Chrysler ends ties to 11 local dealers
Jim LaFlam and Jim Atkins received the same notice yesterday, but each processed it a little differently. LaFlam sounded deflated - "devastated" was his word - after learning his family's Chrysler dealership in Runnemede was among 789 nationwide targeted for elimination by the struggling automaker.
Jim LaFlam and Jim Atkins received the same notice yesterday, but each processed it a little differently.
LaFlam sounded deflated - "devastated" was his word - after learning his family's Chrysler dealership in Runnemede was among 789 nationwide targeted for elimination by the struggling automaker.
Eleven area dealers were on the list, five in South Jersey and six in Pennsylvania.
Atkins, at a Roxborough dealership, was defiant.
"We aren't closing our doors," said Atkins, general manager of John Flynn Chrysler Jeep, barely looking up from his computer screen as he spoke. "We can always sell something. I can sell brooms if I have to."
What he sells in the future remains to be seen. But according to Chrysler L.L.C., it won't be that company's vehicles.
Chrysler notified about 25 percent of its 3,200 dealerships nationwide yesterday that they would be eliminated as part of a restructuring plan aimed at saving the automaker, which filed for bankruptcy protection April 30.
In a motion filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York, the company said it wanted to sever its franchise ties with the dealerships by June 9. A hearing on the motion is set for June 3.
The U.S. Treasury, which has given Chrysler $4 billion in federal loans in the last five months, said shrinking Chrysler's dealership network was one of many steps needed for the company to survive.
"We understand that this rationalization will be difficult on the dealers that will no longer be selling Chrysler cars and on the communities in which they operate," Treasury said in a statement. "However, the sacrifices by the dealer community – alongside those of autoworkers, suppliers, creditors, and other Chrysler stakeholders – are necessary for this company and the industry to succeed."
In its filing, the Auburn Hills, Mich., company said many of the dealers' sales were too low, with just over 50 percent of dealers accounting for about 90 percent of the company's U.S. sales.
The company is also trying to reduce the number of single-brand dealerships to bring all three of its brands - Jeep, Chrysler and Dodge - under a single roof, they said. It also wanted to limit competing dealerships.
The 3.5 million customers who purchased vehicles from the affected dealers will be notified about the closures and their warranties will still be honored, said vice president Steven Landry.
All dealers were notified by United Parcel Service letters yesterday morning whether they were to be eliminated as franchisees.
David Kelleher, owner of David Chrysler Jeep at the Airport Auto Mall, was among those to get good news: He is to remain a Chrysler dealer. "It is a very bittersweet day," he said. "I told my staff, don't go dancing in the street. We just survived a train wreck, that's all."
He was realistic about what was happening. Some dealers were being sacrificed so others could succeed.
"There really is no savings in eliminating dealerships," he said. "It is just so some of us survive in a market where there is not enough demand at the moment. It is unfortunate we are doing it on the backs of those dealers they are closing."
One of those dealers is LaFlam, who said he had been expecting the worst.
"It wasn't a total shock," he said. "We kind of had an indication that, as a single-point Chrysler dealership, this might happen to us."
He was referring to a dealer that sells only Chryslers as opposed to one that might sell other brands, such as Dodge and Jeep, as well.
"Smaller dealerships, such as ours, have been targeted for years for elimination," he said.
Knowing that did not make it any easier. The dealership, on the Black Horse Pike in Camden County, was founded in 1954 by LaFlam's father. LaFlam and his brother, Rob, have run it for 30 years.
"It is devastating for us," he said. "It is devastating for our employees . . . There is a lot of uncertainty. It's tough.
"At this point, we are going to stay open as a used-car dealer. We will just sell used cars."
Atkins, in Roxborough, steadfastly refused to let the news ruin his day.
"It is what it is," he said. "My boss said not to worry about it, just sell cars and that is what I am doing. I sold two cars this morning."
Pressed a little by a reporter, Atkins was steadfast.
"My boss' company isn't in bankruptcy, Chrysler is," he said, referring to the dealership. "I'm not going to worry because nothing has happened yet. And I don't want my sales staff worrying either. Otherwise, I'll be the only one here Monday morning."
As he spoke, a potential buyer entered the showroom. "Listen," he said, abruptly ending the conversation, "I have to sell cars."
End of the Road
Dealerships in the eight-county Philadelphia area that are to lose their Chrysler, Dodge, or Jeep franchises.
Pennsylvania
Name Location
Bergey's Lansdale
Jeff D'Ambrosio Dodge Frazer
J.J. Flynn Philadelphia
Gegnas Philadelphia
I.M. Jarrett Hatboro
Weathers Lima
New Jersey
Name Location
Berlin Chrysler Berlin
Cherry Hill Jeep Cherry Hill
LaFlam Chrysler Runnemede
Lenihan Jeep Marlton
Mall Chrysler Maple Shade
SOURCE: Chrysler L.L.C.EndText