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Cape car dealers await Congress's bailout decision
Say economic fallout of automakers' failure would hammer U.S. economy
Honda dealer asserts Detroit companies must change their business model
By James Kinsella
When representatives of Detroit's Big Three automakers appeared before Congress last week to ask for a $25 billion bailout, a number of Cape Codders were even more interested than most other Cape residents.
Owners, managers and workers at Puritan Pontiac Buick GMC, Ford of Hyannis and Premier Cape Cod, which hold Dodge, Chrysler and Jeep vehicle franchises, were hoping that the federal government would agree to provide financial help for the struggling Detroit automakers.
Congress, however, provided no immediate relief, apparently as turned off by the individual private jets that each of the Big Three's executives rode in on as the lack of detailed plans for putting the requested aid to good use.
"The consequences are staggering. In this country, there are so many jobs involved... We have got to get something."
- Richard Covington
Ford of Hyannis
The Big Three - General Motors, Ford and Chrysler - have until Tuesday, Dec. 2 to present a plan to Congress on how they would use the money.
The Cape business people who sell Big Three vehicles say they understand the need for a plan, as well as the massive economic fallout if one or more of the carmakers fail.
"The consequences are staggering," said Richard Covington, president of Ford of Hyannis. "In this country, there are so many jobs involved... We have got to get something."
"If the government can't help the carmakers return to success, Joe Laham, owner of Premier Cape Cod said, "someone is going to pay" - not only the workers at the Big Three and their suppliers who lose their jobs, but other Americans who will have to cover their unemployment benefits.
The dealers also said the Big Three executives didn't really have a choice in how they traveled to Washington, D.C. - that their employment contracts specify their manner of travel so as to protect their security for the corporations.
That being said, the dealers say they understand how members of Congress and their constituents would react to the private-jet travel at a time when so many people are hurting.
They also appreciate that Congress wanted a better, more detailed plan as to how the companies planned to use the money to turn their operations around.
"It's like applying for a job without a resume."
- Joe Laham, of Premier Cape Cod, on executives' failed plea
Jim Costas, one of the owners of Puritan Pontiac, said he wasn't disappointed by Congress's rejection of the executives, but he was surprised that the executives weren't more in tune with the mood of Congress and the country.
Laham said of the executives' approach: "It's like applying for a job without a resume."
The dealer said Congress made the right decision to insist on a better, more detailed plan.
What is hurting the auto industry, Laham said, is what is hurting the housing and other industries across America: the sharp tightening of credit.
These days, he said, even people who have good credit scores are being getting turned down for financing because of broader concerns about their long-term financial security.
One observer who said Detroit has to embark on a new approach is Jay Goodwin, one of the owners of Hyannis Honda.
"I think Congress was on the right track," Goodwin said Friday. "The Big Three companies all have been failing with their business models for years."
To give the automakers money now, Goodwin said, would be completely irresponsible.
He sees bankruptcy reorganization as the only way for the Detroit automakers to free themselves from union contracts that he said hurts their ability to compete in the marketplace.
"The Big Three companies all have been failing with their business models for years."
- Jay Goodwin
Hyannis Honda
In contrast, Goodwin said, Honda and Toyota don't need help, given their strong balance sheets and abundance of cash.
At the same time, he sees the dire straits of the Detroit automakers as "extremely tragic" for the entire nation.
Nothing would be better, he said, than to have a healthy Big Three, even if that means his own dealership would face more competition for customers. "Competition makes everyone better," he said.
Laham said Congress should base its aid to each automaker on what that particular company is prepared to offer. For example, he said Chrysler's leader, Robert Nardelli, is prepared to slash his compensation to help put a deal together.
At present, Costas said, business is slow as people wait to see what Congress does.
"Obviously, whatever decision the government makes depends on whatever the three leaders come back with," he said.
Even though the Big Three's executives didn't initially get the help they sought, Covington anticipates Congress eventually will provide aid.
"I'm one of those guys who believe they are going to get help," Covington said.
39 comments
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Round off a 52 - week year into 50 weeks:
$10,000 per week = $500,000 per year.
$20,000 per week = $1,000,000 per year.
$15,000,000 per year = $300,000 per week. (Chrysler CEO)
$21,000,000 per year = $420,000 per week. (GM CEO)
Poor babies!
