that got replaced ( chrysler - desoto dealers was Groucho's big sponsor) by plymouth (with Dodge being the upper middle price brand like Buick or Mercury) but then Dodge's marketing started sitting on top of Plymouth's and Chrysler division started making the upper middle price cars so plymouth sank and Dodge is in their market.

Note that the company tried several times to import their foreign subsidiary cars and did not understand them either (Sunbeam Tiger, Hillman avenger / plymouth cricket, Simca 1204 at plymouth dealers) and later partnered with Mitsubishi with the same results - most of the dealers did not want the imports.

  • 2 votes
#6.2 - Sun May 17, 2009 4:10 PM EDT
Reply
Eric AlbertDeleted
Soul-1097635

This Started Way Before Obama Was Even Elected. I Lost My Job From A Major Dealership After Working There For 17 Years, And It Was Not One Of The Big Three. Sales Dropped, Customer Confidence Dropped, And Then The Dealership Profits Dropped. So Everyone Knows What Was Next.

I Can Go Back To Work At Any Other Dealership, But Why? No One Is Purchasing "Enough" Cars To Support As Many Sales Consultants, And The Dealerships Are Tightening Up Their Purses, Because Of Low Profits, So After 17 Years Of Building a Career, I Must Start All Over, And You Want Me To Blame Obama... Come On.

I Blame The Dealerships And Automotive Companies For Being Greedy When The Getting Was Good, And Now They Have Nothing To Show For It. Bad Cars By Some, And Enormaous Profits By Others Has Left The American Public Not Wishing To Even Feel For Us.

Who Do I Go To For Help? Where Is My Bail Out? I Was One Of The First Victims Of This War (October 31), And I Am Building My Own Business To Survive, And For The Automotive Industry To Survive, They Better Follow Suit. Strap It And Start All Over, And This Time Place The Client First, And Profits Second. After All The Money The Automotive Dealerships Made They Should Have Enough To Float For Years, But Just Like The Other Giant Corporations, The Gave It All To Their Executives... Now They have No Money, And No Clients Either, And I Have No Job...

  • 1 vote
Reply#8 - Thu May 14, 2009 11:33 PM EDT
Bernhard Meck

I'm with you on that, Soul... too long have dealerships and US-manufacturers in this country exhausted every venue to hype up sales, created artificial demand, squeezed every dollar from the public on every level possible? "Credit amnesty, you work, you drive! You are PRE-QUALIFIED for UP TO $30,000 towards your next vehicle... BILL HEARD CHEVROLET... blah, blah, blah!

Any fool with his first pay-check and no math-skills could drive out with a 6.9l Pontiac Firebird getting what...? 12 miles to the 99cent gallon? Luckily the obnoxious chain of Chevy-dealers went out right at the start of the latest mess. You know, in other countries people still save up most if not all of their money before buying a car. In China people save about 25% of each pay-check, in Germany about 11% and in this country virtually zero (disclaimer: now that the scat hit the fan that rate is supposedly up to 5%)

We have seen this country become a market where something like 92% of all deals involve some sort of Whimpy-financing ("paying TUESDAY for the HAM-burger I would like today"). In China most deal are handled with CASH brought into the dealership. What does that mean? Living beyond the means for one! Over-charging people for deals and credit and extended warranties that have little value! (personal experience with attempting to get refunds on stolen and destroyed CHRYSLER vehicles in 2008)

We are all better off reverting back to frugality, cutting off credit to ourselves like a BAD DRUG HABIT! Let the banks choke on the money and try to make do with less. Expect no one to GIVE you a job, but instead expect to have to make your own! With the money you make, be tight-fisted, get the best deal on WHATEVER car you want! Foreign or domestic! CASH!

Bless your heart and good luck and may the spaghetti monster have mercy upon GM and Chrysler... Amen!

  • 2 votes
#8.1 - Fri May 15, 2009 12:16 AM EDT
Reply
jorlwebb

Chrysler itself is its own problem, but cutting down on dealerships is just a natural occurance of a shrunken economy. Lets say the economy wasn't in shambles and Chrysler was still dying because it just sucks. When Chrysler dies, another automotive company will just step in to take up those customers. In the grand scheme, no one loses their jobs, they just move to new ones for another company.

In this case, the economy sucks and Chrysler still sucks. So Chrysler still can't sell enough cars, but now no other car company is there to pick up the slack because there is no slack in the economy. These dealerships are just victims of a spending drought just like every other person and business. Especially in the auto industry.

So just remember this in the future. When the union jobs go, so go the suppliers and the dealers. But hey, at least the white collars are still around. Oh? Did you not know which side you were on?

  • 1 vote
Reply#9 - Fri May 15, 2009 12:13 AM EDT
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