GM's "Death Star" Jeopardizes Illinois Town

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First Posted: 06- 1-09 06:30 PM   |   Updated: 06- 1-09 07:32 PM

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Deathstar

Ralph Nader said a General Motors bankruptcy would launch "a conclusive Death Star to tens of thousands of jobs, thousands of small businesses and adverse effects to hundreds of communities around the country."

The Death Star, a moon-sized superweapon from the Star Wars movies, could destroy an entire planet in a single attack. The Death Star created by GM's bankruptcy filing on Monday probably can't blow up an entire planet, but it might be able to do some damage to a small town in Illinois.

In May, GM notified Rust Chevrolet in Cissna Park, Ill. that the dealership's contract with GM would not be renewed at the end of 2010. Rust Chevrolet was one of 1,100 dealerships axed by GM in May -- a number that nearly doubled with Monday's bankruptcy filing. The delayed closings are GM's attempt to give its dealerships a soft landing. Cissna Park's mayor says that if Rust Chevrolet goes bust, it could have a devastating impact on the area.

"If we keep our school, our grocery store, and our car dealership, we'll be OK," said Mayor Rick Baier, in an interview with the Huffington Post. "And we're losing one of those things."

Baier said car sales account for about half of the town's approximately $100,000 in sales tax revenue, and a fifth of its roughly $250,000 in total annual revenue. If the dealership closes and is unable to reopen as a used car dealership or body shop, the town would have to raise rates, fees and income taxes just to keep the necessary services -- like its schools -- up and running. And it would have to delay less urgent projects, like repairs to streets and wastewater treatment systems.

"It's just gonna be a major hit for Cissna Park," he said. "Apparently GM doesn't account for any type of loyalty."

Rust Chevrolet has been operated continuously by the same family, in the same location for almost a century.

"We've been affiliated with Chevrolet for over 94 years. My grandfather started right here," said the dealership's co-owner, Karen Rust Walder.

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In a good year, the dealership sells 100 units. And 2008 was a very good year, causing Rust Walder to wonder, why her dealership?

"Maybe we didn't have the numbers that GM wanted to see, but I've paid all my bills with them and I owe them nothing," she said. "It's not like we were a financial drain for them. I don't know why this would be a good business decision at all."

Bill Visnic, a senior editor for Edmunds AutoObserver, told the Huffington Post that GM supports dealers through its marketing programs, parts, and inventories, and that those costs factor into a calculation to close a dealership. The broad formula, Visnic said, "is 'How much do we as a car maker think it costs to support you versus how many car sales do you make every year?'"

Visnic said that even after GM sheds 2,100 dealers, which will leave it with 4,100, it may still have too many. But he says that in its rush to go into and out of bankruptcy as quickly as possible, GM may be cutting carelessly.

"I can almost guarantee you there are some dealers by sheer dollars and cents who've been wronged," he said. "Some dealers that have been cut are reasonably viable and making a contribution to overall profitability of the company ... but they don't have the time to pick through them."

GM has not published a list of closing dealerships. The Huffington Post, with readers' help, has been working to compile an inventory.

John McEleney, chairman of the National Automobile Dealers Association, said that GM has too many dealers for its market share. While McEleney praised GM for giving dealerships until late 2010 to wind down -- providing a much softer landing than the three weeks Chrysler gave some 800 of its dealerships -- he said GM's "Death Star" blast is too large.

"They're taking advantage of an opportunity that they can reject these (dealership) contracts out of hand," McEleney said. "We think they went too deep."

Rust Chevrolet is the only car dealership in Cissna Park, which Baier (who also works as a fireman and editor of the local paper) describes as a quiet town with little crime, excellent schools, and one grocery store.

"It's just a nice quiet place to raise your family. And there are a lot of older retired people, they've lived here all their lives. They don't want to leave Cissna Park. They want to die here," he said. "The community, they want to rally around Rust Chevrolet. They want to fight GM but we don't know how do it."

Cissna Park may not have Luke Skywalker and an army of Ewoks, but it does have a congressman.

On Monday, Illinois Rep. Tim Johnson (R), who represents the area, wrote a letter on the town's behalf asking GM to reconsider its decision to abandon Rust Chevrolet. In the letter, provided by Johnson's office to the Huffington Post, Johnson noted that Cissna Park relies on the dealership for half of its sales tax revenue. And he wrote that he didn't see what GM stood to gain from closing it.

"In the larger picture of General Motors, I cannot imagine that closing a dealership of this size makes a significant difference in the sustainability of the corporation," Johnson wrote. "The effect on Cissna Park of such a decision, however, would be devastating. Please consider the scale of these decisions and the century of loyalty of Rust Chevrolet and Cissna Park as you work through these difficult times."