Btw, $218 is what Chrysler CEO raped from Depot. No one deserves that much of a "please just go away", cashout. I don't care how good they think they are....how much is that by the weekly paycheck? And they talk about fascism. Well, guess what boys and girls. Welcome to the elite takeover. How much are the Rockefellars and Rothschilds worth now? Next book they should write is how the rich ruined the free world via outsourcing, overspending on a phoney war and hedgefund housing scam.
“Live daringly, boldly, fearlessly. Taste the relish to be found in competition - in having put forth the best within you”
–Henry J. Kaiser
H. J. Kaiser gave us the ubiquitous Jeep among his products. The problem with the American automobile industry is when they became both complacent after the Korean War ended and allowed the UAW free reign in labor contracts. Whist the beaten economies of Japan and Germany were able to rebuild with our economic assistance and than build much more efficient plants here in the US free of burdensome tax structures and labor contracts. We reaped what we sowed and now we have a fallow harvest.
My idea is to give every American up to 1.5M of them a voucher for $16,667 to buy a new car, use registry databases to find current owners of American big three cars more than seven years old.
I agree the unions are part of the problem, just as your own union at cch contributes to their downfall.
But CEO's getting paid too much is just as bad. They need to restructure the auto industry as well as the mortgage industry.
Why is Toyota solvent? Because of good management, moderate salaries, but equally as impt., it's a far better vehicle. How long has the US car dealers and oil industry been ruining this country? Unions where created to protect the employees from abuse by their employers, but they manage to take advantage of a good thing. I personally don't believe in unions, but understand why we have them. I'd rather see people fired for not doing their jobs. Especially for spoiled CEO's who think its okay to waste more money on not fixing the companies and using private jets when they tell us they are BROKE! Maybe they should join the assembly line!
Many of the stock holders who sought higher returns were in fact employees who besides wanting better than average returns on their stock also sought extraordinary compensation through their union agreements talk about burning the candle at both ends they also meted it in the middle.
http://forums.capecodonline.com/n/pfx/forum.aspx?nav=messages&tsn=7&webtag=cc-business&tid=728
The only significant thing you said here is "It's up to us to resort back to the way our parents lived".
That's called... personal responsibility. It's not a crime to send credit cards to teenagers or the elderly. People who ARE responsible can managed their money and lives with or without credit cards. Stop making excuses for people.
Okay smarta$$ tell us how you are able to maintain your easier lifestyle than the rest of us: What is your age, where do you work, (off cape?)for how long, 401k pretty healthy, house paid for, parents leave you money, pay for college, wife work, kids grown, don't need your help, no set backs, no divorce, or family illness, loss of job, help from friends, elderly parent dependent financially and domestically? You have zero clue of the obstacles in the way of those who can't just live with what they have, in some cases, it's very little. Your vision is narrow and I'm betting you voted republican. Gone is our democracy, embrace corporate tryranny, because that is what 8 years helped to ensure. Don't get too cocky, you too may have to stand in the bread line one day! Enjoy it while it lasts!
I don't have it "easier" than you or anyone else. I just love your "economic" theories and excuses. I paid for my own college and am paying for 2 kids soon to be 3. How? Working long hours and the wife works 2 jobs. If you don't have it... don't spend it. Get rid of cable, internet, designer clothes, cell phones, fancy cars, dinning out etc, etc. You know, like you said "back to the way our parents live".
As usual, you avoid answering the questions. I only use a debt card, drive a 2000 volvo I paid with cash $2900, one owner, from craigslist, just got luck, lots of scams there too, don't advice it, unless you can get car checked out first, and run VIN #, it's under book value, rmv charged me 5% of $3950 in protest. Always been a step 9, ins is cheap. Use to drive Chevy trucks, never again. My car drives like a caddy. Clothes, designer only from a local shop where owner gets from NY. I buy what she has at 50 % off, off season,$25- 75, wear till they wear out or out of style, then always to goodwill. Shop at Trader Joes for one. Quality of produce, selection and price is perfect. Internet on phone (right now) or at home as a modem $19 monthly. One phone, cell only, $59, 2000 min. No cable. Heavy curtains to keep out drafts. But some of what I asked applies in my circle of life. When too many depend on one provider something eventually falls out of place. If you can't answer my questions, I assume most do apply.
Cru,
The only significant thing you said here is "It's up to us to resort back to the way our parents lived".
That's called... personal responsibility. It's not a crime to send credit cards to teenagers or the elderly. People who ARE responsible can managed their money and lives with or without credit cards. Stop making excuses for people.
