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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- mergina I'm a Fan of mergina 84 fans permalink
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Gm will manufacturer less and less vehicles in this country. If and when they ever come back it will not be with union workers. There is a big fat GM rat behind the scenes, and that management that drove it to the brink of its new existence as a primarily foreign made car company is still in place, comfortably set financially, and ready to lauch the All New Foreign Made GM American Car Company.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 06/01/2009

Anybody who buys GM or Chrysler is Anti-American. Let these losers die.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 06/01/2009
- Dbos I'm a Fan of Dbos 26 fans permalink

Buy American. Buy union.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 PM on 06/01/2009
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Aye!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 PM on 06/01/2009
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Build quality and you will get our money

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 PM on 06/01/2009
- SvrWx I'm a Fan of SvrWx 10 fans permalink
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Why should I pay an extra $3000.00 for my car that I know is going to the Unions. Screw that. I'll buy a well made Honda or Toyota that I know will run for 100,000 miles with little problems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 PM on 06/01/2009

My Toyota pickup was assembled in a US plant by US workers represented by UAW. Since I lived relatively close to it at the time, I even knew a couple of people who worked there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:44 PM on 06/04/2009
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How is that so?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 PM on 06/01/2009
- mphalen I'm a Fan of mphalen 10 fans permalink
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I just heard on the radio that GM is going to cut another 21,000 jobs. That is at least 21,000 cars they will not sell.
When are people going to realize that it is not about the cars, or the gas milage, or even making "affordable" cars more people can afford. The reason they are not selling cars is because more and more people are losing good paying jobs, like the autoworkers. We manufacture very little in this country and without the good paying manufacturing jobs so people can make enough money to buy, maintain and insure a car.
Noone else sees the relationship between the increase in the unemployment rate with the decrease in car sales? And the failure of our economy?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 06/01/2009
- mergina I'm a Fan of mergina 84 fans permalink
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add all the relatives and friends to that 21,000 and you are well over 100,000.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 PM on 06/01/2009
- newsmctado I'm a Fan of newsmctado 16 fans permalink

Thats a completely misleading oversimplification of the facts. GM has been losing market share for fifteen years (including the largest period of economic growth in America since WWII, the late 90's). They have lost marketshare for the same reason any company loses marketshare: they haven't made products that compete with other products on the market. Thats not to say GM has not made some good products (trucks and work vehicles have been fantastic over the past ten years). Unfortunately, their automobiles (sedans, sports cars, etc) have not stacked up against foreign and domestic competitors (ie: japanese and european cars). Foreign passenger vehicles have largely been safer, cheaper, had better gas mileage, more inovation, better styling, etc that GM could not compete with for a number of reasons (labor costs, production costs, materials costs and reluctance to recognize market demand). You are correct that our workforce has moved away from industrial production in the past thirty years. But to say that people aren't buying cars "because more and more people are losing good paying jobs" doesn't really make a lot of sense. Unemployment was at historic lows in the 90's and wages increased compared to the purchasing power of the dollar. People were buying cars like hotcakes then, they just weren't buying GMs. They were buying Toyotas, Hondas, Kias, Hyundais for the most part. Marketshare of European cars (such as Merc and BMW) which were formerly considered luxery cars, also increased during that period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 PM on 06/01/2009
- Broughden I'm a Fan of Broughden 4 fans permalink
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So why dont they simply switch their car dealership to a new brand? How hard can that be?
Or maybe live in a town that has more going for it than "..our school, our grocery store, and our car dealership­..."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 PM on 06/01/2009
- Dbos I'm a Fan of Dbos 26 fans permalink

not easy to move when your 94 yrs. old

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 PM on 06/01/2009
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Cissna Park, Ill?
This is a one horse town in the middle of nowhere.
Someone threw a beer can from a car on I-57 and
the town was born. Gimme a break...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 06/01/2009

Funny thing about facts there sport, they sell their cars and pay GM in a timely manner. Better than some of the big city dealers that have inventory sitting on the lots. And for the record, Cissna Park started in 1882 with the Chicago & Eastern IL RR before cars and certainly before the interstates. Might check some facts. They can be useful.

Tis better to keep ones mouth shut and the world guessing
than to open it and prove a fool to the world!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 06/01/2009
- Tinsdale I'm a Fan of Tinsdale 16 fans permalink

The people of Cissna Park have the same common hopes, fears and dreams shared by other Americans. Sheesh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 AM on 06/02/2009
- Sureyouare I'm a Fan of Sureyouare 8 fans permalink

listeningpost I'm a Fan of listeningpost I'm a fan of this user permalink

Not dense, but this process has only just begun.