HuffPost Readers: Got a tip on GM? How is the bankruptcy affecting your town? Let us know at submissions+GM@huffingtonpost.com.


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Ralph Nader said a General Motors bankruptcy would launch "a conclusive Death Star to tens of thousands of jobs, thousands of small businesses and adverse effects to hundreds of communities around the...
Ralph Nader said a General Motors bankruptcy would launch "a conclusive Death Star to tens of thousands of jobs, thousands of small businesses and adverse effects to hundreds of communities around the...
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It is very sad to see such hard blows fall on these small towns. Usually after Wal-Mart has already put most of the mom-and-pop shops out of business.
Ms. Rust, why don't you consider selling Toyotas or Hondas or even Hyundais instead? American cars plain suck. I would never own one.
Most of the Asian car companies have factories in the U.S. and even a lot of their parts are now made here.
I love my 2001 Hyundai Elantra! 28-35MPG, has 90,000 miles on it and runs great with no major problems, except an o2 sensor (2005) and a CV boot (2009) both of which were covered under warranty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 AM on 06/02/2009
- green108 I'm a Fan of green108 7 fans permalink
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We're off the charts now. With all the devastating news, it's time Congress got real, corporations god real, and America got real. Long-term sustainable vision. Hello.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 AM on 06/02/2009
- ROLtheWolf I'm a Fan of ROLtheWolf 14 fans permalink
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I own a 1998 Dodge Grand Caravan, that had a couple of pricey repairs 5 years ago, but has been otherwise trouble-free since, knock on wood. I once owned a Puke Green 1977 Chevy Malibu, that later had a brown door, and the engine purred like a kitty. I think cars these days are all a roll of the dice when you buy them, because my 2008 Nissan Versa works great, but the 6-disk CD player is so complex, my wife and I conspired to jam it, and I can't claim it under warrantee. I haven't checked, but I bet it will cost at least $500 bucks to fix. People unreasonably expect to buy a car, and have it be problem-free for life, while every one drives like Racer X.

In a Nutshell: I'm not sure the brands deserve the consumer loyalty or reputation they have.

As for GM and Chrysler, America has a strategic-defense reason to keep both companies around in at least a reduced capacity. You cannot be a country that doesn't manufacture for very long.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 06/01/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 190 fans permalink
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These are essential industries, essential, if you don't know that then you might as well be Republican and watch Fox News...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 06/01/2009
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These industries made themselves obsolete. They need to be turned into something else: wind turbine factories, solar panel factories. America's behemoth car makers clearly can't compete on a global stage. Let small car companies with better ideas emerge and take over the market.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 AM on 06/02/2009

Good idea. Those factories can easily be retooled to be a part of the solution. I think the big lesson in all of this is that we have reached the end of an era, and how well we do in the next era depends entirely on how quickly we accept this and adapt to it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 AM on 06/02/2009
- paulalex I'm a Fan of paulalex 12 fans permalink

How ironic to see a "Clean Coal" ad embedded in this article.

Let's move away from fossil fuels and the vehicles that rely on them asap OK?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 PM on 06/01/2009
- steamboat I'm a Fan of steamboat 45 fans permalink

JUST OVER THE NEWS WIRES:

General Motors to PERMANENTLY close 9 more plants, idle 3 others.

Is this CHANGE we can believe in?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 PM on 06/01/2009
- Axekick I'm a Fan of Axekick 15 fans permalink
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It is "change" that is unavoidable and necessary. Whether or not you believe in it depends on how realistic your perspective is.

General Motors has been mismanaged and failing on every level for most of my life. I'm from a small to mid size steel town in Illinois, believe me I hate to see union workers lose their jobs regardless of the circumstances. But feeding a cancer isn't a winning strategy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:21 AM on 06/02/2009
- Joeyjackal I'm a Fan of Joeyjackal 3 fans permalink
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No, but the last administration after 9/11 squandered an ideal opportunity (perhaps one of the only ones therein that could've come close to a silver lining) to lead the American citizenry away from its reliance on fossil fuels. Instead tax cuts were provided to taxpayers who purchased Hummers and other nearly single-digit MPG vehicles. Bush withdraws the nation from the Kyoto Treaty as one of his first acts. On Sept. 12, 2001, America was united. The US had the full sympathy, support, and assistance of virtually every civilized government and citizen in the world. America was ready to be led… to work and to sacrifice to be sure the events of 9/11 never happened again. It was like the scenario FDR faced the day after Pearl Harbor. George W. Bush took our trust and our hopes….and led us…not to victory like FDR, but right down to the monstrous mess we have now. On that Sept. 12, we were ready to curtail our use of oil to make us less dependent on the Middle East. What sacrifices did he ask of us to cement our national unity? He asked us to go shopping. He asked us to go to Disneyland. He squelched all efforts at energy conservation and the development of clean alternative fuels. All that, rather than incentivizing the changes American car companies needed to make to remain viable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 06/02/2009
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Bush surrounded himself with oil men. His family has had relations with the Saudis for generations. Could anyone who knew this have expected Bush to do any different?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 AM on 06/02/2009
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Don't worry the banks involved are getting their money upfont.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 AM on 06/02/2009