-----------------------------------
You are attacking ,Buzz. Unions need to be reformed, but NAFTA has a lot to do with the current general economic picture. Also, American auto industries have done nothing to improve their engineering or gas mileage. This is all of our own making - fat, complacent Americans.
You shouldn't attack crusader. We all need to clean our own house - America.
Hope you all had a great holiday.
Thank you for your concern. It is much appreciated. I know that to many, my identity is out due to all my opinion blogs written and certain nosey busy bodies. While others are relentlessly harrased by clever subversive means, I remain untouched. Maybe it has something to do with my relative the congressman....lol.
Yes, Chevy trucks failures are bad trannys. Great for pulling boat trailers and heavy loads, but gas guzzlers, heavy emissions. Love my volvo. I've had Saabs too. Love the turbo, but they are tempermental. Europeans engineering can't be matched as far as precision and style, built to last.
The hammer to the economy is coming. If this isn't the form, something else will be.
Doesn't matter how much or little CEOs get paid: The relatively meager salaries of other workers are so numerous that they control costs.
But now it seems the Mafia and the govt. are so entertwined that one has become the other!
Is there a nurse in the house? Off topic, but have to warn those with elderly parents. Nursing home owners and drug companies are the next big fleecing dope dealers. Stay healthy, hope you don't get drugged into hyper zombie land by way of pimping doctors. Been fighting for mom's health for weeks. DPH is to blame, they say. Like to see their bank accts. Calls to DC as well.
The Market (meaning in the big sense of it, whether Main or Wall Streets) does what it wants to do. The "after the Close" explanations that chime in every day are nonsense. It's random. That means although Congress and Presidents can influence and pick up the pieces, they don't control. You're all writing like someone can and does.
The Cape market was doomed two years ago. Consequences take time to work out.
There is no such thing as random where money is concerned.
It's the G-O-D of the world.
You must live in the same shallow world as buzz and rest of the blind Americans who don't know what is really going on. I guess those drug reps who were beating down my office door to sell to my boss were all imaginary, too. Do you know how many perks docs get for pushing drugs on people? NH care for private pay is over 6k a month in some places.Sunshine living, cohasset. My brother went through 400k pretty fast, then he got the zombie drugs when money ran out. Some get serious long term side effects from drugs. My mom lived through the horrors of Nazi occupation in N. Italy. Maybe you should take a trip to the middle east, see how you come back. Ask our soldiers. Go take your prozac.and continue to pretend everything is okay. Don't tell me this sh!t is not for real.
The real conspiracy is the conspiracy of silence. Which seeks to obliterate those who question "the way things are".
Truth does not fear investigation, and taking everything at face value is the height of ignorance.(Einstein)
anonymous:
"If we take anything to apply in our lives it's that we should be free-thinking individuals and prepared to think outside of boxes and speak our truths no matter how it might appear to those around us."
Or, "A smile is just a frown turned upside- down."
Let them live in their small world of denial and self-absorption. They'll find out soon enough. I guess the crooked administration along with corporate criminals had to find a way to pay for this war. Why else are we seeing the lower middle class being swallowed up by this disaster. Thanks for your support, that case revealed much didn't it. I never realized the Cape is the fishbowl of rest of what is profoundly unjust in this country. King George has never been defeated. Colonization by the English, their evil lust for world domination by way of tyranny live on. And their unsuspecting sheep will follow.
Remembering 911 and why it happened, talk of the presidents club, in secrecy they sold out the American people with all their illegals they lust for profits, nothing more I know you follow romaneagle as I do. Once a skeptic, now a true believer. Consolidation of international banking by way of criminal lenders. The BS about helping homeowners is just lip service so we don't start a revolution. They will continue to pick away slowly, unless something is done to change our planned fate.http://forums.capecodonline.com/n/pfx/forum.aspx?tsn=1&nav=messages&webtag=cc-business&tid=732
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11229
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Chrysler's CEO was forced out as CEO of Home Depot...a move once described as the only thing he had ever done to make money for Home Depot. He received mega-million$ in $everance pay. Now Chrysler pays him $15 million per year to learn the auto business while he runs the company...into the ground. Honda showed a net income of $2 billion last year and paid their CEO $1 million per year.
What am I missing? When the CEO of GM told a congressional committee this past week that GM is doing well in its foreign operations and was asked why that money is not used to prop us U.S. operations he had no answer...and he is paid $21million per year.
What a country!