Posted 09:45 PM on 06/01/2009

the process will be what it will. If I owned a dealership, I would tell you:

1) they own most of the property their dealerships sit on. Not that they can sell it right now, but they do own it.

2) The inventory they own is a greater asset to them than you imagine. You assume (maybe not you, but people reading) that the inventory they carry isn't paid for until it is sold, that is not true. The inventory on most cars over 5 months old is already paid for.

3) Their overhead costs are relatively small. Most of their overhead goes into marketing. They have the rest (showrooms, etal) already paid off after just a few years in business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 06/01/2009
- lornejl I'm a Fan of lornejl 619 fans permalink
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You didn't link Neo, the readers here might have the impression that those were your words.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 06/01/2009
- Sureyouare I'm a Fan of Sureyouare 8 fans permalink

They might, but savvy posters know to google. And when you pull the last hairs out of your donkey rear end proving that they are NOT mine, let me know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 06/01/2009
- Sureyouare I'm a Fan of Sureyouare 8 fans permalink

or the last red hair out of that mop on your head......­......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 PM on 06/01/2009
- Sureyouare I'm a Fan of Sureyouare 8 fans permalink

The burden of their payroll is on sales, which are commissioned based. Their service crews are paid by an outsourced company. Their payroll doesn't belong to the dealer unless the dealer so chooses. They work for GM.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 PM on 06/01/2009
- lornejl I'm a Fan of lornejl 619 fans permalink
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Michael Moore wrote a great piece today. Why do ALL right wingers hate Moore ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:49 PM on 06/01/2009

Because he carefully documents their stupidity and hypocrisy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 06/01/2009
- lornejl I'm a Fan of lornejl 619 fans permalink
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That was my first guess too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 06/01/2009

People thinking only of themselves and mad because others are not thinking of them. What the President is trying to do is reduce the amount of people laid-off and make the company profitable. The company is shedding dealerships so that you and I the consumer will have to go further to find a better deal. Most people will not drive to the next town to price shop. I don't know what they're going to do about internet shoppers. Having cars built in China will allow GM to continue financing current pensions and healthcare costs of retirees. Retirees who have very very comfortable agreements made when times were better. For over 35 years old people like me have been trying to tell our fellow Americans to BUY AMERICAN. Otherwise one day Americans would not have jobs. Without jobs we can't buy anything. Pushing paper for a living is a temp. job. Too bad people didn't get it till now. Other than making something and selling it (manufacturing) all other jobs are support industries­.Think about it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 PM on 06/01/2009
- JoDeeVa I'm a Fan of JoDeeVa 18 fans permalink
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IF American automakers had listened to and heeded the demand of consumers to build cars as competitive in price/ quality as foreign cars..your fellow Americans might have been more inclined to listen to you, as well as BUY AMERICAN! So, they didn't BUY AMERICAN and the BIG 3 still didn't get it and still enjoyed great wages/ benefits even if the companies didn't profit. It was sheer arrogance/ ignorance on the part of the BIG 3, so...Now that day has come and some Americans don't have jobs. Too bad people didn't get it till now, INDEED!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 06/01/2009
- dogman44 I'm a Fan of dogman44 47 fans permalink

The workers build the cars. They have no say in the design factor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 AM on 06/02/2009
- Disuberence I'm a Fan of Disuberence 130 fans permalink
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So in those 60-90 days when it relaunches do I get to hear President Obama say "Now witness the power of this fully armed and operational BATTLESTATION!" and then blow up like... the RNC?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 PM on 06/01/2009
- cdrach I'm a Fan of cdrach 4 fans permalink

as if we in illinois don't get screwed enough by our politicians- now GM is lubin' up

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 PM on 06/01/2009
- Sureyouare I'm a Fan of Sureyouare 8 fans permalink

You continue to elect inept and cr00ked politicians and you expect everyone to blame THEM? You were apthetic

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 PM on 06/01/2009
- lornejl I'm a Fan of lornejl 619 fans permalink
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How do you know he is a repub ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 PM on 06/01/2009
- Sureyouare I'm a Fan of Sureyouare 8 fans permalink

apathetic

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 PM on 06/01/2009

Doan Barry come from near there?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 06/01/2009
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Ah, the old guilt by association ploy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 06/01/2009
- lornejl I'm a Fan of lornejl 619 fans permalink
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Are you feeling well ? scratch your paw 1 time for yes, 2 for no...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 06/01/2009
- dogman44 I'm a Fan of dogman44 47 fans permalink

Who is Doan Berry?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 AM on 06/02/2009

Maybe it's time for some Yankee Ingenuity.
Depending on how one interprets the Mayor's statements, the loss in taxes is either $50 or 100 thousand dollars, if half the townsfolk, listed as 800 plus on Google, covered the loss it would be about $200/year at the outside. Not good, but not the end of the world either.
Time to get creative.