How else do you propose that GM reduce its massive overcapacity?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 06/04/2009
- neem I'm a Fan of neem 4 fans permalink

I admire President Obama for dealing with the twin abominations of GM management and the United Auto Workers. The President is engineering a reduction in size for GM, which seems like the best way to handle this great mess. GM needs to go away, but it needs to disappear a little bit at a time, so that millions of working people (counting suppliers, etc.) are not jolted all at once. It's a very difficult situation, and I think Obama has handled it well. He's not postponing the inevitable, but he's not accelerating into the abyss. Obama did not pretend that there's no problem. He's not pretending that GM will ever make products that real people will buy of their own free will. He's winding things down as best he can.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 06/01/2009
- Tinsdale I'm a Fan of Tinsdale 24 fans permalink

It is unfortunate that President Obama did not apply the same stringent measures to Wall Street. Henry Merritt Paulson, Jr. and Associates won: Game, Set and Match. The President was a mere spectator.

There is a glaring dichotomy in how this administration treats the manufacturing sector versus the financial sector. The concept of "Moral Hazard” only applies to Lehman Brothers, Americans facing foreclosure, and the auto industry. There will be a swath of economic destruction from the Midwest through the South ignited by the decline of our auto industry. America’s manufacturing core has been facing a precipice and the current administration has now given it a shove.

Mark Twain once commented that people can't get rich doing each other's laundry. The Obama administration has now presented us with a test case.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 AM on 06/02/2009
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If you really want to stare the elephant in the room down, please realize that it's name is HEALTH CARE! Until we as americans, get that HUGE problem under control, our manufacturing base will continue to dwindle no matter how much restructuring goes on. For ever GM worker on the line, they were supporting 10 retirees. That ratio is not sustainable. We cannot compete against countries and companies that have universal or near universal healthcare. Take healthcare out of the profitability equation and GM, Ford and Chrysler can run with the big dogs again, easy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 06/01/2009
- mouselion I'm a Fan of mouselion 123 fans permalink
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Hear, hear!

You put your finger on it! I've been trying to explain that to my Republican brother-in-law for years now.
The conservatives stubbornly refuse to see how they are scrooing American workers. They don't want universal healthcare, but then they complain about US wages being too high.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 PM on 06/01/2009
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Conservatives get scared away from health care reform and then the economy turns and they find themselves in a needy position. Isn't it ironic?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 AM on 06/02/2009
- ROLtheWolf I'm a Fan of ROLtheWolf 14 fans permalink
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I agree whole-heartedly that Universal healthcare would pave the way for the job-flexibility that America lacks. Our huge companies have been caught in a bind for decades as the retirees started to build-up on the books. If we had National Healthcare, the companies wouldn't have the burdens of these retirees' health costs, and much more room to lay-off seasonally. Healthcare has become a huge benefit that forces managers to even size up a potential new-hire's state of health, i.e. the source of ageism in hiring. By having a government run (or at least guaranteed) system, the potential to improve the labor market place is exciting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 06/01/2009

Even with health care and pensions off the table, America still cannot compete with Chinese labor. These CEOs are going to dump health care, pensions, and labor, ALL THREE, and say that they have to do it in order to compete in a global marketplace. These CEOs have wholeheartedly embraced the Wal-Mart ideology. They envision themselves as becoming hugely successful multinational corporations that make things in China and sell them to global markets. Their ideology is that a Wal-Mart job is better than no job at all. American autoworkers will be converted to the auto equivalent of big box clerks--they will wear vests and make minimum wage. GM owners and managers will get rich. They will feed the coffers in Washington. And workers will suffer here and abroad. We'd better get a grip on this real quick, because this is exactly where they are taking us. They are emulating Wal-Mart on a massive scale.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 AM on 06/02/2009

Our lack of single-payer health care is a giant drag on our economy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 06/04/2009
- dogman44 I'm a Fan of dogman44 54 fans permalink
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"......but I've paid all my bills with them and I owe them nothing." Maybe those are the dealerships
that are being closed while successful in hopes that the failing dealers will pick up the business
of the closed dealers and be able to pay what they owe GM.








