2010 Road Test: Chrysler Town and Country

2010 Chrysler Town & Country

2010 Road Test: Chrysler Town and Country Minivan is an Ideal Family Hauler

By: Nick Yost
NY Autos Examiner

There are probably some diehard Volkswagen Microbus fans who would dispute this, but to me Chrysler is the manufacturer that came up with the family-friendly minivan.

I was there back in 1983 when the manufacturer took the wraps off those first front-wheel-drive vehicles and I can remember my reaction to this day.

Here was a brilliant concept, I thought, a much more practical replacement for the station wagon. It was designed to hold up to seven or even eight passengers in reasonable comfort and could swallow plenty of luggage. What’s more, it would fit in most family garages. Read the rest of this entry »

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Chrysler Town & Country Safety and Security

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Dealers Split on Chrysler Offer

Some say it wants too much, too fast for reinstatement

Chrysler 300CWith just days left on Chrysler Group’s offer to reinstate 50 closed stores, some dealers are pleased with the deal the company is offering; some are telling Chrysler to bag it.

“Nobody in their right mind would agree to this,” California dealer Richard Carpenter says of Chrysler’s terms for costly improvements, and its demand for a five-year waiver on protesting new nearby points.

In certain cases, dealers are pleased with the offers and intend to sign.

“Half of my staff has been calling looking for jobs, and I have customers calling daily wanting to know if we’re going back,” said rejected New Orleans dealer Mike Comiskey. “I’d like to make a living again, and I think the brand can survive.”

Many dealers also are dismayed by the tight 10-day window for a decision on the offers, which began going out March 26. But a Chrysler source said the company is flexible and will talk to dealers who have questions and may need more time.

Carpenter said the store upgrades Chrysler wants could cost as much as $3 million — and says the company wants the job done in just eight months. In addition to saying no to Chrysler’s offer, he’s dropping his arbitration case, too.

Harold Johnson, who now sells used cars in Wichita, Kan., said he spent half a million dollars a few years ago to upgrade his store and could save as much as $100,000 in arbitration expenses by signing — which he plans to do.

One Midwestern dealer said he is leaning against signing because the requirements of the letter he received aren’t clear and he hasn’t been able to get a clarification from Chrysler.

Chrysler Logo

The seven-page Chrysler letter also attaches a number of conditions that would make it easy for the company to wiggle out of the agreement, said the dealer, who asked not to be identified.

The dealer said Chrysler made the offer while he was in the middle of selling parts back to the company for less than 30 cents on the dollar. If he were to sign, he would have to buy back the parts at full price, resulting in a loss of almost $100,000.

Chrysler has said it is offering reinstatement to 50 closed showrooms that sold the Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep brands under one roof out of 387 that filed arbitration claims.

Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne said in a speech last week that the 50 dealerships “are in locations that will benefit our customers but not have an adverse effect on existing partners in our network.”

Chrysler was closed for the holiday weekend on Friday, April 2. The company issued a statement on the process: “Chrysler Group offered standard letters of intent in the interest of finding a mutually agreeable alternative to arbitration. The dealerships involved filed for arbitration, signaling they wanted to join Chrysler Group’s dealer network.”

Leonard Bellavia, a Mineola, N.Y., lawyer who represents dealers, said General Motors Co.’s letters of intent last month to 661 rejected dealerships “were more businesslike, more reasonable and less amorphous” than Chrysler’s letters.

Neil Roland & Bradford Wernle
Automotive News
Source: http://www.autonews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100405/RETAIL07/304059978/1422#ixzz0lf1UeY73

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Chrysler Shifts Tone on Dealers

Automaker offers reinstatement to 50 stores, signals settlement talks with more

Finally, some movement at Chrysler.

After nearly a year of taking a hard line with rejected dealerships, Chrysler Group changed course last week and offered to reinstate 50 stores.

The company also said it will enter settlement talks with an unspecified number of rejected dealerships and disclosed that 36 already have been reinstated nationwide.

Chrysler Jeep DodgeOne thing hasn’t changed, though. Chrysler still favors dealerships that sell all four of its brands: Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and the recently added Ram truck brand. All 50 offers of reinstatement are to stores selling all those brands.

But despite the actions by Chrysler, problems remain.

Dealer lawyers say Chrysler hasn’t budged in its approach to arbitration — for example, demanding that arbitrating dealers sign confidentiality agreements blocking them from sharing Chrysler information with other dealers.

One dealer who received a call from a Chrysler official saying a letter of intent for reinstatement was coming said he was taking a wait-and-see attitude.

“We’re looking at it with guarded optimism,” said the dealer, who declined to be identified. He remains skeptical because Chrysler had given no previous indication it had any interest in bringing back any rejected dealerships.

A company spokesperson said Chrysler would continue to explore “mutually beneficial options outside arbitration” to settle with dealers who have filed for arbitration.

By offering to reinstate the 50, Chrysler reduced its arbitration caseload to 337, said a company spokesperson.

National Automobile Dealers AssociationEd Tonkin, chairman of the National Automobile Dealers Association, called Chrysler’s intention to reinstate 50 dealerships “a move in the right direction.” This, coupled with previous contracts awarded to 36 other closed dealerships, brings the total to 86 dealerships that could be reinstated.