By the way, none of these dealerships have been closed yet, no one really knows how it will shake out in 2 years time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:28 PM on 06/01/2009
- Sureyouare I'm a Fan of Sureyouare 8 fans permalink

They haven't closed because they need to sell their inventory? are you really that dense?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 PM on 06/01/2009

Not dense, but this process has only just begun.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 PM on 06/01/2009
- kapo I'm a Fan of kapo permalink

I hear the new GM will change its name to Particular Motors.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 PM on 06/01/2009
- OtayPanky I'm a Fan of OtayPanky 66 fans permalink
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Private Motors is more appropriate, I think.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:30 PM on 06/01/2009
- Roxanna I'm a Fan of Roxanna 31 fans permalink

What I don't understand if GM is going Bankrupt why will they still be making cars now in China, not for most Chinese to buy but for us? Is that where the money went?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 PM on 06/01/2009
- HMDMSR I'm a Fan of HMDMSR 45 fans permalink
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Funny, isn't it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 PM on 06/01/2009
- JoDeeVa I'm a Fan of JoDeeVa 18 fans permalink
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Where do you think any of that money goes from cozy relationships with China? We depend on their cheap goods and they depend on our dependency, reaping our debtor-nation status to them. China owns US and now we own GM..it only makes sense that the cost-profit margin is part of the calculation at this point for GM. But, it won't matter if Americans still don't buy their cars. China's import taxes are too high to make it feasible for American companies to sell anything but the pricey luxury models there, somewhat limited for any profit-margin. I think the GM deal with China is ultimately headed to making/ selling cars competitive within the China market and end-running the import tax (and other regulations), by franchising there. It would help GM with the soft-market for their cars in the US, IF they could sell them in China.

Not good news for UAW and employees who are justified in the angst and fight they will make on this front. Short of the gov't stepping up to the plate and intervening, it may just end up being the price for obsolescence of their product, while the only supply being demanded comes from the unions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 AM on 06/02/2009
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cities, town, villages and burbs need to diversify in the future

take back farms from big aggi

get rid of walmart and open up factories that make things again and mom and pop stores

entrepreneurship - right

too big to fail it's too big to exist

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 06/01/2009
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Spot on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 PM on 06/01/2009
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great post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:30 PM on 06/01/2009
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lets do it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 PM on 06/01/2009
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first we need a place to start, room for the experiment and cash.

so we need a benefactor, someone who is politically and monetarily willing to fund the first free range self sustaining community in the US?

gotta start somewhere.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 AM on 06/03/2009
- dogman44 I'm a Fan of dogman44 47 fans permalink

That really is what it's all about isn't it? How does one go about suggesting the system
needs radical change without becoming an enemy of the state?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 AM on 06/02/2009
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basically, piss off enough people and become the majority.

With the help of the bailout and crooked corporate elites we are well on our way.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 AM on 06/03/2009
- awckid3 I'm a Fan of awckid3 3 fans permalink

Face reality. Walmart is here to stay. We we warned about losing manufacturing jobs 10 to 15 years ago, but we failed to do anything about it. Now we have no choice but to think of other ways to bring in revenue to our towns. Manufacturing will never be what it once was, NEVER.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 AM on 06/02/2009
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why would we want it to be what it once was? pollution chemicals toxins

what we need is to retool what we have with the better technology we possess.

recycle the building to make solar everything - schools that teach trades and vocations - clean these places up (jobs) and produce affordable housing, clinics, gardens.

All it takes is a little imagination and will.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 AM on 06/03/2009
- luckybear I'm a Fan of luckybear 7 fans permalink

I say who cares? We had to bailout GM otherwise a bankruptcy judge would have torn up all contracts and the company would have been sold to who ever had the money (Chinese company probably).

GM had 45% market share in 1980; 35% market share in 1990; 22% in 2008; and 18% in 2009. It made sense to have all these dealers and huge production numbers when GM had 50% but it doesn't now. Someone has to pay and take a hit otherwise the entire company goes bust. Sorry that's life. TIme for these dealers to find new occupations. Doesn't matter how long they've sold cars.

When Oldsmobile was discontinued GM had to pay the dealers $1 billion dollars cash to buy them out because of ridiculous state franchise laws. Sorry time to shed this dead weight and make money again. Profits are the only thing that matters in a competitive industry like automobiles.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 06/01/2009
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