'

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 PM on 06/01/2009
- vietveter I'm a Fan of vietveter 23 fans permalink

Hey G.M.

See ya

Sell your customers cars that last and get decent mileage; show them you care about them, NOT GM

Toyota, Nissan, Honda, VW

Real cars

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 PM on 06/01/2009

I bet if they got rid of that ridiculous family name for a domestic car dealership, and used something less of a Joke to competitors and cynical customers, they'd have a better shot.

Theres a dealership i know of called Lemon Chevrolet.
Insane.
In a world where marketing is actually more often more important to commercialism than the product, and where we live in a world of connotations and implications, how can they think having a name attached to a product that coincides with Derogatory Truthful incidents in those products such as RUST and LEMONs, would be in any way a good idea?

Thats like starting a University named "DumassUniversity"
Or the "Alabama State Penitentiary School of Politics" That would be a winner.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 PM on 06/01/2009
- take10 I'm a Fan of take10 64 fans permalink
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Spend $40K on a GM product that comes with a 36K mile or 36month warranty and may not last that long, and all amenities are add-ons that increase the price by another $4-- t0 $5K. Or, you can spend the same amount on a foreign auto built right here in America by American workers that include amenities as standard equipment, and the warranty is doubled or even ten years on some makes. There is no doubt that GM or Chrysler will not be a buyers first choice. We've lost the edge in both quality and product appeal!

Workers build what they are told, but are somehow the blame for what ails the American auto industry! I don't think so! Designing the equivalent of a disposable auto is what got GM and Chrysler in trouble. If they are ever to be successful again, quality and appeal must be foremost in their restructuring. Until then, I want the best, I know for sure, my money can buy. On top of that, dealers must change how they treat their customers in the service department. A big turn off in my book!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 PM on 06/01/2009
- dogman44 I'm a Fan of dogman44 54 fans permalink
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When I was a kid in the 50s and 60s, my dad worked at a Ford assembly plant in Chicago. I
remember him explaining "planned obsolescence" to me at a young age. It forever changed
the way I looked at consumer goods.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 PM on 06/01/2009
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Good point. Built to insure future purchases.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 06/01/2009
- take10 I'm a Fan of take10 64 fans permalink
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Designed to fail in about 37 months!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 PM on 06/02/2009

Today is a world of tech more than ever. America needs to own and export mass produced hi tech products. Asia is running away and if we do not work hard now education and research wise, we may not catch up. I hate to wind up like the Roman Empire (It shrunk to the current Italia).
Labor is very expensive in the US so we really cannot compete with Chinise imports unless we put very high taxes on the imports.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 PM on 06/01/2009

Why does Apple assemble their products in China??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 AM on 06/02/2009
- Dbos I'm a Fan of Dbos 29 fans permalink

new meaning of "see the usa in your chevrolet."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 06/01/2009
- repearwo I'm a Fan of repearwo 50 fans permalink
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People need to get used to it. The US is going to be changing forever. Places like Cissna Park need to get with the program and not fight GM or the restructuring. They need to look for new industy and ask for green funds to attract green business there. The adminstration has funds it is putting to those industries to help towns just like this one. It is not Obama, it is reality catching up with the US.

For years we took from the rest of the world and created a false expectations that our lifestyle could last forever. We can have a good lifestyle, much like the 50's but we will have to work for it. Fewer jobs mean stay at home moms/dads. Less is better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 06/01/2009
- Rog49Thomas I'm a Fan of Rog49Thomas 192 fans permalink

Not if folks can't support themselves.

I've seen the "less is better" lifestyle in the Philippines, the Peoples Republic of China and sundry other spots where working folks just scrape by - living in miserable conditions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 PM on 06/01/2009
- blastocyst I'm a Fan of blastocyst 28 fans permalink

400 million+ in China living on the equivalent of $1 (U.S. Funds) per day.
Try competing with a stand-by (for sickouts?) slave-labor force as that. And, they just keep-on multiplying.

Our vaunted stand on Human Rights not withstanding.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 PM on 06/01/2009
- Tinsdale I'm a Fan of Tinsdale 24 fans permalink

Excellent point. It is humbling to realize that global wage rates are, and will be, determined by a new industrial park in China or a remote village in Indonesia

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 AM on 06/02/2009

Soon we'll all start calling each other Comrade too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 06/02/2009
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