In U.S. Bankruptcy Court last year, Chrysler canceled 789 dealerships.

“NADA views this as a good-faith effort and hopes that this carries forward in Chrysler’s continuing settlement and arbitration discussions with the other terminated dealers,” Tonkin said.

Delays?

Eric Chase, an attorney representing four rejected Chrysler dealers, said the reinstatements do not change his opinion that the automaker won’t give in easily on the remaining dealerships seeking arbitration. He said Chrysler has been “obstructive” at every phase of the arbitration process.

Chrysler’s demand for a signed confidentiality pledge before it will agree to provide documents in discovery is prompting complaints from dealer lawyers accustomed to comparing notes on strategy.

The company also still is resisting dealers’ efforts to find out the specific criteria used in terminating their stores — information that Chrysler was required under law to provide in January, dealer lawyers said.

“Chrysler continues to resist and contest each and every step in arbitration,” said Rob Byerts, a Tallahassee, Fla., lawyer whose firm represents 13 closed Chrysler dealerships. “It appears to be for no good reason other than delay.”

Delays benefit Chrysler because if arbitrations aren’t completed before the June 14 deadline set by Congress, the dealers lose their cases, said Mike Charapp, a McLean, Va., lawyer.

Chrysler’s nine-page “Confidentiality Agreement and Order” — a copy of which Automotive News obtained — has touched off wrangling in dozens of arbitrations, seven dealer lawyers said.

Chrysler defended the confidentiality agreement.

“This is a standard request in litigation dealing with sensitive financial and competitive data,” the company said in an e-mail last week.

It added that the new law setting up arbitration states that “discovery shall be limited to request for documents specific to the covered dealership.”

Dealer lawyers disagreed, saying the standard approach in arbitration is to consider each particular document rather than the documents as a whole.

If a document deals with trade secrets or confidential business information, then it is addressed with the arbitrator, they said. But dealership performance documents rarely raise such sensitive issues.

Hearings in April

Meanwhile, the June 14 deadline looms over proceedings, although arbitrators have the discretion to extend them another month.

A total of 115 hearing dates, scheduled from April 21 into early June, had been set as of last week, said India Johnson, senior vice president of the American Arbitration Association, which is administering the cases.

Hundreds more have yet to be scheduled. The exact figure is a shifting number, as General Motors Co. and perhaps Chrysler move to reinstate dealerships.

A total of 1,550 GM and Chrysler arbitration claims have been filed, but GM has said it is reinstating 661 rejected dealerships and is willing to discuss possible settlement with as many as 499 more.

Johnson has little concern about the arbitration meeting the congressional deadline. Said Johnson: “We have a lot of other arbitrators that we could throw at these cases.”

Chrysler Group Reinstatements

Dealerships
789 Canceled in Bankruptcy in 2009
36 Reinstated by Chrysler after Bankruptcy
2,334 Operating as of Feb. 28
50 Will receive offers of reinstatement from Chrysler
337 Still in Arbitration
Source: Chrysler

Neil Roland & Bradford Wernle
Automotive News
Source: http://www.autonews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100329/RETAIL07/303299935/1400#ixzz0lf7mgWr7

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Chrysler Franchise DealershipWASHINGTON — Chrysler Group, after congressional pressure and complaints from rejected dealers, said it will stop awarding new franchises temporarily in the markets of closed dealerships that are pursuing arbitration.

“Chrysler Group understands that the practice at this time may be a cause of concern among policymakers and among arbitrating dealers,” the automaker said in a statement. “As a measure of good faith, Chrysler Group will not proceed with network actions that directly impact an arbitrating dealer until the arbitrator has had a chance to rule in that case.”

Chrysler said the only exception would be if the company is “contractually obligated” to award a new franchise.

Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich., and Steven LaTourette, R-Ohio, asked Chrysler this month to stop the practice. They said shuttered dealerships could win reinstatement from an arbitrator but be prevented from reopening because a new franchise already had been awarded in that market.

Some rejected dealers also have complained about Chrysler’s new franchise awards in recent weeks.

The moratorium on new franchise awards is Chrysler’s second in recent months.

2010 Chrysler 300 SRT8The company initiated a halt from October to December during unsuccessful settlement talks with dealer groups about an alternative to legislation.

Chrysler told dealer groups last fall it planned to award about 100 new U.S. franchises. The company has declined to confirm or update this figure.

”This is window dressing to placate Congress,” Tamara Darvish, a leader of the Committee to Restore Dealer Rights, which represents rejected Chrysler and General Motors Co. dealerships, said today.

Chrysler shut 789 dealerships as part of bankruptcy proceedings last spring. Close to 400 of them are seeking reinstatement through arbitration.

Under legislation signed by President Barack Obama in December, arbitrators have until mid-June to decide their cases. They can extend the process for a month at their discretion.

Chrysler has been trying to realign its dealer network to consolidate all its brands under one roof.

Neil Roland
Automotive News
Source: http://www.autonews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100316/RETAIL/100319921/1400#ixzz0iTCLleiz

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2010 Chrysler Town & Country – A Playground on Wheels

Town & Country, Chrysler’s gift to kids everywhere: a playground on four wheels.

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